By Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
In Context:
Apopka and Orange County homeowners have been dealing with soaring property insurance costs recently. The revelation that insurers were funneling billions to affiliated companies while simultaneously pleading financial ruin suggests that some of these rate increases may have been driven by corporate practices rather than purely by storm damage and litigation.
Citizens Insurance Rate Hikes:
Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state-backed insurer of last resort, covers many homeowners in Apopka and Orange County. The news that most citizens’ nearly 1 million policyholders will face rate hikes starting June 1 means that homeowners already struggling with high premiums will likely see even higher bills. Citizens remain the largest insurer in Florida because private insurers have pulled out or become insolvent.
Affiliate Fees and Hidden Costs:
The report’s findings that insurers paid billions to manage general agents (MGAs) and affiliated companies raise concerns that these costs were passed on to policyholders through higher premiums. If insurers artificially inflated costs to shift profits to affiliates, homeowners in Apopka and Orange County may have been overcharged without realizing it.
Legislative and Regulatory Impact:
If state lawmakers move to tighten regulations on affiliate payments and require greater transparency, it could lead to future reforms that benefit homeowners. However, the fact that the report was hidden for years and never acted upon raises questions about how aggressively regulators will pursue changes.
Litigation vs. Corporate Practices:
Insurers have long blamed excessive litigation and hurricane damage for the insurance crisis. However, the report suggests that corporate behavior — not just natural disasters and lawsuits — may have played a more significant role in driving up rates. This could increase pressure on lawmakers to focus on insurance company practices rather than on litigation reform.
Potential for Future Reforms:
If lawmakers press forward with an updated report and stricter oversight of affiliate payments, it could eventually lead to lower rates or increased competition in the market. But any meaningful changes will likely take time, meaning Apopka and Orange County homeowners may not see relief soon.
Bottom Line:
For Apopka and Orange County homeowners, this situation reveals that rising insurance premiums may have been partly driven by questionable business practices, not just storms and lawsuits. While state officials are now investigating, the outcome remains uncertain — and immediate rate relief is unlikely. However, increased scrutiny of affiliate payments and insurer practices could lead to more accountability and possibly lower rates in the future.
Mitch Perry of the Florida Phoenix follows up on the bombshell article from the Tampa Bay Times in the below article:
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Florida lawmakers peppered the state’s sitting and former insurance commissioners for three hours on Friday to demand answers about why they didn’t bring immediate attention to a 2022 report detailing money transfers from Florida insurers to out-of-state affiliates.
At the time, Florida property insurers were pleading for legislative reforms because of liabilities from major storms and excessive litigation. Nevertheless, they were paying billions of dollars to affiliated companies, the document found.
The Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) commissioned the report, prepared by Risk and Regulatory Consulting, in 2020 and it was published in March 2022, several months before a special legislative session made it harder to sue insurance companies.
House Speaker Daniel Perez called Friday’s meeting of the House Insurance & Banking Subcommittee following a bombshell Tampa Bay Times story about that report, which found that insurers who were claiming financial ruin after Hurricane Irma in 2017 and Hurricane Michael in 2018 had paid $680 million in dividends to shareholders while simultaneously funneling billions to affiliated companies.
The report showed that 53 insurers reported a total of $61 million in net income, while their affiliates, known as MGAs (managing general agents), reported $14 billion in income.
Hillsborough County Republican Susan Valdes asked David Altmaier, who was insurance commissioner at the time the report was commissioned, whether he found the disclosure alarming.
“Red flags”
“It certainly raised some red flags, which is why it was important for us to determine whether or not this was accurate,” Altmaier said.
Lawmakers pressed Altmaier and his successor, Michael Yaworsky, about why the office never made the report public. Their response was that it was in draft form and not ready for general release.
“A draft is a very real thing to us, and it is an indication that it is not a completed product,” Yaworsky told the committee.
Under further questioning, Yaworsky mentioned discussions that concluded sometime later in 2022 between the OIR and Rise & Regulatory Consulting “to perfect the document.” He said he didn’t know the details, adding that his office was dealing with between six or seven companies at the time that had gone through insolvency, as well as investigating other insurance companies.
