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When San
Francisco resident Charlie Bott got an offer
in the mail recently for earthquake insurance,
he stared long and hard at the bottom line.
Then he threw it away.
"It was
way beyond anything you pay for house
insurance. Not even in the same league,"
said Bott, a nuclear engineer with a baby on
the way.
Now, like
millions of others, he's hoping the Big One
doesn't strike -- or if it does, that the
government will come to the rescue.
Californians
have built vast metropolises atop seismic
faults, but 86 percent of the state's
homeowners have no quake insurance, a
proportion that has crept upward as memories
of past quakes fade.
"It's a
game of Russian roulette,'' said Norman
Williams, an assistant deputy commissioner at
the state Department of Insurance.
State
officials are hoping that next month's 100th
anniversary of the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake will inspire Californians to
prepare. That quake and subsequent fires
destroyed 28,000 buildings and left 225,000 of
the city's 400,000 residents homeless.
Estimates of the death toll range from less
than 500 to more than 3,000, making it one of
the deadliest natural disasters ever to strike
the United States.
Hurricane
Katrina, which killed more than 1,300 people,
has had a dual effect on homeowners in the Bay
Area, where geologists project a 62 percent
probability of a magnitude 6.7 or greater
earthquake in the next 26 years.
Some
Californians called their insurance agents and
signed up for quake coverage. But for many
others, watching billions of dollars in
federal aid pour into the Gulf Coast merely
bolstered a sense that the government would
come to the rescue after a big earthquake.
There's a
joke in the insurance industry about this
mind-set. It's nicknamed the "Air Force
One Solution" -- based on the myth that
the president would surely fly over a disaster
zone dropping $100 bills from his plane.
"Good
luck with that," said Nancy Kincaid,
director of public policy, mitigation and
communications for the California Earthquake
Authority. The authority is the state's
privately funded, publicly managed quake
insurance provider; its member companies
provide coverage to about 70 percent of
Californians who have such protection.
"Everyone
thinks the government will bail you out,"
she said, "but we've learned it's
absolutely not true."
The Federal
Emergency Management Agency provides only
limited assistance, said spokeswoman Nicol
Andrews.
"FEMA's
not designed to make people whole after
disaster, but to get people back on their
feet," she said. The cap on FEMA grants
to a single household is currently $26,200,
and on loans, $150,000.
"It
would be a false sense of security to rely on
FEMA to rebuild a life the way it was before a
disaster," Andrews said.
FEMA still
maintains an office in Northridge, near Los
Angeles, for reconstruction projects 12 years
after the deadly earthquake there. It's a
testament to the limited powers of the
government to swiftly rebuild lives.
The
Northridge quake had a magnitude of 6.7 -- in
the range of the big quake that is likely to
strike the San Francisco Bay area. It killed
72 people, left 9,000 injured and wreaked an
estimated $25 billion in damage.
Yet most
Californians still pin their hopes on the
federal government, should a quake badly
damage their homes.
"That
would be the only thing that would save the
region," said Matthew Park, an
information-technology manager who owns a home
in Corte Madera, across the Golden Gate Bridge
from San Francisco.
"I am
hopeful, but I think it's dicey," Park
said of the federal government marching in
with aid. "Based on Katrina, my
confidence is low."
Still, Park
decided against adding earthquake insurance to
his homeowner's policy. "The deductible
is ridiculously high, to the point where the
level of protection you actually receive is
anemic," he said.
The cost of
earthquake insurance varies widely based on
the home's location, age, type of
construction, proximity to faults and type of
land it's built upon -- bedrock or landfill,
for instance.
One homeowner
in Oakland will pay $1,468 this year for
$306,000 in insurance coverage for his house,
with a deductible of nearly $46,000. A house
insured for $500,000 in the Marina district of
San Francisco -- a neighborhood built on more
unstable fill from the bay -- costs $2,400 a
year to insure through the California
Earthquake Authority, with a $75,000
deductible.
In a region
where many homeowners are already stretched
thin by some of the highest home prices in the
country, quake insurance is another expense
they cannot afford to take on.
If the
worst-case scenario struck, for example, Park
would still owe the bank hundreds of thousands
of dollars, on top of his reconstruction bill.
"I don't
know where my funds would come from to manage
that beefy mortgage and the additional costs
of rebuilding," he said. "I guess it
would be a foreclosure scenario."
The
earthquake authority's rates will drop
practically across the board in July, with the
average decrease 22 percent, Kincaid said.
This is driven in part by a recent government
study that found the risk of quake damage was
lower than previously thought in many densely
populated areas.
Earthquake
authority officials are also hoping the rate
cut will help reverse a long slide in the
number of homeowners who have quake insurance.
But some
acknowledge they are simply gambling with
their homes.
"The
costs seem not to justify the expense,"
said Mike Janover, a marketing official at an
Internet company. "My home is on bedrock,
as well as the fact the place is 96 years old.
If it hung in there this long, I made a bet it
can hang in there for another five years
before I sell it."
(Article
taken from Insurance Journal)
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