TALLAHASSEE,
Fla. -- March 31, 2006 -- Condominium associations
covered by Citizens Property Insurance should brace
themselves for an average statewide rate increase of
about 20 percent in the coming months.
At
a meeting in Tallahassee, Citizens' board on Thursday
approved a rate-increase request from its staff and
will submit it to state regulators, said Justin
Glover, Citizens' spokesperson.
Condo
associations will have a chance to voice their
concerns about this increase at public hearings that
insurance regulators will call once Citizens has
submitted its filing. State law requires public
hearings when an insurer requests a rate hike
averaging more than 15 percent.
The
state-run insurer of last resort covers 36,554 condo
associations statewide, with more than half of that
exposure -- 20,749 policies -- in South Florida. These
policies generally cover the building structures.
Citizens
must increase its condo association rates now because
the Australian company QBE Insurance Group has just
begun raising its rates by an average of 38 percent,
and state law requires Citizens to charge the highest
rates. This measure is designed to encourage consumers
and businesses to shop around for a private insurer
rather than turn to Citizens.
Condo
associations are already reeling from double-digit
rate increases in recent years as well as
hurricane-related expenses.
Anticipating
the hikes, Joseph Buerk, president of the 61-unit
Seacrest Towers Condominium Association in Pompano
Beach, insisted on doubling the budget for insurance,
from last year's $47,000 to the current $90,000 a
year, for its QBE premiums.
That
comes to about $1,500 per unit. Individual owners
usually get additional insurance to cover the
interiors of their units, and they have been hit with
increases as well.
"Something
has got to be done," he said Thursday. "It's
ridiculous, the costs are so high."
The
market for condominium association insurance, already
tight before the 2004 hurricane season, has clamped
down even more. Citizens and QBE are among a handful
of companies still writing this coverage.
Southern
Family, a unit of the Poe Financial Group, has been
selling condo association coverage as well. But the
company announced earlier this month that it will
cancel policies as they come up for renewal because of
its financial problems since the 2004 storms. That
means more policies will be flowing into the Citizens'
pool.
In
another action, Citizens' board also approved changes
to its underwriting guidelines that will give owners
of older homes a break. Surcharges on policies will be
removed for homeowners who retrofit their homes and
bring them up to the current building code.
Surcharges
on these older homes ranged from 1 percent for a
20-year house to 20 percent on homes more than 40
years old.
Copyright
© 2006, The Miami Herald, Beatrice E. Garcia.
Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.
Miami Herald staff writer Donna Gehrke-White
contributed to this report.