“I think it’s possible that they were simply overwhelmed,” he said.
Speaking under oath, Altmaier said the office had become aware of transfers with affiliated companies in 2014, but it wasn’t until 2021 that they were able to get legislation passed that specifically authorized them to investigate the affiliate payments.
“Even before we got this draft report, the office was very mindful that this allegation was out there. We were very mindful that we needed to increase our authority to answer these types of questions, not just for you but for your constituents and our consumers and all kinds of other stakeholders,” he said.
Altmaier wasn’t able to answer why, if he thought the report was so important, he didn’t follow up when the OIR received it in 2022.
“Hindsight being 20/20, there’s probably some opportunities where I could have poked a little bit to make sure that this work was continuing. But, as the commissioner said, we were dealing with a lot,” Altmaier said.
Pinellas County GOP Rep. Adam Anderson asked to what extent can excessive affiliate fees affect policyholders’ premiums?
“There is a factor in there that is fees that you pay to your affiliates,” Altmaier replied. “If that’s being done correctly, then that’s a reasonable fee to have in the rates. One of the reasons why this work was so important to us was, if this is being abused, then it can have detrimental impact on policyowner premiums. The challenge is, we didn’t fully answer that question during my tenure,” he said.
Yaworsky, who served as chief of staff to Altmaier between 2017 and 2021, was named Insurance Commissioner in early 2023. He said it wasn’t until late last year that he was even aware of the report.
That prompted several members of the committee to ask why he didn’t share the information from the report when appearing before lawmakers since then. They wanted to know whether the affiliate payments were directly responsible for the escalating property insurance rates that have become the single most important issue to Floridians, according to multiple polls taken over the last year.
Yaworsky pushed back, disputing that the transfers explain why some carriers have become insolvent or closed their businesses in Florida.
Insurers continue to blame excessive litigation
“I think the problem at its crux with companies is pretty easy to demonstrate — that it was … due primarily to litigation, but also natural catastrophes and the cost of reinsurance,” he said. “The companies went broke because rates simply could not be raised fast enough to accommodate that, and the market did not exist to support that. There’s not a lot of evidence that MGA fees or affiliate entity fees were the proximate cause of any insolvency.”
Also at the center of the discussion was what is considered a “fair and reasonable” amount for those companies send to their associated groups. The state of Florida to this day does not have a defined standard in law about what is fair and reasonable.
The Tampa Bay Times made a public information request to see the report in 2022, yet did not receive it until late last year. Several committee members questioned what led to that delay. “There was so much going on in 2022 that this did not take the priority,” Yaworsky said. “That’s a plausible explanation for what happened here.”
Some lawmakers reacted with disgust.
“Our purpose here today is to find out if insurance companies have been allegedly ripping the citizens of Florida off. Why rates are so high? We want to find that out. And this report’s the state’s attempt at determining the answer to that,” said Palm Beach Republican Mike Caruso.
“Yet it’s still in draft form. It’s only seven pages long. It deals with data from 2017 to 2019. Today’s 2025. And I find it, as a legislator, that’s outrageous that we’re getting something that’s so antiquated and so full of flaws.”
Caruso and other lawmakers asked whether the office plans an updated report. That remains uncertain at this time, although committee chair Brad Yeager said after the meeting that he believed lawmakers would push to make that happen.
The report cost $150,000 and was paid for by a trust fund within the OIR, and not from taxpayer money.
The future
In his State of the State address last week, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis proclaimed that the state’s homeowners’ insurance market is finally seeing some stability, noting 130,000 new private policies over the past year and that Florida had the lowest increase in rates of all 50 states.
However, the Tampa Bay Times reported earlier this week that the vast majority of the almost 1 million policyholders with state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp. will pay higher rates beginning on June 1. Known as the property insurer of last resort, it remains the largest in the state in terms of the number of policies written.
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Disclosure: Research and sourcing for the "In Context" portion of this article was produced using ChatGPT, an AI language model, to enhance research, generate ideas, or draft content. The Apopka Voice performed all final edits and fact-checking to ensure accuracy and alignment with our journalistic standards.