A U.S. Senate committee looks at insurance, including Florida’s Citizens Property Insurance

Share
Citizens Property Insurance

©2024 The News Service of Florida

The U.S. Senate Budget Committee, which in the past several months has raised questions about the finances of Florida’s Citizens Property Insurance Corp., will hold a hearing Wednesday about how climate change is affecting insurance markets.

The hearing, which will be held in Washington, D.C., is titled “Riskier Business: How Climate is Already Challenging Insurance Markets.”

The committee, led by Chair Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., requested a wide range of information from Citizens in November and followed with another request in March that seized on a comment by Gov. Ron DeSantis that Citizens was not “solvent.”

A March news release from the Senate committee said its probe of Citizens “built on two previous, still ongoing investigations into the insurance industry’s response to climate change amid the committee’s growing concerns about the economy-wide harms from a spiraling insurance affordability and availability crisis.”

But Citizens officials have pushed back against Whitehouse’s assertions, including that Citizens might have to seek federal assistance to pay claims if it faced catastrophic losses.

Citizens was created by the state as an insurer of last resort but has grown to become Florida’s largest property insurer.

During a December meeting of the Citizens Board of Governors, President and CEO Tim Cerio said a November letter from Whitehouse could cause “unwarranted panic” among Citizens policyholders and Floridians.

“I cannot over-emphasize that the assumptions in the Budget Committee’s letter suggest a fundamental misunderstanding of how Citizens Property Insurance operates, and it under-estimates our claims-paying ability,” Cerio said. “And I’m speaking now, and I need to speak to our policyholders so they hear this, Citizens is structured so it will always be able to protect its policyholders and pay claims.”

You may also like

school classroom
Pasco County schools push for parent involvement in reviewing new science textbooks

Listen: Florida schools are reconsidering what science textbooks will go...

St. Pete non-profit rallies organizations for International Day of Peace

Justin Lucci has experienced a lot of change in the...

The Scoop: Fri. Sep. 6th, 2024, Tampa Bay and Florida headlines by WMNF

Pollution is still happening in Sarasota Bay and in Manatee...

Florida’s super soaker drags on and the flood risk increases

Drive safely and stay away from flooded roads and flood...

Ways to listen

WMNF is listener-supported. That means we don't advertise like a commercial station, and we're not part of a university.

Ways to support

WMNF volunteers have fun providing a variety of needed services to keep your community radio station alive and kickin'.

Follow us on Instagram

The Saturday Night House Party
Player position: