aftermath (copy)

The aftermath of Hurricane Ida in Dulac. ¶¶Òõh's private insurers have dwindled since last April, as nearly a dozen withdrawing from the market and several others have gone insolvent. The state's insurer of last resort, ¶¶Òõh Citizens, and other agencies have stepped in to assume residents' homeowners policies.ÌýÌý

Yet another major insurer is pulling out of ¶¶Òõh.

United Property & Casualty Insurance Co., based in Florida, will cease renewing its roughly 36,000 Louisian home insurance policies in 2023. It is the largest company, in terms of the value of , to amid the state’s .

Wednesday’s announcement of UPC’s departure didn’t say why the company is leaving, though Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon that UPC’s financial ratings had been downgraded.

The company had the fifth-largest share of Louisian’s home insurance market in 2021, at a little more than 3%, or $65.3 million in premiums. Southern Fidelity, which failed earlier this year, actually had more policyholders, but the value of the property it insured was less.

UPC’s exit adds to a growing list of at least 23 companies that have recently withdrawn from ¶¶Òõh or gone insolvent. Altogether, the group held more than 200,000 policies, nearly a fifth of the state’s market.

Many customers of those companies have been forced to purchase policies from ¶¶Òõh Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state run-insurer of last resort. Since 2020’s Hurricane Laura, Citizens’ policy count has more than tripled to well above 100,000, and that number is sure to grow dramatically with UPC’s departure.

Citizens’ prices will also go up next year, by an average of about 63%, though in some parishes the increases will exceed 100%. Average premiums will be around $5,000 in at least seven parishes, including Orleans and Jefferson.

By law, Citizens sets its prices above market rates to push customers to shop for policies elsewhere. Donelon has used financial incentives to entice out-of-state companies to take up Citizens’ policies, though .

Though many of the insurers that took on Citizens policies have since failed, it’s a strategy Donelon intends to employ again.

UPC must give customers a 30-day heads up before their coverage expires. About 3,000 policyholders whose coverage was set to expire between November and January will get a temporary extension. UPC is also responsible for handling any outstanding claims.

UPC was founded in 1999 and writes insurance in seven states other than Florida and ¶¶Òõh. In April, Donelon recommended fines totaling $250,000 against UPC after the Department of Insurance flagged 10 violations of Louisian’s insurance code.

That included the company’s handling of claims and what the department said was a failure to monitor a third-party company UPC hired to manage its business operations. UPC disputed some of those claims, but it wasn’t immediately clear if UPC filed an appeal. Company officials couldn’t be reached Wednesday evening.

Investigative reporting is more essential than ever, which is why we’ve established theÌý¶¶Òõh Investigative Journalism Fund,Ìýa non-profit supported by our readers.

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