Florida Insurance Consumer Advocate Robin Westcott Offers Criticism, Recommendations on Citizens Property Insurance Inspection Program

Jul 26, 2012

 

The Sun Sentinel reported today, July 26, 2012, that, in addition to critical remarks, Florida Insurance Consumer Advocate Robin Westcott made several recommendations pertaining to Citizens Property Insurance Corporation (“Citizens”) ongoing Mitigation Inspection and Outreach Program at a committee meeting this morning.  Those included:

  • That Citizens should rewrite information sent to consumers with “plain language”
  • That Citizens should require inspectors to pull permits and provide detailed information to policyholders before the inspections
  • That Citizens should provide space for policyholders’ comments on forms filled out during the inspections
  • That Citizens should inform policyholders of why specifically they don’t qualify for a certain discount so they can consider making the appropriate upgrades

A complete report is forthcoming from a Colodny Fass& Webb representative in attendance.  To access a preview of today’s meetings, click here.

The Sun Sentinel blog detailing Ms. Westcott’s remarks is reprinted below.

 

Should you have any questions or comments, please contact Colodny Fass& Webb.

 

Blog:  Consumer advocate slams Citizens insurance over inspections

By Julie Patel, Sun Sentinel “House Keys” Blog

 

Insurance Consumer Advocate Robin Westcott on Thursday criticized Citizens Property Insurance’s push to inspect homes and revoke discounts for hurricane-resistant features.

“Hardening of homes is the only way Floridians have to help control…the spiraling cost of insurance in this state,” she said. “The more they hear, ‘I didn’t get anything for doing that,’ the less they’re going to” make upgrades.

Westcott said the inspections are also hurting the state’s housing market: “You might get to the closing table [to find out] you can’t afford to buy that house anymore because the insurance is going to be greater than you expected. We’ve heard a lot of realtors say potential sales go away.”

Westcott recommended, among other things, that Citizens rewrite information sent to consumers with “plain language;” require inspectors to pull permits and provide detailed information to policyholders before the inspections; provide space for policyholders’ comments on forms filled out during the inspections; and inform policyholders of why specifically they don’t qualify for a certain discount so they can consider making the right upgrades.

Carol Everhart, a Citizens board member and the committee’s leader, asked Westcott to help Citizens draft a brochure to make the process easier to understand. Citizens’ employees plan to research some of Westcott’s other recommendations before bringing proposals back to board members for consideration.

Westcott said her office is also concerned about a proposal to raise new Citizens policyholders’ rates by more than its current cap of 10 percent a year and reduce coverage for water losses to $15,000. The insurer’s board plans to vote on the proposals at a meeting in Miami Friday.

Complaints about inspections

Westcott described a consumer who had three inspections done by Citizens’ contractors and each had a different result. One inspector pulled permits and took a photo of roof clips to help the consumer score discounts. The other two did not pull the permit and wrote “other” instead of noting the clips were there. “What is ‘other’? Well, they lost all of their credits,” she said.

“That is unfair,” she said. “We are not doing the right thing by the consumer here.”

She also said many consumers have windows with etchings on them that prove they’re hurricane resistant if they’re looked up at Home Depot. “It’s discoverable…Just because it’s not bloody obvious, [doesn’t mean] they’re not entitled to the discount,” she said.

Westcott said the state has gotten complaints about inspections from consumers, bankers, real estate agents, inspectors, public adjusters and others. We’ll note how many complaints the state has received when we get the information.

Citizens said only 3 percent of policyholders who had inspections done disputed them and only 1 percent received additional discounts after disputing the findings.

Are inspectors told to remove discounts?

Westcott questioned what Citizens is telling the inspectors. “We’ve got some folks out there that either aren’t doing it correctly or are doing it under instructions to take the credit away,” she said.

Citizens’ executives said the insurer is doing the inspections so premiums and discounts are based on accurate information, not to raise premiums. “By no means, [are there] any instructions…to take away wind mitigation credits,” said Yong Gilroy, Citizen’s chief insurance officer. “We’re trying to do all the right things” but Citizens employees have to balance what regulators, policyholders, board members and elected officials want.

Some policyholders have asked whether inspectors receive financial incentives for taking discounts away. Citizens Spokeswoman Christine Ashburn said, “Absolutely not.”

Citizens’ board meeting is Friday at 9 a.m. at the Marriott Hotel, 11099 Brickell Ave., Miami.

 

 

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