Condo buildings with uninsurable roofs to get
Citizens' coverage as they pursue replacement
Citizens staff proposed that
high-risk buildings would be eligible offered coverage only if a
roof replacement contract was in place, with a deposit paid.
Insuring them during the transition period. |
Article Courtesy of The Palm Beach Post
By Anne Geggis
Published July 16, 2024
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Condominium buildings with roofs too old or too
damaged to qualify for insurance will get some relief — the state’s
insurer of last resort has agreed to cover the buildings if certain
conditions are met.
Condos, mostly, and other commercial buildings were previously able to
get insurance through the commercial insurance market for these risks.
But the hardening underwriting market has left a gap, leaving some
buildings uninsurable, said Jay Adams, chief insurance officer of
Citizens Property Insurance Corp., in speaking to the Actuarial and
Underwriting Committee of Citizens Board of Governors.
The Citizens staff proposed that high-risk buildings would be offered
coverage only if a roof-replacement contract was in place, with a
deposit paid. Insuring them during the transition period — meaning the
time period while the roof gets replaced — will ultimately make it more
likely the buildings will be able to get back into the commercial
market, and off Citizens' rolls, Adams said.
Citizens' action arrives at a time when older condominiums are getting
increased scrutiny, including new requirements to pass building
inspections and undergo studies of condo associations’ solvency. The
added rules were passed in the wake of the 2021 Surfside condo collapse
after it was revealed that bickering and financial issues among the
condo's board and residents delayed repairs that may have prevented the
building's collapse and the deaths of 98 people.
Some on the actuarial and underwriting committee of Citizens’ board,
which updates the state-created company's business lines according to
recent legislation and oversees contracts, had questions about what kind
of financial exposure this offer of transitional insurance to buildings
undergoing roof repairs could mean for the state’s insurer of last
resort. Citizens, they pointed out, by its nature already writes
policies too risky for private insurers take on.
Carlos Beruff, chairman of the Citizens Board of Governors, noted that
condo associations of 200, 300 and 400 people have a great deal of sway
in Tallahassee.
“The pressure is … on us to write these uninsurable buildings, because
these are well-organized condominium associations,” Beruff said. “Some
of them are pretty expensive buildings, and all of a sudden, we're
picking up the pieces. It sounds good when it's working, but it's going
to clean our clock when it's not.”
Board members asked how many buildings would fit the criteria described
in this update of rules, but the question went unanswered. The measure
was approved without comment at the full Citizens Board of Governors
meeting in Lake Mary Wednesday.
A spokesperson for Citizens said this new, transitional line of business
will cover everything, but the roof-in-progress will mean coverage for
these buildings is more defined.
"The thought was, it makes a more clear distinction of what's covered
and what's not," said the spokesperson, Michael Peltier.
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