Florida
Florida passes condominium safety bill in wake of Surfside
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida would require statewide recertification of condominiums over three tales tall underneath a invoice despatched Wednesday to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis by lawmakers, their laws a response to the Surfside constructing collapse that killed 98 individuals.
The Home unanimously handed the invoice throughout a particular session initially known as to handle skyrocketing property insurance coverage charges. The condominium security invoice was added to the agenda Tuesday after an settlement was reached between the Home and Senate.
Recertification could be required after 30 years, or 25 years if the constructing is inside 3 miles (5 kilometers) of the coast, and each 10 years thereafter. The Champlain Towers South was 40 years outdated and was going by the 40-year-recertification course of required by Miami-Dade County when it collapsed final June.
On the time, Miami-Dade and Broward counties had been the one two of the state’s 67 that had condominium recertification applications.
“We have now truly made constructive change figuring out that condominiums can be safer shifting ahead,” mentioned Republican Rep. Daniel Perez.
The invoice would require that condominium associations have adequate reserves to pay for main repairs and conduct a research of the reserves each decade. It might additionally require condominium associations to offer inspection experiences to house owners, and if structural repairs are wanted, work should start inside a 12 months of the report.
Related laws failed through the common session that led to March.
The condominium measure was hooked up to a invoice that might forbid insurers from robotically denying protection due to a roof’s age if the roof is lower than 15 years outdated. Owners with roofs 15 years or older could be allowed to get an inspection earlier than insurers deny them protection.
Whereas some Democratic lawmakers complained that the particular session on insurance coverage didn’t go far sufficient to assist relieve owners, they did reward the addition of the condominium security laws.
“This invoice makes this journey value it, at the very least for me,” mentioned Democratic Rep. Michael Grieco, whose district borders Surfside. “I do know of us who misplaced individuals in that constructing.”
He recalled the primary day households had been allowed to go to the positioning of the collapse.
“To listen to the oldsters screaming into the rubble,” He mentioned. “They had been screaming to individuals who may nonetheless be alive. I am going to always remember that sound.”
Florida
'Cautiously Optimistic' on Florida: Defense Costs Down, but Reinsurance Still a Drag
Analysts with the AM Best financial rating firm and other stakeholders are cautiously optimistic about the resurrection of the Florida property insurance market, 18 months after state lawmakers approved monumental litigation reforms.
That was the sentiment gleaned from a Thursday webinar hosted by the rating company and from an AM Best report on the Florida market, released the same day.
“It’s still a little too early to declare a win in the marketplace, but signals do look promising,” AM Best analyst Josie Novak said.
Notably, since the legislation was enacted in late 2022, direct defense and cost containment expense – considered a key measure of the claims litigation burden on carriers – has dropped sharply. In 2022, Florida carriers reported the highest DCC-to-direct-premiums-earned-ratio of all U.S. states, at 8.4%, for homeowners, allied and fire lines. The next-closest state was Louisiana, at 3.6%, AM Best reported.
By the end of 2023, that measure had been cut in half, falling to about $307 million for the 47 insurers that write most of the Florida market, including the state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp., but excluding some major national carriers.
“While still early, a downward trend has been observed, indicating the reform has positively impacted results,” the report noted.
While 2023 was a year that saw only one relatively minor hurricane hit Florida, claims and defense costs would have been two to three times higher under under Florida’s pre-reform statutory regime, which had allowed assignments of benefits and one-way attorney fees, said Randy Fuller, the Florida leader for Guy Carpenter, the global reinsurance firm.
Another sign of health in the patient: The combined ratio for Florida-focused carriers, excluding Citizens, dropped to the break-even mark in 2023, outpacing AM Best’s national property insurance composite measure. Citizens’ combined ratio fell to less than 81%.
“These are results that have not been seen since the earlier part of the latest decade,” the report noted.
The expense ratio for the Florida specialists fell to about 26%, down from a high of 35% in 2019. Loss-reserve development for Florida insurance carriers also is showing promise, with favorable numbers for the first time in years, AM Best said.
Florida carriers also added significantly to policyholder surplus last year – without major cash infusions. From 2019 to 2023, the Florida-focused insurers, including those that became insolvent, received $2.6 billion in capital contributions, but surplus grew by just $239 million, the analysis showed.
But in 2023, surplus had jumped by $532 million and that was was not dependent on capital contributions.
The news about the reinsurance market was a little more of a mixed bag. After three years of turmoil, spiking reinsurance rates, limits on coverage and higher retention levels, the 2024 renewals for most Florida carriers seem to be “incredibly stable,” Fuller said.
The legislative changes have created some optimism among most reinsurers, analysts said.
But reinsurance costs are still weighing heavily on insurers, and Florida carriers have a much higher dependency on reinsurance than insurers in other parts of the country – almost 10 times the national average, the AM Best report noted. From 2019 to 2023, unaffiliated ceded premium for the Florida insurers more than doubled, from $3.1 billion to $6.4 billion.
Although many carriers have sharply raised rates for policyholders in recent years, the growth in direct premium written has not kept pace with the growth in ceded premium, the report found.
