Controversy Over Deductibles May Just Be Beginning

November 19, 2012

When the National Hurricane Center declared Sandy a “post-tropical storm” just before it made landfall, a lot of homeowners across New Jersey, New York, Connecticut and Maryland may have saved a lot of money. The governors of these states have told insurers that because the storm was not classified as a hurricane, the insurers can’t enforce costly hurricane deductibles on storm-related claims.

In recent years, many insurers have added hurricane and wind deductibles that can run as high as 5 percent of the covered value of the homes. So a person who owns a home worth $500,000 suffering hurricane damage would be responsible for as much as $25,000 before the insurer would pay anything.

But while New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced boldly that “homeowners will not have to pay hurricane deductibles,” this does not mean homeowners won’t face any costs.

Some policies carve out wind damage from coverage altogether or levy sizable deductibles for wind damage even if it is not caused by a hurricane. New Jersey regulations prohibit that when it pertains to a hurricane, the state’s Department of Banking and Insurance said.

On the other hand, some states affected by Sandy will allow hurricane deductibles to come into play. In North Carolina, for instance, Sandy was still a hurricane when it passed by the state, said Kerry Hall, spokesperson for the North Carolina Department of Insurance. “Secondly, North Carolina policies use named-storm deductibles instead of hurricane deductibles.”

Furthermore, “insurers may fight this ‘post-tropical’ idea, and say we don’t care what you call it,” said J. Robert Hunter, director of insurance for the Consumer Federation of America, a watchdog group. “We won’t know for a while, because they won’t know for a couple of weeks when they settle a claim.”

That may mean a protracted trip through the courts since insurance contracts typically contain meteorological language that state governors can’t necessarily change by fiat.

If insurers do not apply the deductibles, they may try to recoup costs in other ways.

Robert Hartwig, president of the Insurance Information Institute, said insurance industry officials had meetings with New York’s Department of Financial Services and the governor’s office to convey their point that ultimately the cost of insurance will have to rise as a result of the decision.

“Insurers will comply, but the broader point is that the deductibles help keep the cost of insurance lower in coastal areas,” he said. “The cost to insurers has to be reflected in the price that is charged, and now that has to include the possibility of storms that are hurricanes being re-categorized as ‘post-tropical events.'”

“The unprecedented nature of the storm is going to be something that insurers take a hard look at it, in terms of cost damage, and also in terms of how the pricing works in coastal parts of New York and other areas subject to hurricane deductibles,” he said.

Another battle could brew over “anti-concurrent causation clauses” now contained in many policies, according to Hunter. The language in policies is often ambiguous, which leaves homeowners the opportunity to sue, Hunter said.

Was this article valuable?

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

From This Issue

Insurance Journal Magazine November 19, 2012
November 19, 2012
Insurance Journal Magazine

Top Personal Lines Retail Agencies; Assisted Living / Long Term Care; Contractors & Builders