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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Sunday, October 27, 2024

Wetter, more destructive hurricanes, like the back-to-back storms that pummeled Florida this fall, are pushing the state's homeowners insurance market to the brink of collapse. [I]t was then-governor Republican Rick Scott, now a U.S. senator, who lured low-quality insurance companies to the state and left Florida's publicly owned insurer-of-last-resort agency struggling to provide for more homeowners as private insurers went bust or refused to renew policies in hurricane-prone areas.

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As part of a years-long crusade to force more Floridians into the private insurance market, Scott raised premiums and rescinded discounts from the Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the government-backed nonprofit insurer, all while giving private companies extra incentives and protections to operate in the state.

Now that warming-fueled storms are routinely causing billions of dollars in damage across Florida, private insurers are fleeing the state, forcing customers back to Citizens. But now the deals the public insurer offers come with higher premiums and worse coverage.

Now Scott's Democratic challenger for Senate, former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, is hoping voters can make the connection between Scott's eight years as governor and the financial squeeze caused as insurers increasingly fail to pay to repair properties damaged in hurricanes Helene and Milton.

Once voters draw the link between the devastation and the inability to get affordable coverage, "you're going to see people here in the state push back very, very strongly against these electeds that have been here and done nothing," she said.

"It's borderline criminal," she added. "People are so angry, frustrated and exhausted. Helene brought flooding. Then Milton made everything worse."

This has been an underlying current running silently through Florida politics for the last few years - especially since Florida's incurred 4 major hurricane strikes in the last 2 years. The stories are numerous of people living near the coasts unable to afford living in Florida any longer between the cycles of rebuilding and then re-decimation from subsequent hurricanes, compounded by insurance costs only the wealthy can afford - gutting century's old Florida coastal communities of its working class residents and retirees on modest incomes.

And the Republican Florida legislature's answer to these problems is to strike any mention of climate change from government, as though that alone will solve the problems. And there's this too:

Scott slashed environmental regulations and cut funding for Florida's water management agency by $700 million, setting the stage for a toxic algae bloom that decimated fisheries and the coastal tourism business in 2018. Scott's critics skewered him with the nickname "red tide Rick," and the issue hurt the Republican in the polls.

"He was red tide Rick'... People living in Florida for a very long time know him very well," Mucarsel-Powell said.

"The homeowners insurance crisis that we're facing right now started under Rick Scott," she said.

Just after taking office in 2011, Scott signed legislation eliminating Citizens' caps on premium increases, causing the cost of coverage to skyrocket.

Citizens then launched a campaign to re-audit homes that state-sanctioned inspectors had already deemed ready for a major storm as part of a process to qualify for an insurance discount. Of the more than 250,000 homeowners Citizens double-checked, three out of four lost discounts, the Tampa Bay Times reported in 2012.

This is Republican governance at its finest. It's only a matter of time until Floridians figure out that someone other than its current stewards need to be given power in order to right all that's gone wrong by allowing the GOP anti-science agenda to take root in their state government to the detriment of the people trying to live and thrive there.

#1 | Posted by tonyroma at 2024-10-27 10:58 AM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 1

"That's just a big, fat, Huffpost lie!"

--Stinkerwaffleironut

#2 | Posted by Angrydad at 2024-10-27 03:26 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

One in California too.

The California problem is self-inflicted.
www.nbcbayarea.com

#3 | Posted by oneironaut at 2024-10-27 03:32 PM | Reply


This is Republican governance at its finest. It's only a matter of time until Floridians figure out that someone other than its current stewards need to be given power in order to right all that's gone wrong by allowing the GOP anti-science agenda to take root in their state government to the detriment of the people trying to live and thrive there.
#1 | POSTED BY TONYROMA

So what's California's problem?

#4 | Posted by oneironaut at 2024-10-27 03:33 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

#4 Their republican governor.

#5 | Posted by gracieamazed at 2024-10-27 03:50 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

"The California problem is self-inflicted."

Huh? Did you even bother to read the article?

Climate change, ending in more wildfires, seems like the culprit.

Hardly "self-inflicted".

#6 | Posted by Danforth at 2024-10-27 03:56 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 5

So what's California's problem?
#4 | POSTED BY 1TRUMPCUCK

Not enough people taking the forests.

Did you have anything else to add other than your stupid whataboutism?

