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  • Possible changes to state insurance oversight
    A man in a suit speaks into a microphone at a podium, with the California state flag visible in the background.
    State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara speaks during a press conference with Los Angeles labor leaders and advocates in Commerce on Sept. 26, 2022.

    Topline:

    A new ballot proposal could change how California regulates property insurance by rolling back parts of Proposition 103, a law voters approved in 1988.

    The backstory: Proposition 103 has regulated home, auto and other types of property and casualty insurance in the state since 1988. It requires insurance companies to seek approval from an elected insurance commissioner to raise their premiums, and allows members of the public to object to rate increases.

    Major changes to oversight: If passed, the measure would shift power from voters to the governor, curb public oversight of rate hikes, and potentially disrupt ongoing efforts to stabilize the state’s troubled insurance market.

    Ballot battle ahead: Backers must gather over 500,000 signatures by April 2026 to qualify for the ballot, setting up a high-stakes fight that could reshape how insurance rates are set in wildfire-prone California.

    A proposed ballot initiative would drastically change the way property insurance is regulated in California by repealing a law voters passed almost four decades ago.

    Proposition 103 has regulated home, auto, and other types of property and casualty insurance in the state since 1988. It requires insurance companies to seek approval from an elected insurance commissioner to raise their premiums and allows members of the public to object to rate increases.

    The initiative — which experts are calling a long shot — would throw most of that out. It would impose stricter limits on the rate-approval process starting in 2027; the commissioner would be appointed by the governor instead of elected; and the public would no longer be able to intervene in rate filings.

    The independent insurance agent who submitted the proposed measure, Elizabeth Hammack, wrote that she “has seen firsthand the dysfunction” that Proposition 103 has “wreaked upon our state.” Hammack did not immediately respond to CalMatters’ request for an interview.

    Denni Ritter, a vice president for American Property Casualty Insurance Association, said the insurance industry group was not involved in drafting the measure and is “reserving judgment” while reviewing it.

    To qualify for the November 2026 ballot, the initiative effort would need to collect more than a half-million signatures by April.

    If the initiative qualifies for next year’s ballot and is approved by voters, it also could throw a wrench into Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara’s plan to try to fix the state’s insurance market as insurers have refused to renew policies or write new ones as wildfire risk has grown.

    Lara crafted his plan around the confines of current insurance law while giving the insurance industry certain concessions, such as allowing them to use catastrophe modeling and to factor in their reinsurance costs when setting their rates. In exchange, the insurance department asks that insurers retain or increase their policies in areas considered at high risk for wildfires. The plan’s implementation began this year.

    “Prop. 103 guarantees consumers’ right to hold all parties in the ratemaking process accountable,” said Molly Weedn, an external spokeswoman for the insurance department, adding that Lara is “opposed to any effort to take away the rights consumers deserve.” As for how the measure would affect Lara’s plan, Weedn said, “Come back to us with that question if they collect the signatures.”

    Consumer Watchdog, the Los Angeles-based advocacy group whose founder wrote Proposition 103 mostly to address rising auto insurance rates, said in a statement the proposal does not seem to be a “serious” or well-funded campaign. The group also cited a report that found Prop. 103 has saved California drivers more than $150 billion in auto insurance rates over the years, as well as a poll that found consumers blame insurance companies for rising premiums.

    “We’re confident voters want more accountability from insurance companies,” Carmen Balber, the group’s executive director, told CalMatters. She said repealing Proposition 103 “would mean skyrocketing rates for home and auto insurance policy holders.”

    Amy Bach, executive director of San Francisco-based consumer advocacy group United Policyholders, said that while Proposition 103 has “important consumer protections,” the intervenor process has resulted in approval delays — which insurers have long complained about — and political pressure that have contributed to California’s problematic insurance market.

    “I don't give the ballot measure a high degree of success,” Bach said. “People are not happy about escalating premiums.”

    But Karl Susman, owner of an insurance agency in Los Angeles, said: “If you ask any homeowner in the state of California, 'Are you happy with the current state of insurance?' You know the answer is going to be no. Now, we actually will have an option to vote to change that.”

    Another consumer advocacy group says Proposition 103 has helped keep California home and auto insurance rates lower than the national average. The state’s average annual homeowners insurance premium falls in the middle of the pack among all U.S. states, according to an analysis by comparison website Bankrate.com.

    Consumer Federation of America, a Washington, D.C.-based research and advocacy organization, “has studied state insurance markets for decades, and this initiative would institute the regulatory system used in states that have seen some of the most dramatic rate spikes around the country,” said Douglas Heller, director of insurance for the group.

    Heller added that California is not alone in facing an insurance crisis and that “removing oversight of the insurance companies at this moment would be like shutting down the fire department in the middle of a blaze.”

    This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

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