If you own or plan on owing a home in NC, thank your legislators, because you are helping pay beach property premiums and pushing private homeowner's insurance companies out of the state. The next time a hurricane comes (and there will definitely be a next time, just depends on when) homeowner policies accross the state will be held accountable to help pay damages. Here is some info, forgive the length:http://www.ncjua-nciua.org/html/about-nciua.htm
6/30/2009 9:25:17 AM
Oh I forgot all of the unemployed hacks in here don't own any land
6/30/2009 12:49:50 PM
or your thread sucks. either way.
6/30/2009 12:53:54 PM
^^ I'm just curious, but what menial job is it you do mister Domestic Beer major?Anyway, about the topic, I don't really understand how this plan is set up and structured.
6/30/2009 1:12:33 PM
6/30/2009 1:40:39 PM
Great, so what do we all think about this government mandated insurance program? Are you angry that private competition is skipping the state?
6/30/2009 7:42:40 PM
I asked a question fuck face. Can you answer it?
6/30/2009 7:43:47 PM
im unemployedand dont own landdont care
6/30/2009 7:50:40 PM
It's not exactly insurers that are paying for it, it's the insured in this case. [Edited on June 30, 2009 at 10:01 PM. Reason : no jerbs]
6/30/2009 10:00:14 PM
let's all go build on unstable, vulnerable barrier islands and make somebody else foot the bill when nature does what it has for eons.
7/1/2009 12:04:14 PM
7/1/2009 1:44:09 PM
Would someone take a minute away from their rage to actually explain how this program is funded and how it exists. Who controls it. Etc. Surely, in all your rage you took the time to understand what the fuck it was you were reading rather than just be pissed off at the sound bite pieces.1) Particularly, are the taxpayers on the hook directly to backstop lossesand2) Are private insurers forced in some way to pay into this plan to do businessNone of you fucks that are so enraged about this news item knows these answers?Because, it looks like to me the private employers are part of this association willingly
7/1/2009 1:53:42 PM
I sent this to Sonya Champion, listed as Administrative Manager on their "Contact Us" website:
7/1/2009 3:35:51 PM
^ OMG POST #666!!!! IT'S EVIL
7/1/2009 5:57:26 PM
7/2/2009 10:51:27 AM
Ok, as best I can tell, the Insurance Commission sets the rates that the insurance companies can charge, and perhaps they cap that somehow? I can definitely see how this would cause problems. What happened was the private insurers got together and figured out another way they could profit by tapping into a market that any single insurer didn't want to meddle in, the coast. So they got together to spread out the risk across all of them and in turn they make a little extra cake providing wind/flood insurance. Though, it seems odd that somehow the rates via this avenue are lower than the private insurer. You have to wonder who was managing the beach fund to let it get like this. I can imagine after the decade worth of run up in coastal property prices, and with the downturn making everyone look at their bottom lines more, someone finally started taking a hard look at the numbers and realized that they were on the hook for big time losses and weren't charging high enough rates to cover it.But I'm still not sure who the gatekeeper is and why they can't just raise the rates.Thats my best guess without bothering to read and study it (not that interested).
7/2/2009 11:35:12 AM
http://www.newsobserver.com/politics/story/1601024.htmlAnother update.
7/9/2009 12:29:10 PM