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Published Fri, Jan 15, 2010 06:02 AM
Modified Thu, Jan 14, 2010 09:20 PM

Coastal insurance hike goes to court

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- The Associated Press

RALEIGH -- A North Carolina appeals court is weighing whether to freeze or even reverse homeowners' insurance premiums that soared by up to almost 30 percent along the coast while sliding by a third in counties farthest from the shore.

A three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard arguments Thursday in a lawsuit by coastal communities trying to overturn a deal struck in late 2008 between former Insurance Commissioner Jim Long and the N.C. Rate Bureau, which represents insurers.

The municipalities argued Long approved the increases before coastal residents knew insurers had requested them and set rates at unreasonably high levels.

Attorneys for the state agency and the Rate Bureau told the judges state law makes the insurance commissioner responsible for representing consumers, and rate settlements can't be appealed to the court by anyone else.

"Suppose the commissioner gets it wrong?" Judge Linda Stephens wondered.

"I don't know of anywhere else where an order can be issued and there's no right to appeal that," Judge Martha Geer said.

A court ruling could come later this year.

Long's decision meant that homeowners policies that were written or renewed beginning May 1 for coastal properties from Sunset Beach to Morehead City could jump 29.8 percent. Policy premiums for homes on the Outer Banks counties of Currituck, Dare, Hyde and Pamlico were allowed to rise by 22 percent, a big jump but a bargain compared to the doubling of rates that insurance companies originally sought.

The deal also allowed homeowners in 32 western counties to cut their premiums, in two counties by up to 6 percent.

The rate changes included policies written by both private insurance companies and the Beach Plan, the state's property insurance provider for coastal properties.

The General Assembly last summer was forced to shore up the overextended Beach Plan by capping potential costs to insurers and putting every property owner in the state on the hook from a disastrous hurricane season.

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