Monday, February 21, 2022

PROPERTY INSURANCE RATES ON THE RISE IN LOUISIANA!




Monday, February 14th, 2022

Baton Rouge, Louisiana

 MAJOR PROPERTY INSURANCE RATES ON THE RISE IN LOUISIANA!

Louisiana homeowners know a good bit about suffering, particularly when it comes to being stuck with the highest property insurance rates in the nation. The Clark Research Group determined that Louisiana has some of the highest insurance costs, coming in at an average of more than $6000.00.  No other state in the South comes close. If you live in industrialized New Jersey, the cost is $1,318.00, a drop of some $300.00 in the past 10 years. California, with wildfires and massive rain caused mudslides pays an average of $1,988.00.

But that’s not the whole story.  Two years ago, Congress merely put its finger in the flood insurance dike with legislation that supposedly capped the skyrocketing rates of property owners in flood prone areas.  But what our minions in Washington didn’t tell us is that the rates are continuing to climb dramatically.  News reports across this state just his past week reported that flood insurance rates in Louisiana will rise more than 129% over the next decade with many policyholders seeing an increase of more than four times what they are currently paying.

Because of the devastating hurricanes that seem to hit the gulf coast at least once a decade, the federal government has bailed out these southern states, literally and financially, time and time again. Some cynical members of congress have even suggested that it’s time for many homeowners to relocate.

A few years back, Allstate Insurance Company suggested the creation of a state run money pool to limit how much all property insurers would have to pay when a hurricane hits the state in the future. But here’s the problem. Who pays for the pool? You guessed it. Every property owner in the state through a new assessment. So the rates continue to go through the roof with no relief in sight.

Actually, the Allstate plan wasn’t such a bad idea if you go back a few years. But the legislature and the insurance department mistakenly went a different direction creating this monster called the Citizens Property Insurance Company, and the state missed the chance to contain property rates and create a much healthier insurance climate.

Let’s get one thing straight that we can all agree on and makes it worth talking about. Property insurance is a necessary evil, and every property owner must have it. And nobody’s happy over the present way the system works.

Under the purposed Allstate plan, a new assessment would be put on every property insurance policy sold, with the money going into a state rainy day fund for when a major hurricane hits. Several formulas might be used, but the idea would be to limit how much any one insurance company would have to pay out. In return, property insurance rates would be curtailed.

The same plan was suggested by the insurance department back in the 90s, and it made much better sense then. No one worried about the ‘big one” actually happening, and the legislature wasn’t receptive to any kind of assessment. But in the past four years, new state proposals have been the prime cause of property rates going sky high.

First of all, the Louisiana Legislature gave the insurance industry the right to raise every rate 10% a year without any approval. And is it any surprise that company after company did just that, whether needed or not? All rates above 10% have to be

Then the legislature really went off the cliff and created a state run company without any money injected into it. There should have been a minimum injection of well over $50 million just to get this concept started. No significant re-insurance was required in the law creating the program, which was a huge mistake, and one that every property owner will be paying for over the next 20 years. And finally, you need insurance professionals to run such a state created company. Experienced professionals were woefully lacking in the make-up of Citizens.

So with no reinsurance in place to cover the Katrina costs that now have exceeded one billion dollars, the state borrowed the money and you and I will pay this indebtedness off, year in and year out, for the next twenty years. This adds an additional 20% to the average insurance policy.

Now Allstate is saying just add a little more. But is such a plan, if the Governor and the Legislature decide to go along, going to literally price insurance beyond the reach of the average homeowner? It’s getting close to that point. So what do you do?
Four things.

Completely restructure the Citizens state created company. Bring in professionals with strong insurance management backgrounds to run it professionally, with a requirement that there be no contributions to any politician involved. Louisiana followed in lock step with a similar Florida plan that is about to implode with similar problems.

The Governor should bite the bullet, and recommend the injection of $100 million in state funds to stabilize the Citizens concept. Florida has. injected over $700 million dollars. Mississippi has appropriated $50 million to help their rates drop. Louisiana has not appropriated one penny.                                    

Make reinsurance mandatory for property insurance companies up to 80% of any anticipated losses. If this had been done pre-Katrina, this present crisis would have been greatly reduced

Give the Allstate suggestion a good review. It’s not that bad of an idea, but the defect is that Louisiana is much too small to go it alone. The Governor should start immediate discussions with Texas, Mississippi, and Alabama to form a joint pool. Leave out Florida for they have too much future risk. If a joint effort had been in place pre-Katrina, the present crisis would have been greatly reduced.

But the most important idea is for the Louisiana congressional delegation to join the Governor in proposing what the country did after 9/11. Form a national catastrophic fund that allows any state that faces a national disaster to join in. Oklahoma for tornados, California for earthquakes, flooding protection in the Midwest, and of course hurricane protection for coastal states. If New York could demand it after 9/11, you would hope there would be substantial support for a national catastrophic plan because of a; the recent natural disasters across the nation.

The Louisiana Legislature should authorize the forming of a Joint Underwriting Association for Louisiana businesses. Any business could join and pay a monthly assessment that would be used to buy re-insurance for the Association. This is a short term fix, but would buy some time for many businesses who cannot find affordable insurance until the other proposals listed above take effect.

