Dan Quigley is one such person. Quigley lives in the Oakland Hills.
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As with so many of his neighbors, his insurance company dropped his fire coverage this year due to extreme fire risk. It took a lot of work, but he eventually found coverage from State Farm, but for 50 percent more than what he paid last year.
"It made me feel like, who knows what the future is going to hold," said Quigley.
That's why Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara is holding workshops to figure out how to keep rates down and minimize the number of policies being cancelled.
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One idea proposed originally surfaced following the devastation of Hurricane Andrew in 1992.
Right now, fire insurance rates in California are set based on a 20-year average of money coming in from premiums, and money going out to repair damage.
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In Florida and many other states, insurance rates are determined using a "catastrophic model": a formula inputted into a software program that would calculate insurance premiums based on an insurance company's risk.
"I think we looked at Florida homes and we found 77% of the homes would get lower insurance premiums," argued Nancy Watkins, an Orinda resident and insurance industry consultant with Milliman.
She says the formula the state uses now does not work.
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"What we've seen is enormous increases in premiums indicated by a long term averaging formula," she said.
But Carmen Balber of Consumer Watchdog questions the catastrophic model, saying it's just a bunch of numbers thrown into a black box.
"The black box algorithm jiggers those numbers around and spits out a rate. And one model could be wildly different than the next model. We have no idea how the companies are manipulating those numbers to come up with an end result," Balber contended.
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She wants homeowners rewarded for taking measures to reduce their fire risk by clearing vegetation, using fire resistant roofing materials and closing up their vents.
Quigley spent thousands of dollars with his neighbor to clear 15 trees between their homes.
Balber thinks insurance companies should be required to discount Quigley's insurance as well as others who act to reduce their risk.
"Insurance companies are not required to offer discounts when homeowners harden their homes. We need that as well," said Balber.
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"I think that's a great idea," said Quigley. "I think to the extent that they might have expertise to help us do it right. That might even be really valuable."
Nancy Watkins also supports that idea. As does the insurance commissioner. Commissioner Lara, however, has not publicly disclosed where he stands on the catastrophic model idea.
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