Showing posts with label homeowners insurance North Carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeowners insurance North Carolina. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

The Consent To Rate Form - In North Carolina This Is A Big Red Flag

More and more insurance companies are sending out a consent to rate letter, also called a consent to rate form to their North Carolina Auto Insurance and North Carolina Homeowners Insurance policyholders. The letter may seem like harmless little form that you sign and return but it isn’t. In fact it should be a big red warning flag to you about your insurance company and your status with them. Alarm bells should be going off in your head and there are a few things you will want to understand before you sign anything.

To understand what a consent to rate letter is and how it works, you must first understand a little bit about how auto insurance and home insurance rates are established in North Carolina. You see, all rates for these policies have to be approved by the NC Insurance Commissioners office. In most all cases, the Insurance Commissioner sets the maximum rates allowed for a North Carolina auto insurance policy and a North Carolina home insurance policy. The various insurance companies then create their own many rate tiers for their policies by deviating, or reducing their rates to something below the maximum allowed rate which is often referred to as the state rate.

What a consent to rate letter does is ask you to give the insurance company permission to charge you rates on your policy that exceed the state maximums. When you sign and return this letter you are essentially giving your ok to be charged rates higher than those established by your insurance commissioner.

Why would the insurance company want to charge you rates above those allowed by the commissioner’s office? Well there are really only two reasons. One is a macro reason and the other is micro in nature. Let me explain.

The macro reason means that the company is doing this for either all or many of its clients. We are seeing this with the North Carolina Homeowners policies from some companies who have too much exposure to possible storm assessments as a result of the beach plan insurance crisis. To read my latest blog about that, please click here.

The micro reason would be that the insurance company has singled you out as a client that they find too risky to insure at their usual rates. Before they can accept you as a customer and issue your policy, they have to know that they can charge you more than the state maximum rates.

Either way, a consent to rate letter is bad news for you as a customer of that insurance company. It implies that either your company is having some difficulties or that you are a bad risk. The implications for you are that you may be seeking insurance from the wrong company. You may not be a good fit for that company for a whole host of reasons. With so many other insurance companies out there, all fighting for your business, your best course of action may be to seek insurance elsewhere.

Before you sign and return any consent to rate letter, you should get an informed second opinion. At Clinard Insurance Group in Winston Salem, NC, we work hard to make sure that our clients and friends are well informed insurance consumers. We can help you better understand what that consent to rate letter means for you. Call us, toll free at 877-687-7557 for any help you may need with your North Carolina auto insurance, home insurance, umbrella insurance or even life insurance. We can give you an informed second opinion on your insurance questions.

The source material for this article was drawn from information found at www.insuranceanswerguy.com.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

All North Carolina homeowners now face a personal burden for beach house hurricane losses.

The North Carolina State Legislature is crafting legislation, House Bill 1305, that will push the burden of catastrophic hurricane losses of beach property on to the backs of all unsuspecting property owners statewide. While there are some positive changes in this legislation, it feels like to me that they are sticking it to the people who are not there watching this legislation be made, and that is all the people who own property in North Carolina that is not coastal property.

The good news here is that the NC legislature has finally admitted that the North Carolina Beach Plan is broken and needs a fix. The Beach Plan insures $75 billion worth of property in coastal areas and has a meager $1.5 billion in reinsurance and reserves to pay claims. Clearly if a large storm hits our coast, there will not be enough money to pay the claims. To find out how we got to this point and read more details of this problem, click here.

The major parties working on this legislation are the coastal property owners and their lawmakers and the insurance companies. Right now, if a storm hits and the beach plan goes under, the bill must be paid by all the insurance companies doing business in North Carolina writing homeowners insurance and other property insurance including commercial property policies. This assessment is presently unlimited and this unlimited exposure is scaring the insurance companies in North Carolina into taking dramatic action which impacts all of their policyholders. One drastic example is the consent to rate letters that some major insurance companies are now sending to their homeowners policyholders.

House Bill 1305 which sailed through the house on July 15th will take care of some of the uncertainty for the insurance companies. Right now the insurance companies face the uncertainty of unlimited assessments to bail out the Beach Plan after a major storm. If this bill becomes law, then their assessments will be limited to $1 billion per storm. Still quite a lot of money but now it is a number that they can plan for. So all in all, I think the insurance company lobby did a pretty good job of getting what they wanted.

But if you add another billion dollars to the amount available for a major storm, you will see that we still now have only $2.5 billion to protect over $75 billion in assets. So where does the rest of the money come from? Well the biggest chunk is a new storm assessment that can be added to every property insurance policy in North Carolina. If this bill becomes law, and we have a major storm, then you can expect to see an extra charge added to your homeowners insurance of up to 10%. And it is unclear in the wording of the bill as to whether or not that is a one time charge or can go on and on until the Beach Plan is made whole again. The open ended nature of the wording leads me to believe that this charge could remain on your policy for years and years to come.

Those owning property at the coast, who are insured through the Beach Plan, will have to give up something as well. In the event of a major storm, they will face a deductible of no less than 1% of the total value of the property. There is a clause that allows for even higher deductible percentages if needed.

I disagree with the legislators who say that our coastal property is a state treasure for all of us and all of us living in this state should be on the hook to support the coast. I think that the fairest solution is to raise the rates on beach property to more accurately reflect the risks and let those who own property or rent property at the beach carry the burden. In South Carolina the Beach Plan rates are about 10 times what ours are and their Beach Plan is adequately funded. This is the fairest way to handle this problem. In all cases of insurance, the system works best when those in control of the exposure are the ones who pay for the insurance.

At Clinard Insurance Group in Winston Salem, NC we work hard to make sure that all of our clients are informed insurance consumers. If you have any questions about how this might affect your homeowners insurance policy, or if you need any other help with any of your insurance policies, please call our office, toll free, at 877-687-7557 or visit us online at www.ClinardInsurance.com.

The source information for this article was taken from www.insuranceanswerguy.com.