Insurers see major county car rate cuts with props. 100, 103

Insurers see major county car rate cuts with props. 100, 103

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In a flyer made available over the weekend at a meeting of the Democratic State Central Committee, insurance industry campaigners said that two initiatives they oppose, Propositions 100 and


103, would, if passed, result in auto insurance rate decreases ranging as high as 55% in Los Angeles County. The industry flyer also predicted that the two measures would mean a decrease of


11% in Orange County. At the same time, the flyer repeated contentions that despite their rate rollback provisions, Propositions 100 and 103 would actually raise auto insurance prices in 54


of the state’s other 57 counties. The industry’s estimates are challenged by both the Proposition 100 and 103 campaigns, who assert that the rollbacks their measures call for would apply


uniformly throughout the state. They say the industry is trying to defeat their initiatives by convincing voters outside of Los Angeles and Orange Counties that the two measures are unfair


to them. The insurance industry contends that Proposition 100, backed by the California Trial Lawyers Assn., and Proposition 103, supported by consumer advocate Ralph Nader, would do away


with the territorial rating system under which insurance prices are based on where a policyholder lives. Forcing insurers to charge uniform rates regardless of risks in particular areas, the


industry argues, would result in most areas getting increases while only a few would get decreases. The Proposition 100 and 103 campaigns say territorial rating is unlikely to end under


their measures, which contain provisions that would allow the state insurance commissioner to preserve the system. The industry flyer, however, was the first time the insurers have estimated


the precise size of rate reductions they say would occur in parts of Los Angeles if the measures they oppose are passed. Many companies have been raising rates in recent months for


policyholders in the Los Angeles area. The decreases mentioned in the industry flyer would be figured from rates in effect on election day. According to the flyer, the Burbank-Foothill area


would get a 36% decrease in rates, Commerce-South Gate a 29% decrease and other decreases would be Glendale-Pasadena, 36%; Harbor, 21%; Long Beach-Montebello, 21%; Los Angeles inner


suburban, 29%; Los Angeles metropolitan east, 47%; Los Angeles metropolitan north, 54%; Los Angeles metropolitan south, 55%; North Bay, 50%; San Fernando east, 48%; San Fernando west, 43%;


San Gabriel central, 17%; San Gabriel east, 15%; San Gabriel north, 15%; San Gabriel south, 17%, and South Bay, 17%. The areas were not further defined and in some cases do not correspond to


geographical sections usually referred to in the Los Angeles area. The flyer also said Orange County would get an 11% decrease, but it said San Diego County would get a 23% increase and


other increases would amount to 38% in Santa Barbara County, 4% in Ventura County, 9% in Riverside County, 42% in San Bernardino County and 9% in Kern County. MORE TO READ