At least you got Gracie excited.

#7 | Posted by ClownShack at 2024-10-27 06:04 PM | Reply

... raking the forests***

#8 | Posted by ClownShack at 2024-10-27 06:05 PM | Reply

One in California too.
The California problem is self-inflicted.
#3 | POSTED BY 1LumpyTrumper

You're an "open borders, liberal, Chinese immigrant".

Why don't you move out of this state you hate so much?

Idaho is probably more your flavor.

#9 | Posted by ClownShack at 2024-10-27 06:08 PM | Reply

Anyone feeling cognitive dissonance from reading the comments?

#10 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-27 06:29 PM | Reply

@#10 ... Anyone feeling cognitive dissonance from reading the comments? ...

What Is Cognitive Dissonance Theory?
www.simplypsychology.org

... Cognitive Dissonance Theory

Cognitive dissonance was first investigated by Leon Festinger, arising out of a participant observation study of a cult that believed that the earth was going to be destroyed by a flood, and what happened to its members " particularly the really committed ones who had given up their homes and jobs to work for the cult " when the flood did not happen.

While fringe members were more inclined to recognize that they had made fools of themselves and to "put it down to experience," committed members were more likely to re-interpret the evidence to show that they were right all along (the earth was not destroyed because of the faithfulness of the cult members). ...


Projecting?


#11 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-10-27 06:47 PM | Reply

Seek help.

#12 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-27 06:52 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

@#12

Why?

#13 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-10-27 07:06 PM | Reply

Visitard isn't a good troll.

Or a smart troll.

Or a funny troll.

But he is persistent.

#14 | Posted by ClownShack at 2024-10-27 07:12 PM | Reply

Developer friend of mine just finished a decent sized apartment complex in Tampa Bay area. Solid as a rock, block construction, hurricane proof windows and sliders, whole nine yards. I slept like a baby through Milton in one of the units. The insurance policy is 4x what his last apartment complexes have been.

I've been using the same insurance broker for all my residential rentals for 4-5 years now and I just had to switch insurance brokers. Every carrier my broker reps for has pulled out of FL. My insurance policy is going to be $32,000 for 23 houses. If I want coverage for wind damage, ya know from like a hurricane...the quote was an extra $128,000. Over $500/month. Average rent is $1,800. Nucking futs.

And yeah, Citizens is a joke. I've been reading articles stating Citizens has been denying most of the claims from the past couple of hurricanes, Helene and Milton.

#15 | Posted by gavaster at 2024-10-27 10:48 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

"They'll have to pry this condo I paid for with my ex-husband's pension from my cold dead hands!"

#16 | Posted by AMERICANUNITY at 2024-10-28 01:03 AM | Reply

My condo was built way back in the 1970s all concrete construction ecvept for thr roof. We also have steel shutters for every window and door. We've never had any flooding but I was still required to get flood insurance but it wasn't too expensive unlike the wind insurance for the buildibg. I hope Rick Scott and Ron Desantis catch the hell they deserve for our insurance crisis. They are both just puppets owned by the insurance industry. How much are Floridians willing to pay because po;iticians like Scott and Desantis are sold out to the insurance industry?

#17 | Posted by danni at 2024-10-28 09:11 AM | Reply

The problem isn't "climate change"

I recently sold one of my homes because I was tired of paying the insurance and It wasn't used but 4-5 times a year.

The insurance on my primary home tripled in 3 years simply because the property value shot up. I called my agent (my son) to complain. It basically boiled down to replacement costs.

The problem is cheap money, and our government loves it. During COVID people who didn't have a pot to piss in, or a window to throw it out of suddenly had money to burn on $100k vehicles and new homes. And that money didn't start drying up until late 2022.

#18 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2024-10-28 09:47 AM | Reply | Funny: 1

The unfortunate reality is that nobody outside Florida cares what homeowners insurance costs inside Florida.

This back and forth between the state government and private insurance companies is just stupid. There is no easy solution for this.

And the economics of it will work out. Rent, prices, etc. all have to reflect the insurance costs.

#19 | Posted by eberly at 2024-10-28 10:10 AM | Reply

It's not just Florida. My insurance and property taxes doubled this year. Bidenomics/Harrisnomics

#20 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-28 10:26 AM | Reply

It's not just Florida. My insurance and property taxes doubled this year. Bidenomics/Harrisnomics

Blaming the wrong people isn't going to fix the problem. What a moronic statement to make.