“The materially higher position indicates greater direct risk borne by Florida specialists, necessitating more effective risk transfer, underwriting, pricing, and risk exposure management,” the report said.
Still, other signs point to improved market conditions, including modest rate decrease requests from several insurers and the approval of eight new carriers for Florida this year. Most of those new companies are reciprocal exchanges, a model that some insurance agents until recently had been unfamiliar with, said Dave Newell, vice president of membership and industry relations for the Florida Association of Insurance Agents.
But once the model was explained to agents, “they have become more comfortable with it,” Newell said in the virtual conference.
The full report can be seen here.
Topics
Florida
Trends
Reinsurance
Florida
Florida Democratic lawmaker reacts to Trump’s verdict
WESTON, Fla. – After a jury found former President Donald Trump guilty Thursday, U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz released a statement saying no one is about the law in the United States.
From Weston, Wasserman Schultz, a Democrat who supports President Joe Biden’s re-election, did not question the legitimacy of the hush-money conviction in New York City.
“No matter what Trump says, a jury determined the facts in this case were clear beyond a reasonable doubt. Yet like any felon, he can appeal this conviction,” Wasserman Schultz wrote.
She also referenced other cases Trump is fighting and accused him of trying to overturn the last election and added that the conviction “affirms that the rich and powerful – and even ex-presidents – still face accountability in America.”
President Joe Biden’s campaign distributed a fundraising appeal after the verdict saying, “We’re THRILLED that justice has finally been served, but this convicted criminal can STILL win back the presidency this fall without a huge surge in Democratic support.”
Copyright 2024 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.
Florida
Spring Break In Florida Was Way Different When I Was Young – Town-Crier Newspaper
The Sonic BOOMER
My uncle owned a motorcycle store in Broward back when Fort Lauderdale was the exotic vacation destination for college-age spring breakers. This was before Cancun, Cabo San Lucas and Jamaica took over. Back when I was in college, a lot of kids like me paid their own tuition and, therefore, sought out a sunny location that met their primary requirement of being within hitchhiking range.
I didn’t hitchhike to Fort Lauderdale but saved up for two years so I could fly. My cost-saving plan was to take off on a wing and a prayer with a 21-year-old, first-time pilot, who had tacked an index card onto the campus bulletin board. It would be him, two of his friends, two more strangers and me.
Long story short? The weather was so horrific that the control tower sent us out over the gulf so that our inevitable crash wouldn’t be into houses. I may have had a near-death experience before we landed. And then, even though he’d taken my round-trip airfare, the pilot “ran out of money” and re-sold my seat, leaving Florida early without me. Fun times.
But you know, kids. Resilient. I had a place to stay (my uncle’s), so I figured I’d get my refund when I got back to Milwaukee. No sweat. Also, no refund.
But we must return to my story after that 100-word essay detour to What-I-Did-On-My-College-Spring-Break Land.
My uncle owned a motorcycle shop. And, because of that, our family was into motorcycles. Both my brothers became absolute fanatics after working for him a few summers, and even I had a bright yellow 60 cc scooter.
My youngest brother (rapidly approaching retirement age) currently owns a paint and body shop where he has pre-painted more than 30 motorcycle gas tanks in preparation for the idyllic gear-head decades stretching ahead of him. He can’t wait.
My other brother Jim (an unsung creative genius) took a full-size Triumph cycle, “sliced” it in half horizontally with a piece of tempered glass and turned it into a coffee table. As a bonus, there was a one-of-a-kind table lamp which revved to life when you pressed down on the accelerator.
My two brothers displayed these companion pieces of art in a Wisconsin bar during a cycle show, and Jim was immediately offered $30,000 for the set on opening day ($50,000 in today’s money). However, because he’s an artist, he turned that down because “they’re not really for sale” and “anyway, no one has seen them yet.” This museum-quality mentality almost cost him a divorce, in addition to 30 grand.
As for me, I had a great time on my scooter. I didn’t give it up until I flopped my helmet onto my ob/gyn’s examination table at eight-and-a-half months pregnant, and he gently suggested I garage the bike for a while. I ended up selling it because (as he already knew, and I didn’t), it’s not really safe to cram an infant into a wire basket and take off.
Sometimes it’s hard being a girl.
-
News1 week ago
The states where abortion is on the ballot in November : Consider This from NPR
-
News1 week ago
Read Prosecutors’ Filing on Mar-a-Lago Evidence in Trump Documents Case
-
Politics1 week ago
Michael Cohen swore he had nothing derogatory on Trump, his ex-lawyer says – another lie – as testimony ends
-
Politics1 week ago
Anti-Israel agitators interrupt Blinken Senate testimony, hauled out by Capitol police
-
World1 week ago
Serbian parliamentary minnow pushes for 'Russian law' equivalent
-
World1 week ago
Who is Ali Bagheri Kani, Iran’s acting foreign minister?
-
Technology1 week ago
Microsoft’s new Windows Copilot Runtime aims to win over AI developers
-
News1 week ago
Buy-now, pay-later returns and disputes are about to get federal oversight