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Posted on Sat, Jul.
14, 2007
Unsettled claims lead
to legal action
BY
BEATRICE E. GARCIA
The
hurricanes of 2004 and 2005 should be a
distant memory for South Florida, but some
residents are still living under blue roof
tarps and contending with leaks, mold and
unfinished repairs.
There are several
thousand homeowners who have open claims --
and lingering damage -- because they say
they haven't collected enough money from
their insurers.
''For a lot of people,
there seems to be no end in sight,'' says
Michael Virkaitis, who is helping his
in-laws in Coral Springs settle their claim
with the Florida Insurance Guaranty
Association, which handles claims for
defunct insurers.
Joy and Frank Vernoia
were insured by one of the Poe Financial
Group companies, which were taken over by
state regulators last June. Their roof was
damaged during Hurricane Wilma in October
2005, and there's water damage in every room
except the bathroom.
Virkaitis and the
couple's attorney, Paul Berger of Boca
Raton, are miffed that FIGA is willing to
pay about $8,000 to repair the internal
damage but refuses to pay to replace the
roof, roughly a $30,000 job. A blue tarp
covers the Vernoia's roof.
According to Michelle
Lovern, deputy director of the guaranty
association, FIGA ''has settled the vast
majority of claims'' transferred to the
agency after the Poe companies -- Atlantic
Preferred, Florida Preferred and Southern
Family -- were seized by state regulators a
year ago.
FIGA has settled
40,786 claims from the Poe companies, paying
out some $811 million. But there are about
2,700 Poe-related claims still open.
After Wilma's romp
through South Florida in late October 2005,
roofs have become a big point of contention
between homeowners and their insurers.
''About 70 percent''
of the problems with open claims revolve
around roofs, says Berger, who says he has
been seeing three to five new clients each
week for the past six to nine months.
''Insurers often
refuse to pay for a new roof even though
four or five contractors have told the
homeowners that they need to replace the
entire roof,'' he says.
And there's a
complicating factor: The Florida Building
Code requires that an entire roof be
replaced if 25 percent or more of it has
been damaged.
That's the bind that
Howard Friedman of Hollywood is in. His
insurer, The Hartford, won't accept the roof
damage and subsequent water damage inside
his house. An engineer sent by the insurer
said the roof was damaged because it was
more than 40 years old, and the storm's
relatively weak winds of about 34 mph
couldn't have caused the damage.
That probably wasn't
the best reason to deny a claim from
Friedman, who is the deputy director for
hurricane research at the National Oceanic &
Atmospheric Administration outpost in Miami.
''I have access to all
sorts of data to show that winds were in
excess of 34 mph at my house when the storm
came through,'' says Friedman, who also says
his roof was replaced about 14 years ago. He
has found a roofer who is willing to take a
down payment to begin the repair work and
wait for the insurer to resolve the claim
for this final payment.
DETERMINING
CAUSE
State Farm, says
spokesman Chris Neal, has had problems
determining how damage was caused as it
worked to settle Wilma claims. For instance,
adjusters had a hard time determining if
damage to roof tiles existed before the
storm or if it was caused by the high winds.
State Farm now has
just under 900 claims open, though claims
can be reopened by policyholders at any
time, says Neal.
The company, the
largest private insurer of homes and autos
in Florida, says it handled 100,000 claims
from Wilma and a total of 300,000 claims
from the four storms of 2004. Neal adds that
it's State Farm's goal is to settle claims
as quickly as possible.
The initial problem
was homeowners often received settlement
offers that didn't cover the actual costs of
repairs because insurers weren't taking into
account the rapid rise in the cost of labor
and materials that often occurs after a
storm. But now insurers have updated prices
used in the software that calculates the
costs, insurers and adjusters say.
Lawyers say many of
the still-unresolved claims are the larger,
more complex cases. ''As the size of the
damages goes up, the ability to settle
quickly goes down,'' says Berger.
However, at a recent
meeting of a state task force studying how
Citizens Property Insurance was handling
claims, many homeowners complained of still
dealing with poorly trained adjusters after
the 2004 and 2005 storms. Some have dealt
with multiple adjusters, each one coming up
with a different assessment of the extent of
damage and cost of repairs.
THOUSANDS OF
CLAIMS
Citizens, the largest
insurer of homes in the state with more than
600,000 policies in South Florida, has 700
open claims from the 2004 storms and some
2,630 claims from the 2005 hurricanes. Of
those, 789 are in litigation.
The task force
recommended Citizens ''take extraordinary
action'' to close as many claims as possible
by Sept. 30.
On a positive note,
Mark Pritchett, executive vice president of
the Collins Center, which is handling the
mediation process for the state, says that
in the past month Citizens has been settling
most of its claims in mediation -- an
about-face from the prior 11 months, when
many of its cases ended in an impasse.
Richard Benrubi, an
attorney with Liggio, Benrubi & Williams in
Boca Raton, says he files a lawsuit on just
about every case he handles from homeowners
who have had claims denied or insufficient
settlements. But only once has he had to go
to trial on a hurricane-related suit.
Benrubi says most
lawsuits are settled out of court through
mediation or appraisal, a court-supervised
process where an appraiser for the homeowner
and one for the insurance company hash out
the claim.
While Benrubi isn't
surprised many insurance companies drag out
claims settlements, he is 'surprised
homeowners wait so long. They get to their
wits' end and then seek counsel.'' |