Your side denies the cause.
Your side points to immigrants as the problem for everything else so your side (Scott/DeSantis/Rubio, etc) can avoid doing anything.
I live in Florida.
I'm seeing this shht happening.
Anyone with an actual functioning brain knows why, who, and what is responsible.

What we're missing are solutions. Solutions take work. Thought. Intelligence.
Three things Republicans in this state refuse to do and don't have.

#21 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 10:30 AM | Reply

-Your side points to immigrants as the problem for everything

including homeowners insurance?

#22 | Posted by eberly at 2024-10-28 10:34 AM | Reply

You don't understand what adding 20,000,000 newcomers to a tight market will do to prices? You don't understand that printing trillions of dollars and spending them on projects that don't increase productivity will cause inflation? You don't understand that free stuff isn't free?

#23 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-28 10:35 AM | Reply

#23 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-28 10:35 AM | Reply | Flag: Source of visitor_'s 20,000,000 number

#24 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 10:41 AM | Reply

#23 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-28 10:35 AM | Reply | Flag: Source of visitor_'s 20,000,000 number

Happy Anniversary ! ! !

#25 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 10:41 AM | Reply

including homeowners insurance?

Yes. To deflect from not doing anything about it. It's a constant.

An example: I listened to two people at the PT talking about the immigrants being the first problem that has to be dealt with before anything else can be done. That immigrants are driving up the price of housing, causing rates to rise for homes and for insuring them because, apparently, immigrants don't buy home insurance or something.

I didn't say it made any sense. I didn't say it was true. It is neither of those things. But damn, they sure are a handy thing to point at and blame for everything. Aren't they?

#26 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 11:03 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Thanks Visitor for proving my point.
20,000,000.
Absolute nonsense.

#27 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 11:04 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

"suddenly had money to burn on $100k vehicles"

Huh?

The three stimulus payments combined totaled $3200.

#28 | Posted by Danforth at 2024-10-28 11:13 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 3

The three stimulus payments combined totaled $3200.

And just like that, another fiction destroyed by fact.

#29 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 11:24 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

#28

That probably chased it off of this thread. But it will pop up on another thread, spouting the same tired garbage. The stupid is persistent.

#30 | Posted by Whatsleft at 2024-10-28 11:48 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

"You don't understand what adding 20,000,000 newcomers to a tight market will do to prices? " -

#23 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-28 10:35 AM

According to the 2020 census, Florida was America's third largest state (population wise), with 21,570,527 people.

Now, apparently, visitor_ believes Florida has 41,570,527 people, surpassing Texas and California's population.

Interesting concept.

#31 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 12:04 PM | Reply

#31 - lol!

#32 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 12:08 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

The three stimulus payments combined totaled $3200.

And just like that, another fiction destroyed by fact.

#29 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 11:24 AM | Reply | Flag:

You're not real bright, are you?

Rent moratoriums, federal enhanced unemployment, suspension of payments on student loans, PPP money for businesses (including very small businesses).

Where I was living at the time, unemployment plus the Fed payment put people at over $1000/week in paychecks. A lot of them were people who worked part time at bars and restaurants.

Anyone making $25/an hour could get the same paycheck and never leave home.

#33 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2024-10-28 12:14 PM | Reply

The vast majority of the money printed was not dispensed as direct payments.

#34 | Posted by visitor_ at 2024-10-28 12:28 PM | Reply

-I didn't say it made any sense. I didn't say it was true. It is neither of those things. But damn, they sure are a handy thing to point at and blame for everything. Aren't they?

The GOP deserves the sign hanging around their neck saying "it's the immigrants" as a blame for every ill.

fair point

#35 | Posted by eberly at 2024-10-28 12:41 PM | Reply

Rent moratoriums, federal enhanced unemployment, suspension of payments on student loans, PPP money for businesses (including very small businesses).

Where I was living at the time, unemployment plus the Fed payment put people at over $1000/week in paychecks. A lot of them were people who worked part time at bars and restaurants.

Anyone making $25/an hour could get the same paycheck and never leave home.

#33 | Posted by lfthndthrds

PPP money was from Trump.