None of this is that original or rocket science. It’s a matter of emphasis. And the Governor obviously has to become involved. In all but twelve states, the Insurance Commissioner is appointed. So congress will look to Governors to aggressively pursue these important concepts. There are ways to resolve this major insurance crisis. But it will take more focus and much stronger leadership. Isn’t the time right?

************

One of the tests of leadership is the ability to recognize a problem before it becomes an emergency.

Arnold Glasgow

Peace and Justice

Jim Brown

Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.

 

THE TWO BEST THERE EVER WAS AT LSU!

 



Monday, February 21st, 2022

Baton Rouge, Louisiana

THE TWO BEST THERE EVER WAS AT LSU!

Two Heisman Trophy winners have come out of LSU.  Right now, Joe Burrow is the toast of Tiger Land along with the whole state of Louisiana. He will be a Bayou Bengal legend for decades to come.  But don’t forget Billy Cannon, the first LSU Tiger to win the Heisman. Older LSU fans will never forget that Halloween night back in 1959 when Cannon established himself as a true Louisiana sports legend.

You see, there are some things you just don’t forget. Where you were on 9/11, or when President John Kennedy was shot. Down here in the Bayou State, add to those special dates Halloween night 59 years ago when Billy Cannon made football history with his 89-yard run to beat Ole Miss and keep the Tigers undefeated. His story is the rise and fall, then the rise again by one of LSU’s all-time great sports heroes.

Even those who are not Tiger fans have to admit it was one heck of a run. Cannon either sidestepped or pushed away tackler after tackler as he weaved his way towards the end zone. I wish I had a dollar for every time the magical run has been replayed on television. You can imagine the crowd’s reaction on most Saturday football nights in Tiger Stadium as once again the fans and the millions of viewers on national television, see Ole’ Billy tear through the Rebel opposition.

This feat by Cannon allowed the Tigers to beat Ole’ Miss 7 to 3, and made him a celebrity for life. Paul Revere had his famous ride and Billy Cannon had his remarkable run.

Cannon went on to play professional football with the Houston Oilers and the Oakland Raiders. Then he went to dental school and built a successful dental practice in Baton Rouge. Because of his popularity, Cannon’s practice flourished to an estimated $300,000 a year - quite a sum in the 1960s! But then his celebrity world came crashing down, and I played a small role in his demise.

It was 1983, and I was in my first term as Louisiana Secretary of State. I was working at my office one afternoon when my secretary said there were two Treasury agents to see me, and they demanded immediate attention. They pulled out a hundred-dollar bill saying it was a fake, and that it had shown up in the Secretary of State’s bank account.

I had my staff go over all the various billing and deposit records, and we were able to determine that a local attorney used the hundred-dollar bill to pay for a corporate filing. We later learned that in was the first Cannon-made counterfeit bill to be discovered in the Baton Rouge area. Others quickly appeared, and a major money printing operation was broken open a few months later. The seventh-largest counterfeiting ring in American history was no more.

For years thereafter when I made speeches around the state, I relished in telling those in attendance how I knew the bill was counterfeit. “You know down at the bottom of the 100 dollar bill where it says ‘In God We Trust?’ Well on the Cannon 100-dollar bill, it said ‘Go to Hell Ole Miss.’”

Cannon quickly confessed and helped prosecutors crack the case wide-open. At the sentencing, Cannon told federal Judge Frank J. Polozola: “… what I did was wrong, terribly wrong. I have done everything within my power to correct my mistakes.”

To thousands of LSU fans, Cannon’s confession pierced the very heart of their allegiance and adulation of LSU’s greatest sports hero. Like the little boy who pleaded with Shoeless Joe Jackson of the Chicago White Sox on the courthouse steps in the famous “Black Sox” baseball scandal of 1919, all many LSU fans could think of was, “Say it ain’t so, Billy.”

As part of Cannon’s redemption, he took on the job of dentist up at Angola State Penitentiary, an hour’s drive north of Baton Rouge. The guards and inmates alike love him up there. Do fans still hold a grudging disappointment with Cannon? Well, when he was introduced a few years ago at Tiger Stadium just after being admitted to the College Football Hall of Fame, the cheering went on and on. Repeated efforts by the stadium announcer to quiet the fans down fell on deaf ears. Neither the President nor the Pope would have gotten such an avid ovation. Billy was back, and all had been forgiven.

Billy Cannon, like few others, has experienced the dramatic highs and lows of being a major sports hero in Louisiana. F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote that in life, there are no second acts. And Thomas Wolfe wrote that you can’t go home again. Billy Cannon proved them both wrong.

Joe Burrow’s legendary status still has lots of time to be extended. Even though his team lost in the Super Bowl this year, Joe Cool continues to be at the top of his game.  He could well be the next Tom Brady, and give fans many special moments to cheer about for years to come.

 Burrow or Cannon-who was the best?  Does it really make any difference?  They both are LSU greats who will go down in antiquity as really special talents who rightly deserve their legendary status in the annals of LSU history.

*****

“People associate me with football regardless of where I go…except when their tooth hurts. They don’t care whether I played football or not. They just want the toothache to stop.”

Billy Cannon

They gave me my career. Coach O and LSU resurrected my career and made me what I am today.

Joe Burrow

Peace and Justice

Jim Brown

Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.  Readers can also review books by Jim Brown and many others he has published by going to http://www.thelisburnpress.com.