Current:Home > ScamsWildfire-prone California to consider new rules for property insurance pricing -Dynamic Money Growth
Wildfire-prone California to consider new rules for property insurance pricing
View
Date:2025-04-12 12:29:38
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A new plan from California’s insurance commissioner aims to stop the nation’s top insurers from leaving the wildfire-prone state by letting them consider climate risks when setting their prices.
Unlike most states, California tightly restricts how insurance companies can price policies. Companies aren’t allowed to factor in current or future risks when deciding how much to charge for an insurance policy. Instead, they can only consider what’s happened in the past on a property to set the price.
At a time when climate change is making wildfires, floods and windstorms more common, insurers say that restriction is making it increasingly difficult for them to truly price the risk on properties. It’s one reason why, in the past year, seven of California’s top insurance companies have paused or restricted new business in the state.
A recent report from First Street Foundation said about one-quarter of all homes in the nation are underpriced for climate risk in insurance.
On Thursday, California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara said the state will write new rules to let insurers look to the future when setting their rates. But companies will only get to do this if they agree to write more policies for homeowners who live in areas with the most risk — including communities threatened by wildfires.
“Everyone is harmed if an insurance company goes insolvent because it cannot pay its claims,” Lara said at a news conference.
The American Property Casualty Insurance Association, which represents insurers, called Lara’s actions “the first steps of many needed to address the deterioration” of the market.
“California’s 35-year-old regulatory system is outdated, cumbersome and fails to reflect the increasing catastrophic losses consumers and businesses are facing from inflation, climate change, extreme weather and more residents living in wildfire prone areas,” Denni Ritter, vice president for state government relations, said in a statement.
The rule change could mean higher rates for homeowners who are already seeing dramatic increases. But looking to the future to set rates doesn’t have to always be pessimistic. Insurers can also consider the billions of dollars the state has spent to better manage forests and make homes more resistant to wildfires — all things insurers aren’t allowed to consider when setting rates under the current rules. They could also consider things like whether power lines have been put under ground in an effort to reduce risk.
‘I think something had to give,” said Amy Bach, executive director of United Policyholders, a national insurance consumer organization. “We’ll have to see what happens to rates.”
Other states already let insurers do this, most notably Florida, although that state does have restrictions on how much they can do it. States with less regulated insurance markets have insurers who build current and future events into their models.
Some consumer groups, including the nonprofit Consumer Watchdog in California, say they are not opposed to insurance companies using a model to look to the future to set their rates. But they want to see what is in that model. It’s not clear if California’s new rules will allow that. State regulators will spend much of the next year deciding what the rule will be.
—-
Associated Press writer Ken Sweet contributed from New York.
veryGood! (4349)
Related
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Biden to award Medal of Honor to Army helicopter pilot who rescued soldiers in a Vietnam firefight
- Diana Ross sings Happy Birthday to Beyoncé during the Los Angeles stop of her Renaissance tour
- Seal thanks daughter Leni 'for making me a better person' in rare Instagram photo together
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Burning Man 2023: See photos of the burning of the Man at Nevada’s Black Rock Desert
- North Carolina’s transportation secretary is retiring; the chief operating officer will succeed him
- Patriots' Jack Jones reaches deal with prosecutors to drop weapons charges
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- New York AG seeks legal sanctions against Trump as part of $250M lawsuit
Ranking
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Best back-to-school tech: Does your kid need a laptop? Can they use AI?
- The US sent cluster munitions to Ukraine but activists still seek to bolster a treaty banning them
- Keke Palmer and Darius Jackson Dance the Night Away at Beyoncé's Tour After Romance Drama
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Suspect on the loose after brutally beating, sexually assaulting university student
- Danelo Cavalcante press conference livestream: Police share update on escaped Pennsylvania prisoner
- Stock market today: Asian shares fall back amid selling of China property shares
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
The Twitter Menswear Guy is still here, he doesn't know why either
Alex Murdaugh’s lawyers want a new trial. They say the court clerk told jurors not to trust him
Pier collapses at University of Wisconsin terrace, sending dozens into lake, video shows
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Wait times to exit Burning Man drop after flooding left tens of thousands stranded in Nevada desert
Suspect on the loose after brutally beating, sexually assaulting university student
Fire destroys bowling alley in North Dakota town