California prevents insurance cancellations for Southern California wildfire victims. Learn about the moratorium issued by Gov. Gavin Newsom.
I join and stipulate with Houman Hemmati’s observations and proposed remedy of running Gavin Newsom, Ricardo Lara and Karen Bass off. Lara apparently doesn’t understand that the insurance ...
Gavin Newsom today confirmed that Mexico was sending firefighters ... California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara spoke on what insurance looks like for homeowners impacted in the Los Angeles County wildfires, saying, “Now is the time for you to ...
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) is in the spotlight as multiple wildfires tear through the Los Angeles area, putting his response under a microscope amid speculation over his political ambitions. On Tuesday,
Fonzi’s cool kid act is not cutting it. I join and stipulate with Houman Hemmati’s observations and proposed remedy of running Gavin Newsom, Ricardo Lara and Karen Bass off. Lara apparently doesn’t understand that the insurance carriers have to get ...
To many ecologists, economists and other experts on California wildfire risk, the vow to rebuild is part of a familiar California cycle as predictable as the Santa Anas: We keep putting homes in the path of the flames.
The L.A. wildfires expose California’s difficult road to navigate between disaster risk and solving the state’s housing crisis.
Several insurance companies have stopped offering policies in California or are refusing to renew existing ones in an effort to reduce their financial risk, according to Fox 9 News. However, Governor Gavin Newsom has a strong message for these insurers: Not on my watch.
The California insurance commissioner has issued a mandatory one-year moratorium on insurance cancellations and non-renewals for Southern California homeowners affected by wildfires.
Decades-old, voter-approved restrictions on insurers raising premiums have created a regulatory disaster to match the natural one.
California's Fair Plan, the state's insurer of last resort, may be unable to pay billions in claims arising from the Los Angeles fires and may require a bailout that could ultimately be paid by homeowners statewide.
Charging excessive prices for motor fuel, transportation, freight and other necessities is now illegal in two counties under the state of emergency due to ongoing wildfires.