Litigation Relief Needed for TWIA Depop Program to Work, Lawmakers Say

By | September 7, 2015

A new law that became effective Sept. 1 in Texas will give the state’s property insurer of last resort for wind and hail along the coast more leeway in its plan to reduce overall exposure by incenting private insurers to take out some of its policies.

But some say the current post-catastrophe litigation environment in the state will hamper the efforts by the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association to reduce the number of policyholders on its books.

Passed by the Texas Legislature this year Senate Bill 900 grants the Texas Department of Insurance and the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association “the authority to develop a formal depopulation or ‘takeout’ program,” according to a summary of the bill on TWIA’s website.

The idea is to allow private insurance companies to take out large numbers of TWIA policies, rather than one at a time.

We’re not trying to give the industry a free pass, but we can’t have this current situation that we have right now.

“Policyholders are guaranteed rates and coverages comparable to TWIA’s for the first year. Take out insurers must offer to renew the policy for three years and policyholders will maintain their ability to keep their own agent, and even to choose to stay with TWIA if they desire,” TWIA says.

The association was slammed with lawsuits following Hurricane Ike in 2008, causing TWIA’s overall cost from the storm to climb from an expected $1.5 billion to more than $2.7 billion, according to state Sen. Larry Taylor of Friendswood.

Speaking as part of a panel at the 2015 Mid-Year Property & Casualty Insurance Symposium held by the Insurance Council of Texas in early July, Taylor said many of those lawsuits were over claims filed several years after the storm and many concerned claims that had previously been settled and paid.

House Bill 3, passed in 2011, aimed to curtail such practices by limiting the amount of time both claims and litigation could be filed against TWIA.

However, those limitations don’t apply to private property insurers in the state.

In recent years, there has been a noticeable uptick in litigation against property insurers over claims related to hailstorm events. As in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, much of the litigation has been over claims that have been settled and paid, according to Steve Badger, an attorney with Zelle Hofmann Voelbel & Mason LLP in Dallas.

An attempt was made this year to pass legislation aimed at limiting lawsuits against insurers following widespread events like hailstorms and wildfires. But after being passed by the full Senate and the House Insurance Committee, Senate Bill 1628 by Sen. Taylor was never considered by the full House of Representatives.

“TWIA is not getting the lawsuits from those hailstorms; it’s the private carriers that are getting hit. … So I know it [the legislation] works,” Taylor said during the ICT symposium.

The purpose of the depopulation section of SB 900 “is to create a mechanism. … This should make it easier for the private market to go in and negotiate for a batch of policies all at one time,” said state Rep. Ken Sheets, who represents District 107 in North Texas.

Sheets had filed a TWIA depopulation bill in the House, HB 3204, which he said was brought to him by several parties, including the association.

“We offered it as a standalone bill and wanted to get it moving. We saw this bill [SB 900] as an opportunity to get it heard and get it into law,” said Sheets, who also participated on the panel at the ICT Symposium.

SB 900 should “make it easier for the industry to get these policies into the private market. It offers protections for consumers — the policies have got to be comparably priced, it’s got to be with a financially stable company and there are certain protections for three years,” Sheets said.

Like Taylor, Sheets said a resolution to the litigation situation is necessary for the depopulation program to really work.

“We have to put some protection in there for the private industry while protecting the consumer. We’re not trying to give the industry a free pass, but we can’t have this current situation that we have right now,” he said.

Danny Saenz, a deputy commissioner at TDI and a participant in the ITC panel discussion, said SB 900 creates “better certainty … and viability for TWIA in order to be able to protect consumers.”

He agreed, however, that for “depopulation to really work and be successful, you’re going to put some kind of litigation control in place.”

TDI will do what is necessary to put regulations in place, but “for the industry to really buy into it and get into the marketplace and start writing some of those coverages along the coast, I think you’ve gotta’ have some type litigation reform,” Saenz said.

Topics Lawsuits Catastrophe Carriers Texas Legislation Claims

Was this article valuable?

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

From This Issue

Insurance Journal Magazine September 7, 2015
September 7, 2015
Insurance Journal Magazine

Surplus Lines: State of the Market / NAPSLO Issue; Lloyd’s Syndicate Spotlight