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Posted on Sun,
Jul. 11, 2004
Homeowners haunted by underinsurance
By Elliot Spagat
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
SAN DIEGO - Don Robinson says his Residence Mutual
insurance policy pegged the cost of replacing his San
Diego home at $233,000. After Southern California's
fires destroyed the 40-year-old biologist's four-bedroom
house last year, a contractor told him it would cost
$460,000.
Hundreds of other homeowners are finding their coverage
was inadequate, raising the question of what went wrong.
Some industry critics and attorneys suing on behalf of
homeowners have a theory: Insurance agents may be
misapplying software that estimates the cost of
replacing a home and coming up with lowball numbers.
In Robinson's case, a popular software program's quick
survey puts the cost of replacing his home at $249,000,
pretty close to the coverage he bought. A more detailed
questionnaire estimated $427,000, much closer to what
his contractor said he will need.
Critics say insurance agents may be writing policies
with the quick survey, which requires only a few
keystrokes. It asks for a home's ZIP code, year of
construction, square footage and a few other questions.
A more detailed survey, which takes into account details
such as whirlpool spas and fireplaces, takes more time
to complete but offers more accurate estimates.
California Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi's
office is studying the industry's use of
replacement-cost calculators in its investigation into
complaints by victims of last year's fires, which
destroyed more than 3,600 homes. Underinsurance
accounted for 219 of 445 complaints his office had
fielded as of June 28.
After hearing dozens of complaints in April at homeowner
meetings in San Diego and San Bernardino counties,
Garamendi said agents may have deliberately lowballed
the cost of replacing homes in an effort to sell more
policies. He has not set a date to complete the
investigation.
A spokesman for an insurance industry group denied that
agents deliberately give low estimates when writing
policies, saying that underinsuring homes would deprive
companies of additional premiums. He said the
replacement-cost calculators, while not perfect, have
performed well.
"It's not an exact science," said Peter Moraga of the
Insurance Information Network of California, an industry
group. "It's ultimately up to the homeowner to try to
ascertain if (the coverage) is enough."
The complaints have cast a spotlight on Marshall &
Swift/Boeckh LLC, an obscure company based in New
Berlin, Wis., that says its software can pinpoint the
cost of 100,000 construction items, tailored to every
ZIP code in the United States and postal code in Canada.
The numbers are updated every three months.
Homeowner attorneys have not faulted Marshall & Swift,
which is not named in a spate of recent lawsuits.
Instead, they suggest that insurance agents are using
Marshall & Swift's shortcut survey, called Quick Quote,
instead of the more time-consuming questionnaire.
"If used properly, the software can spit out pretty
accurate numbers," said Jerry Ramsey, a Los Angeles
attorney who has sued on behalf of 30 homeowners and
plans about 20 more lawsuits, including one seeking
class-action status against Farmers Insurance Co.
Marshall & Swift has been raising public awareness of
underinsurance, a problem that surfaces after nearly
every major natural disaster. It authored a survey that
found 64 percent of U.S. homes were underinsured by an
average of 27 percent last year. That's an improvement
over 2001, when 73 percent of households were
underinsured by an average of 35 percent.
In the early 1990s, Marshall & Swift and Boeckh, then
separate companies, introduced software that replaced
much cruder valuation methods, such as multiplying a
home's square footage by the going rate of construction.
Wells said its software is used by about 95 percent of
U.S. insurance companies, allowing agents to drill into
such detail as, say, the difference between a
carpenter's hourly wage in Oklahoma City and Oklahoma
City's suburbs.
George Kehrer, who founded a nonprofit group to counsel
disaster victims after he lost his home in the 1991 East
Bay Hills fire, said he has tested the software on about
150 homeowners and found the Quick Quote estimates to be
about 40 percent below the more detailed questionnaire.
Two attorneys who are suing insurance companies say they
found similar discrepancies.
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© 2004 ContraCostaTimes.com and wire
service sources. All Rights Reserved.
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