TAMPA BAY, Florida - Insurance reforms passed by the state legislature this year are starting to take their toll on the Bay area.
Homeowners and insurance agents have been filling local legislators' inboxes with complaints about the new changes, including insurance companies' right to non-renew sinkhole coverage.
The sinkhole exception, which took effect on Oct. 1, is forcing consumers to pay close to $100 for a sinkhole inspection to continue coverage. But a number of e-mails, obtained by the 10 News Investigators, show independent insurance agents criticizing Citizens Property Insurance for refusing to offer sinkhole inspections on homes with no flaws other than "minor stucco cracks or driveway cracks due to settling."
Other agents have echoed the concern that Citizens is using the inspections as an excuse to deny coverage. One told the 10 News Investigators that poorly-trained insurance inspectors are simply taking photos of driveway or patio cracks and calling them possible sinkhole activity, even when thin concrete or growing grass is to blame. The agent asked 10 News to keep his identity secret for fear of retaliation from Citizens and the insurance lobby, which pushed the reforms in Senate Bill 408 .
Another measure, set to take effect on Jan. 1, 2012, allows insurance companies to exclude outdoor structures from a policy, including carports, screened enclosures, and patios.
"To make matters worse," another insurance agent wrote in an e-mail to Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, "unless we manually do a new replacement cost estimation (RCE) the dwelling coverage will continue to include coverage for the enclosures they no longer cover. And if we do complete a new RCE, most likely the dwelling coverage will come out higher because Citizens implemented a new system last year which in most cases has higher valuations."
The frustrations of agents and homeowners alike matches the frustrations of the insurance industry in recent years as sinkhole claims have skyrocketed. Lobbyists for the industry contend small cracks from settling have allowed homeowners and lawyers to file thousands of unnecessary and sometimes fraudulent sinkhole claims. Many private insurance companies have stopped writing policies in sinkhole-prone areas.

But a number of e-mails, obtained by the 10 News Investigators, show independent insurance agents criticizing Citizens Property Insurance for refusing to offer sinkhole inspections on homes with no flaws other than "minor stucco cracks or driveway
If the industry were as concerned about addressing the challenges facing Citizens Property Insurance Corp. as it is about scoring political points and demonizing homeowners, it would be actively reaching out to consumer advocates and homeowners.
Got a crack in your homes foundation from a suspected sinkhole? Citizens Insurance says it wants a ten percent deductible for sinkhole claims. The insurer also wants to make it harder for people who can buy insurance in the private market from choosing
"Home is in great shape,'' reads the most recent inspection report prepared for Citizens. Not great enough. Citing, among other things, the driveway cracks — who doesn't have those? — Citizens declined to underwrite sinkhole insurance.

When insurance companies like state-run Citizens Insurance reach into your wallet, they say they have no choice, because they lost $220 million dollars last year paying costly sinkhole claims. In Pasco County, hundreds of homeowners are struggling to
TAMPA BAY, Florida - Insurance reforms passed by the state legislature this year are starting to take their toll on the Bay area.
Homeowners and insurance agents have been filling local legislators' inboxes with complaints about the new changes, including insurance companies' right to non-renew sinkhole coverage.
The sinkhole exception, which took effect on Oct. 1, is forcing consumers to pay close to $100 for a sinkhole inspection to continue coverage. But a number of e-mails, obtained by the 10 News Investigators, show independent insurance agents criticizing Citizens Property Insurance for refusing to offer sinkhole inspections on homes with no flaws other than "minor stucco cracks or driveway cracks due to settling."
Other agents have echoed the concern that Citizens is using the inspections as an excuse to deny coverage. One told the 10 News Investigators that poorly-trained insurance inspectors are simply taking photos of driveway or patio cracks and calling them possible sinkhole activity, even when thin concrete or growing grass is to blame. The agent asked 10 News to keep his identity secret for fear of retaliation from Citizens and the insurance lobby, which pushed the reforms in Senate Bill 408 .
Another measure, set to take effect on Jan. 1, 2012, allows insurance companies to exclude outdoor structures from a policy, including carports, screened enclosures, and patios.
"To make matters worse," another insurance agent wrote in an e-mail to Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, "unless we manually do a new replacement cost estimation (RCE) the dwelling coverage will continue to include coverage for the enclosures they no longer cover. And if we do complete a new RCE, most likely the dwelling coverage will come out higher because Citizens implemented a new system last year which in most cases has higher valuations."
The frustrations of agents and homeowners alike matches the frustrations of the insurance industry in recent years as sinkhole claims have skyrocketed. Lobbyists for the industry contend small cracks from settling have allowed homeowners and lawyers to file thousands of unnecessary and sometimes fraudulent sinkhole claims. Many private insurance companies have stopped writing policies in sinkhole-prone areas.