STATE FARM ASKS PERMISSION TO JACK UP INSURANCE RATES 22% TO MAKE UP FOR L.A.FIRES.
(ZH)California’s largest home insurer asked the state’s insurance department for a 22 percent emergency rate hike Feb. 3 after receiving thousands of claims following Los Angeles County’s catastrophic wildfires last month.
“State Farm helps people recover from the unexpected,” the company wrote in a press release Monday. “That is what we are doing in the wake of the wildfires.”
As of Saturday, the company had received more than 8,700 homeowners claims and paid more than $1 billion to customers after the Palisades and Eaton fires that started Jan. 7.
The fires killed at least 29 people and destroyed more than 16,000 homes and other buildings in what is expected to be the costliest fire in California’s history.
Damages and economic losses from the fires are expected to reach more than $250 billion, surpassing fire losses for the entire 2020 wildfire season in California, according to an AccuWeather estimate.
State Farm expects to ultimately pay out significantly more, as collectively these fires will be the costliest disasters in the history of the company, according to the statement.
The insurer asked the California Department of Insurance to immediately approve interim rate increases to help avert a “dire situation” for more than 2.8 million state policy holders, including 1 million State Farm homeowner customers.
If approved, the rate changes would be effective after May 1 for customers who renew their policies, according to the company.
“Insurance will cost more for customers in California going forward because the risk is greater in California,” State Farm wrote in the statement.
GRA:So 2.8 million customers are going to pay for 8,700 claims? What about all the profits State Farm made over the years? That should be set aside for situations like this. But nooooo-- "save us"---they say.
You can tell a democrat by the four letter word they use--over and over and over again.
ReplyDelete--GRA
STATE FARM ASKS PERMISSION TO JACK UP INSURANCE RATES 22% TO MAKE UP FOR L.A.FIRES.
ReplyDelete(ZH)California’s largest home insurer asked the state’s insurance department for a 22 percent emergency rate hike Feb. 3 after receiving thousands of claims following Los Angeles County’s catastrophic wildfires last month.
“State Farm helps people recover from the unexpected,” the company wrote in a press release Monday. “That is what we are doing in the wake of the wildfires.”
As of Saturday, the company had received more than 8,700 homeowners claims and paid more than $1 billion to customers after the Palisades and Eaton fires that started Jan. 7.
The fires killed at least 29 people and destroyed more than 16,000 homes and other buildings in what is expected to be the costliest fire in California’s history.
Damages and economic losses from the fires are expected to reach more than $250 billion, surpassing fire losses for the entire 2020 wildfire season in California, according to an AccuWeather estimate.
State Farm expects to ultimately pay out significantly more, as collectively these fires will be the costliest disasters in the history of the company, according to the statement.
The insurer asked the California Department of Insurance to immediately approve interim rate increases to help avert a “dire situation” for more than 2.8 million state policy holders, including 1 million State Farm homeowner customers.
If approved, the rate changes would be effective after May 1 for customers who renew their policies, according to the company.
“Insurance will cost more for customers in California going forward because the risk is greater in California,” State Farm wrote in the statement.
GRA:So 2.8 million customers are going to pay for 8,700 claims? What about all the profits State Farm made over the years? That should be set aside for situations like this. But nooooo-- "save us"---they say.
--GRA