About 200 homeowners demanded aggressive action to curb Florida’s soaring insurance costs last week at a state meeting on insurance reform.
“When your CEOs are making $26 billion a year, we need to make some changes,” said Ginny Stevans, president of Homeowners Against Citizens, a group protesting skyrocketing insurance costs at the state-created insurer of last resort.
Citizens Property Insurance Corp. has become the state’s largest insurer as private companies fled in the wake of the back-to-back storms of the 2004-05 hurricane seasons.
During the seven hour meeting last Thursday, the state’s Property and Casualty Insurance Reform Committee focused on increasing ire against Citizens.
“If Citizens is not going to function as the insurer of last resort, we need to look at getting rid of it,” said state Rep. Kim Berfield, R-Clearwater.
The committee also discussed lengthening the amount of notice an insurer must give before dropping a policyholder.
“The governor is very interested in any solutions we come up with,” said Lt. Gov. Toni Jennings, the committee’s chairwoman.
Topics Homeowners
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Experian Launches Insurance Marketplace App on ChatGPT
How One Fla. Insurance Agent Allegedly Used Another’s License to Swipe Commissions
Trump’s Repeal of Climate Rule Opens a ‘New Front’ for Litigation
Insurify Starts App With ChatGPT to Allow Consumers to Shop for Insurance 

