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View Full Version : Homeowners drop insurance after Katrina



johnnymk
03-19-2007, 04:19 PM
I'm glad I don't live there.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/K/KATRINA_DROPPING_INSURANCE?SITE=NJASB&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Disgusted with his insurance company after Hurricane Katrina, the Rev. Simmie Harvey let his homeowner policy lapse and left his house in the hands of a higher power.

Somebody up there must like the 88-year-old Baptist minister: His newly uninsured house escaped serious damage last month when a tornado ripped through the city's Uptown neighborhood and toppled a tree that narrowly missed his home.

"I wasn't lucky. I'm blessed," he said. "I'm going to be all right. The Lord takes care of me."

Facing soaring premiums or feeling shortchanged by their insurers, a growing number of homeowners and businesses in Louisiana and Mississippi are "going bare," or dropping their coverage altogether, insurance agents and consumer advocates say. Many more are drastically reducing their coverage.

"I have every belief that it's going to be more and more common," said Amy Bach, executive director of the United Policyholders advocacy group. "If it's a choice between eating or paying their insurance bills, of course they're going to eat."

With the new hurricane season beginning June 1, it is a risky strategy. These people could lose everything in a storm or some kind of tragic accident around the house.

"You're basically playing Russian roulette with your most valuable asset," said Robert Hartwig, president and chief economist of the Insurance Information Institute, an industry-funded group.

Elderly homeowners - particularly those on fixed incomes and those who have paid off their mortgages - may be the most likely to go uninsured. Most homeowners don't have that choice, because mortgage companies require borrowers to have insurance. Those whose homes are paid off can drop their policies, unless they are getting government grants or loans that require one.

"Definitely, you'll be seeing more of this," said Bennett Powell, a Metairie insurance agent whose firm sold Harvey his policy.

Exactly how many policyholders are going bare is unclear. The insurance commissioners in Mississippi and Louisiana are not keeping track, and insurers say they do not how many of their former customers are simply buying new policies from a different company.

Shopping around can also be a risky strategy, because homeowners in Louisiana who switch are no longer protected by a state law that bars insurers from canceling policies that have been in effect for three years or longer.

"Do not shop," said Louisiana Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon. "That protection outweighs the advantage of shopping, in my opinion."

Homeowner insurance typically covers wind damage from hurricanes, as well as damage to the home from fires, auto accidents and other misfortunes. It also protects a homeowner if someone gets injured on the property. Along the Gulf Coast, flood insurance is sold separately from homeowner insurance, and made available thorugh a federal program.

Robert Page, a Houma, La.-based insurance agent and president-elect of the National Association of Professional Insurance Agents, said the owners of three large apartment complexes in Houma recently dropped their wind and hail coverage after their premiums doubled. Page said only a few of his thousands of customers have gone completely bare after Katrina.

But "it's only the beginning," he said. "In my opinion, it's going to get worse before it gets better."

Harvey, whose modest ranch-style house has a neat lawn and a long driveway for his black Cadillac, rode out Katrina in his home during the summer of 2005 and only briefly evacuated the city in the storm's chaotic aftermath.

His roughly $1,800 annual premium did not increase significantly after Katrina, but he said he elected to drop his Farmers Insurance Co. policy because the company paid him about $4,000 even though he blames the wind for about $10,000 in damage to his roof.

"If that's all I can get, I don't have any need to get insurance," he said, figuring he is better off saving his money than paying premiums.

In Louisiana, insurance companies raised their homeowner rates an average of 13.2 percent in 2006, according to Amy Whittington, spokeswoman for the Louisiana Insurance Department. Some insurers went far higher.

Many small business owners are feeling the sharpest pinch. The insurer of last resort for many Mississippi homeowners and businesses is the state's "wind pool," and its commercial rates have jumped 268 percent since Katrina.

Tom Simmons, who owns three office buildings in Gulfport, Miss., said he paid $3,070 in premiums for the rental properties before Katrina. Maintaining that level of coverage this year would cost more than $25,000, he said.

Simmons is considering dropping his wind and hail policies but holding onto his fire and liability coverage. Even though none of his properties flooded during Katrina, the thought of heading into the next storm season without wind coverage is "scary as hell."

"The whole darn area is facing this sort of thing," he said. "The insurance companies obviously want out. Maybe they're just pricing us out of the market rather than just saying they're leaving the state."

Jeffrey O'Keefe, president of the Bradford-O'Keefe Funeral Homes on Mississippi's Gulf Coast, already has scaled back his coverage.

Before Katrina, he paid $61,224 in annual premiums to insure five funeral homes, two cemeteries and a crematorium. Renewing that $7 million in coverage would have cost about $781,000, so he reduced his coverage to $2 million. But he is still paying $122,113 in premiums, twice as much as before the storm.

"As a small business owner, it's really putting a hurt on us," he said. "It's a bad problem"

Thesifer
03-19-2007, 07:35 PM
I'm pretty sure I would drop my insurance, if I were still waiting years later for Payout. What's the point in having insurance that never pays out?

Just like car insurance, you end up paying way too much in the end, making them rich.

And then they always look for loopholes to get out of things anyways. like "You aren't covered for this type of disaster, sorry, you're screwed."

renovation
03-19-2007, 08:51 PM
Elderly homeowners - particularly those on fixed incomesI find this to be true for my in-laws in Florida. We are paying 1/2 there because it has just gone out of their reach (it more than doubled in the last year). But they are lucky since their insurance company has still kept them. A lot there have been told you're on your own as the insurance companies either drop them or leave the state after saying good luck. And those people have no choice because insurance companies are not writing any new clients right now in a lot of counties in Florida.

bachviet
03-20-2007, 08:37 AM
My cousin lowers his premium by going with the lowest replacement cost and highest deductible. He lives in FL and he was screwed when one of the storms hit last time (water damage by rain but insurance company said that it was from the flood water).

MrGreg
03-20-2007, 09:39 AM
I would take it as a sign to not live there, but that's just me.

gwilks98
03-20-2007, 10:29 AM
Insurance has gotten way to out of hand. Insurance companies do not tolerate bad years and will screw their policy owners to reclaim lost profit. They get away with it because either the law or the bank requires you to have it.

They really need a profit cap.

MikeD
03-20-2007, 10:31 AM
I would take it as a sign to not live there, but that's just me.

:stupid:

The same could be said about many places along the SE coast.

I would live in some of those places short term, yes. But if you're planning on staying for a long period of time, odds are that you are going to be negatively affected by a hurricane. Hugo, Andrew, Katrina...that's a partial list, and only goes back ~20 years.

It's not a matter of if, but when.

zippyjuan
03-20-2007, 11:21 AM
People are starting to question the value of insurance. Especially if you file a claim and you find that your policy prica has been raised to pay for the cost of that claim- and possibly more. If you end up paying for it anyways, what are the premiums for? I only have replacement property insurance- nothing on my belongings and I am lucky not to need car or life insurance.
Health insurance is another issue. Most people need that.