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Katrina's Karmic Payback: Insurance ReformThis is the fifth in a series of five . . . With homeowners throughout the US scrambling for insurance, with businesses and individuals unable to keep up with the mounting health insurance costs, and with workers comp driving business costs out the roof, the time has come to connect the dots for comprehensive reform of an industry run amok. It's not sexy nor controversial. But its impact on our daily lives is fundamental regardless of our political persuasion or geographic location. We all know that small and large businesses are choking on skyrocketing health care costs. The other day, a friend of mine said that his tiny company just wrote out a $44,000 check to cover the annual costs of its seven employees and their families. The other employees are covered through the insurance benefits of their respective spouses. Without businesses covering the costs, however, families are often going without attending to their health care needs to the tune of 47 million in 2005, according to the Census Bureau. This is a national crisis. These aren’t the only insurance costs that are hurting us. Worker’s comp costs are also skyrocketing and hurting businesses in their pocketbook.What is less well tracked, however, is the national crisis of insuring our homes—the most valuable asset for most families. News reports inside Katrina Land have revealed rate increases or rate increase requests from 23 to 400%. Inside and out of this Katrina-ravaged region, companies are either jacking up their premiums or refusing to write new policies altogether. <!—break--> In May of this year, CNN Money reported that Allstate “the largest home insurer in the United States, said it would no longer write new homeowner policies in California, marking another reduction in its property coverage nationwide. . . . The carrier recently announced it would no longer write new homeowner policies in Florida, Connecticut, Delaware and New Jersey and in certain counties in the Atlantic and Gulf Coast regions.” California is the fifth largest economy in the world and accounts for one-eighth of the U.S. economy. Yet, Allstate is closing shop. Homeowners have one less company from which to purchase their much needed homeowner insurance. In February of this year, State Farm quit writing new homeowner policies in Mississippi. Back in 2002, State Farm’s moratorium on writing new homeowner policies included “Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Texas, California, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Hawaii, Alaska, Maryland, West Virginia and North Carolina. The company ha[d] also restricted activity in Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Nevada and Wyoming.” Just like a good neighbor, right? What we DO know is that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has told us that “[p]opulations and built environments in coastal watersheds are growing rapidly, with 55 percent of the U.S. population already living within 50 miles of the coast.”
Taylor has introduced the Multiple Perils Insurance Act of 2007, H.R. 920, which amends the National Flood Insurance Program to cover all natural perils. It is coming up for discussion in a few weeks at the same time the National Flood Insurance Program comes up for reauthorization. Taylor’s law will help tremendously. Another major problem with the insurance industry is that it is only one of two industries exempt from the nation’s anti-trust laws. You know the laws that make it so you can’t do bid rigging and price fixing. What we DO know is that the Senate’s Democratic Leaders have put together legislation to strip the insurance companies of its 62-year old exemption, and U.S. Senators Mary Landrieu (D-LA) and Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott (R-MS) are among its co-sponsors. This proposed law will finally make price-fixing behavior in the insurance industry illegal. The companion bill in the House is H.R. 1081. What can WE do with all that we know? Clearing away our cynicism, however, allows us to recognize that rearranging the furniture as the building burns around us is, well, stupid. Its only real contribution is to paralyze us which prevents us from taking appropriate action. However, clearing away our cynicism frees us up to be in a position to learn how to be politically savvy, smart, and sophisticated so that we can make our dreams come true inside the complex world of American politics. We do this one day at a time as we keep our eye on the prize and adjust our strategies and tactics as needed to achieve our goals. Because we’re adults, we understand that some things take time, effort, and persistence.
This definition applies to everything including politics. As we clear away our political cynicism, we will find a renewal of our spirits, our creativity, and our intellectual capitol all of which we need to be successful in any endeavor including political hell raising as we are inclined to do here at A.M. in the Morning! Today’s Political Hell Raising Opportunities In addition, let’s drown out the insurance industry’s opposition by calling and emailing our two U.S. Senators and our congressional representative to express our support to end the insurance industry exemption from laws that prohibit their ability to price fix, etc. As usual, A.M. in the Morning! provides contact information and email letters as well as phone scripts and access to telephone numbers of your two U.S. Senators and congressional representative. Thoughts on Katrina’s Bigger Picture Nationally, we must commit resources to invest in world class levees throughout our nation to ensure that we protect our nation’s families, businesses, and communities against the danger of repeating the man-made disaster in New Orleans. Committing to world class levees throughout our country infuses our own economy in ways that have been absent ever since Bush and Cheney moved into our White House six and a half years ago. With a renewed focus on math and real science, we can also breathe new life into all facets of our educational system. Finally, implementing a world class levee system across the country can further assist our commitment to environmental sanity. In the wake of Katrina’s devastation, insurance companies fraudulently denied the claims of legitimate policyholders who sought payment on their wind policies. The result of the insurance industry’s deliberate denials of these claims has been to create a mounting financial crisis throughout the Katrina-ravaged region. Since the insurance industry is begging off of protecting America’s homes against wind damage just as it did with flood coverage in the 60s, we must expand our nation’s Federal Flood Insurance Program to cover all natural perils. However, this is part of an ever expanding crisis with our insurance industry. We now add to skyrocketing health care and worker’s compensation costs, the costs of protecting the single asset that is central to how many of us define the American Dream: our homes. The time has come for insurance reform. To be competitive in the world, our businesses need insurance reform. To run efficiently while providing all the services and programs we expect from our government, our towns, cities, states and federal governments need insurance reform. To protect our health and our homes, our families need this. The insurance execs can think of it as paying off Katrina’s Karmic debt. Anyway you slice it, insurance reform . . . it’s good for America. Listen to the podcast. This is the fifth in a series of five to help the Democratic Party, particularly its presidential hopefuls, to get the framework right, to broaden its lens through which it views Katrina, what’s stopping recovery, what will speed up a vibrant recovery, and how Katrina affords us the opportunity to transform the basic quality of life for all Americans. Part 4: Katrina’s Bigger Picture Ana Maria authors A.M. in the Morning!, dispatches from Katrina's ground zero . . . a distinctly progressive political perspective. In March, this native daughter drove from her home in Silicon Valley, Calif., to surprise her mother with a visit to their family home in Bay St. Louis—ground zero for Katrina’s devastation. The surprise was on Ana Maria. She launched her blog in May 2007 and added podcasts in June 2007 to express her dismay and provide detailed, poignant, on-the-ground accounts of what the people of the Gulf Coast are still experiencing nearly two years after Katrina’s devastation. She is committed to using her blog to reinvigorate the discussion and generate a renewed national sense of purpose to efficiently and effectively rebuild the area. The blog includes the Center for Political Hell Raising, which provides phone scripts and email letters readers may use when contacting whoever is the lucky one Ana Maria targets.
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new orleans
I read somewere that we can build all the levies we want but its not going to save neworleans.all the shipping channels that have wiped out the buffer zone in the region have all but garenteed that neworleans will be submerged.it would take billions of dollars and the repair work needed to start yesterday at a pace that just aint going to happen .they wont properly fund the levy work.what makes people think that there going to do whats nessisary to repair the coastal eco system.If people refuse to face the facts were going to spend millions just to see people die in neworleans again.