Claims Estimates for Hurricane Ike Still ‘Fluid,’ Commissioner Says

December 2, 2008

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As of late November, estimates of insured losses from Hurricane Ike, which hit Galveston on Sept. 13, were in the $6 billion to $8 billion range, according to Texas Insurance Commissioner Mike Geeslin. However, Geeslin said those estimates are “fluid,” noting that more a more accurate estimate won’t be known until about the 90-day mark, or mid-December.

“I want to caution anybody that reads this that it’s subject to change as we get more claims development,” Geesin told Insurance Journal.

Geeslin said the Texas Department of Insurance had fielded around 1,800 Ike-related complaints from insurance consumers by late November.

“To put that into perspective, the total for [Hurricane] Rita was right around 2,000, and it was several months post-Rita that that number reached 2,000. So here in a fairly early phase, within the first 90 days, we’re already approaching the levels that Rita was overall. I expect that we’ll continue to get complaints at a pretty steady clip for a while,” Geeslin said.

Still, he says insurance industry resources deployed post-Ike have been well beyond what he saw after Hurricane Rita in September 2005 and this year’s Hurricane Dolly, which hit the far South Texas coast.

“That’s not to say that we don’t have our issues, as evidenced by some of the complaints,” Geeslin said. “But there are a great number of resources being deployed to this state than what I’ve seen in the past.”

During a Texas State Disaster Coalition conference call in mid-November TDI noted that as of the end of September 530,000 Ike claims had been reported in 33 counties.

By Sept. 30 TDI had received 1,500 Hurricane Ike complaints, 649 of which had been closed and 851 were pending. Regulators said of the closed complaints, 162 were justified. Delays in claims handling, unsatisfactory settlement/offer, denial of claim, agent handling and customer service were some of the most common complaint issues. TDI had returned more than $1.8 million to consumers through the complaint process, according to TDI’s Valerie Brown.

Mark Hanna, spokesman for the Insurance Council of Texas, said at mid-November insurers had settled between 50 percent and 80 percent of Ike claims.

He noted that complaints against insurers, both justified and not justified, amounted to only about one half of one percent of the overall Ike claims so far.

“I don’t doubt that the number of complaints will rise when the more difficult claims are dealt with which is usually the case in any weather catastrophe,” Hanna said.

Hanna said the complaint ratio for Hurricane Rita was less than 1 percent and no complaints were reported from 2007′s Hurricane Humberto.

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Latest Comments

  • January 1, 2009 at 6:00 am
    Peon Agent says:
    Avez, Did you parents have a flood policy? It sounds like they had damage from the tidal surge, and that's not covered by a regular home policy. I hope your agent let them kno... read more
  • January 1, 2009 at 12:43 pm
    Avez says:
    Of all the people I know in this area, only 2 have been happy with their insurance company. As an example, my parents, whose home is technically unliveable (no walls or floor... read more
  • December 9, 2008 at 10:45 am
    Peon Agent says:
    Marie, I'm truly sorry that you are experiencing problems, but I know for a fact that everyone has not had a similar experience. I personally know of a LOT of very satisfied c... read more
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