But no, for workers, relying on a unemployment paycheck that pays a fraction of your former income even with the enhancement really let people buy $100,000 cars and put down a $50,000 down payment on a new home.

How stupid are you?

#36 | Posted by Sycophant at 2024-10-28 01:14 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

How stupid are you?

Do you really need to ask?

#37 | Posted by tonyroma at 2024-10-28 01:23 PM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 1

"How stupid are you?" -

#36 | Posted by Sycophant (and here's Sycophant's sage advice)

Perhaps, lfthndthrds' mind isn't all that it's cracked up to be.

But that's just a guess.

#38 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 01:26 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Hey magidiots, don't believe in climate change?

Your insurance company does.

#39 | Posted by Nixon at 2024-10-28 01:27 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 3

But no, for workers, relying on a unemployment paycheck that pays a fraction of your former income even with the enhancement really let people buy $100,000 cars and put down a $50,000 down payment on a new home.

How stupid are you?

#36 | Posted by Sycophant at 2024-10-28 01:14 PM | Reply | Flag:

You do realize that every minimum wage employee that wanted to make over a grand a week needed do nothing more than stay home and sign up on a computer/phone?

#40 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2024-10-28 02:09 PM | Reply

How stupid are you?

Do you really need to ask?

#37 | Posted by tonyroma at 2024-10-28 01:23 PM | Reply | Flag

Says the guy who recently posted "accusations are confessions" LOAO

#41 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2024-10-28 02:09 PM | Reply

Your insurance company does.

#39 | Posted by Nixon at 2024-10-28 01:27 PM | Reply | Flag:

Your insurance company is reacting to housing costs going through the roof. The average cost of a home in the US topped $400K last year.

#42 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2024-10-28 02:11 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

"You do realize that every minimum wage employee that wanted to make over a grand a week needed do nothing more than stay home and sign up on a computer/phone?"

#40 | Posted by lfthndthrds | Flag: Sounds like a late-night infomercial

#43 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 02:11 PM | Reply

"The average cost of a home in the US topped $400K last year."

#42 | Posted by lfthndthrds

Really?

Then that must make most homeowners very happy to know that the value in their home takes them halfway to becoming a millionaire.

What a great country we live in!

#44 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 02:16 PM | Reply

Says the guy who recently posted "accusations are confessions"

Towards a direct example of someone being guilty of what they accuse others of doing: ie. Trump calling Harris a fascist when he's the one calling himself the only person who can solve problems by exercising unfettered power, and Musk decrying undocumenteds working in America as he himself once did, and claiming that Democrats are threats to democracy and the rule of law while promising to quash 34 guilty charges handed down by impartial juries.

You really are stupid, but why do you insist on proving it by trying to match wits with those who aren't as gullible or non-analytical as you?

#45 | Posted by tonyroma at 2024-10-28 02:19 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

"Says the guy who recently posted "accusations are confessions" LOAO"

#41 | Posted by lfthndthrds

Just how many asses do you have?

#46 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 02:19 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

That two ton shut in?

#47 | Posted by ClownShack at 2024-10-28 02:20 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

Your insurance company is reacting to housing costs going through the roof. The average cost of a home in the US topped $400K last year.

Nope. That's a minor part of it here. The prices of houses going up here is due to private capital buy ups and an influx of red staters. That's over now. That spike is coming down because these idiots have lived through two hurricanes now and they didn't like it. It's not from migrants moving here buying 750K houses.

We had one hurricane after another - and massive floods with few people carrying flood insurance. We'e had development going unchecked for years - and building on wetlands and along the coast. So much of it getting wiped out over the past decade.

And the building codes get tougher and tougher - costing more and more to build.

#48 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 02:20 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

#46

He just insists on beclowning himself over and over again with intentional misrepresentations and gaslighting.

Turds has got to be a masochist, that's the only plausible explanation I can figure.

#49 | Posted by tonyroma at 2024-10-28 02:21 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

-Then that must make most homeowners very happy to know that the value in their home takes them halfway to becoming a millionaire.

The point is that they're not very happy in Florida.

But they won't blame who you want them to blame.

#50 | Posted by eberly at 2024-10-28 02:25 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

so the main drivers in the increase of home insurance increases in Florida are:

Hurricanes and flooding, litigation, fraud (massive), no competition (insurance companies leaving in droves because it's not profitable in this crazy state), location that homes and businesses are building, and we have a lot of people with lousy credit.

