HM 541

1
House Memorial
2A memorial to the Congress of the United States urging
3Congress to support a National Catastrophe Insurance
4Program.
5
6     WHEREAS, during the 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons, the
7State of Florida was devastated by eight hurricanes and four
8tropical storms, causing approximately $35 billion in estimated
9gross probable insurance losses, and
10     WHEREAS, the hurricanes from the 2004 and 2005 hurricane
11seasons have produced high winds, coastal storm surges,
12torrential rainfalls, and flooding resulting in significant
13damage to Florida and the Gulf Coast states, which has resulted
14in displacement of policyholders from their dwellings, loss of
15personal belongings and contents, closing of businesses and
16financial institutions, and temporary loss of employment and has
17created numerous health and safety issues within our local
18communities, and
19     WHEREAS, in 1992, Hurricane Andrew resulted in
20approximately $20.8 billion in insured losses and was previously
21the costliest catastrophe in the United States, but Hurricane
22Katrina alone left the Gulf Coast states with an estimated loss
23of approximately $35 billion, and
24     WHEREAS, natural disasters continually threaten communities
25across the United States with extreme weather conditions that
26pose an immediate danger to the lives, property, and security of
27the residents of those communities, and
28     WHEREAS, the insurance industry, state officials, and
29consumer groups have been striving to develop solutions to
30insure mega-catastrophic risks, because hurricanes, earthquakes,
31tornadoes, typhoons, floods, wildfires, ice storms, and other
32natural catastrophes continue to affect policyholders across the
33United States, and
34     WHEREAS, on November 16 and 17, 2005, insurance
35commissioners from Florida, California, Illinois, and New York
36convened a summit to devise a national catastrophe insurance
37plan which would more effectively spread insurance risks and
38help mitigate the tremendous financial damage survivors contend
39with following such catastrophes, NOW, THEREFORE,
40
41Be It Resolved by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
42
43     That the Congress of the United States is urged to support
44a National Catastrophe Insurance Program. Policyholders require
45a rational insurance mechanism for responding to the economic
46losses resulting from catastrophic events. The risk of
47catastrophes must be addressed through a public-private
48partnership involving individuals, private industry, local and
49state governments, and the Federal Government. A national
50catastrophe insurance program is necessary to promote personal
51responsibility among policyholders; support strong building
52codes, development plans, and other mitigation tools; maximize
53the risk-bearing capacity of the private markets; and provide
54quantifiable risk management through the Federal Government. The
55program should encompass:
56     (1)  Providing consumers with a private market residential
57insurance program that provides all-perils protection.
58     (2)  Promoting personal responsibility through mitigation;
59promoting the retrofitting of existing housing stock; and
60providing individuals with the ability to manage their own
61disaster savings accounts that, similar to health savings
62accounts, accumulate on a tax-advantaged basis for the purpose
63of paying for mitigation enhancements and catastrophic losses.
64     (3)  Creating tax-deferred insurance company catastrophe
65reserves to benefit policyholders. These tax-deferred reserves
66would build up over time and only be eligible to be used to pay
67for future catastrophic losses.
68     (4)  Enhancing local and state government's role in
69establishing and maintaining effective building codes,
70mitigation education, and land use management; promoting state
71emergency management, preparedness, and response; and creating
72state or multistate regional catastrophic risk financing
73mechanisms such as the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund.
74     (5)  Creating a national catastrophe financing mechanism
75that would provide a quantifiable level of risk management and
76financing for mega-catastrophes; maximizing the risk-bearing
77capacity of the private markets; and allowing for aggregate risk
78pooling of natural disasters funded through sound risk-based
79premiums paid in correct proportion by all policyholders in the
80United States.
81     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
82dispatched to the President of the United States, to the
83President of the United States Senate, to the Speaker of the
84United States House of Representatives, and to each member of
85the Florida delegation to the United States Congress.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.