#51 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 02:26 PM | Reply

-That spike is coming down because these idiots have lived through two hurricanes now and they didn't like it

I don't disagree but what makes them any bigger idiot than any other Florida resident?

Choosing to move to Florida?

Choosing to stay in Florida?

pick your poison

#52 | Posted by eberly at 2024-10-28 02:27 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

"Turds has got to be a masochist, that's the only plausible explanation I can figure." -

#49 | Posted by TonyRoma

That's actually a thing, Tony:

The Politics of Masochism

This essay explores why people sometimes act against their economic interests, and, more particularly, why people sometimes knowingly and intentionally support economic inequality even though they are disadvantaged by it, a phenomenon I call masochistic inegalitarianism. The essay argues that such behavior is an inherent and widespread feature of human nature, and that this has important though previously overlooked practical and theoretical implications for any conception of distributive justice. On the practical side, masochistic inegalitarianism suggests that any theory of distributive justice with more than the most modest egalitarian aspirations is inherently self-defeating (or at least self-limiting) because it will naturally produce the background conditions necessary to trigger masochistic behavior among the very people it is designed to assist. On the theoretical side, masochistic inegalitarianism suggests that there are serious problems with any theory of distributive justice based on the idea of hypothetical consent. This is because people with masochistic tendencies would be unlikely to consent to the distributive arrangements these theories have presumed, and the arrangements to which they would be likely to consent would allow a far greater degree of economic inequality than we are prepared to acknowledge as intuitively just. Either we must rethink our intuitions, or, as I contend, there is something about masochistic inegalitarianism that robs hypothetical consent of its moral force.

#53 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 02:28 PM | Reply

I don't disagree but what makes them any bigger idiot than any other Florida resident?

To be honest, I've been wondering that myself after living through the last few hurricanes. I'm here because of elderly family that I need to help with. Can't move them easily - if at all. So I'm a bit stuck.

#54 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 02:32 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

54

I'm not trying equate someone who was born in Florida and has family there with someone who retires there.

But the situation has been quite predictable for a long time in Florida. I have almost no sympathy for someone with no ties to Florida who has chosen to move there just because they could. I know several people like that. They are hurting right now but this was avoidable for them.

The solution sucks but it has to get worse before it gets better.

#55 | Posted by eberly at 2024-10-28 02:35 PM | Reply

Thanks, Eberly.

#56 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 02:35 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

he unfortunate reality is that nobody outside Florida cares what homeowners insurance costs inside Florida.
#19 | Posted by eberly at 2024-10-28 10:10 AM | Reply

The shuttering of several private FL Home Insurance Companies did impact consumers in other states. I'm in Galveston County and had Windstorm coverage through a FL company until last year... when that company went under. I would assume that anyone on the Gulf Coast (and Southern Atlantic Ocean) would be concerned about Insurance policy in FL; like many others I'm now in the State-run system (TWIA, booo) and am always concerned that Texas Insurance policy will follow Florida's policies.

For those saying this is mostly driven by higher home prices, that's just not true. My home value went up by 40% over the last few years but my wind and hail insurance has tripled. Those values are not significantly correlated.

#57 | Posted by bartimus at 2024-10-28 06:42 PM | Reply

Florida's Citizens (State run insurance - or "public") has saved a lot of people here, however the Republicans don't like it one bit - so they push everyone off it by creating laws that kick people out and mandate you take a private policy offered if it's 20% of an increase (or less). If you don't take it, then you might be lucky enough to be allowed to renew. It's called "depopulation" (which I think is way more accurate than they'd like).

The 20% number was implemented because people screamed holy hale (sic) when there was no limit to the increase, and you still had to take it.

#58 | Posted by YAV at 2024-10-28 09:30 PM | Reply

"It's called "depopulation" ..." -

#58 | Posted by Yav

'Tis the close cousin to denaturalization.

#59 | Posted by Hans at 2024-10-28 09:54 PM | Reply

My insurance and property taxes doubled this year.

via GIPHY

#60 | Posted by Nixon at 2024-10-29 07:32 AM | Reply

"The California problem is self-inflicted."

One nut is admitting that climate change is human driven.

#61 | Posted by Nixon at 2024-10-29 07:34 AM | Reply

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