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Tuesday, October 22, 2024 at 10:48 AM

Lawmakers to tackle soaring home insurance rates

CAPITAL HIGHLIGHTS | Gary Borders

Top state lawmakers plan to address soaring homeowners’ insurance premiums when they return to Austin in January for the next legislative session, according to the Houston Chronicle.

The state’s insurance commissioner, Cassie Brown, told a Senate committee home-insurance rates rose last year by more than 21% statewide, twice the average increase in 2022.

More severe and frequent disasters are blamed for the spike in rates. In addition to additional destructive storms, higher home values and higher costs for construction and labor are also factors. The median home price in Texas has risen 40% in the past five years.

“All this new value needs coverage, which results in bigger bills for consumers,” Brown said.

Lawmakers reportedly will consider changes to the state’s file-and-use system, which allows insurance companies to raise rates and then seek regulatory approval. Brown said the Texas Department of Insurance reviews all rate filings but “rarely” disapproves any of them.

“If we tighten up the criteria that you have to look at in order to approve their rates — I would expect that if it’s harder to get a rate increase approval, that would help Texans with their premiums on their insurance,” said state Sen. Donna Campbell, R-New Braunfels.

Alarm sounded over languishing farm bill

Texas farmers, ranchers and lawmakers are voicing concerns that an economic catastrophe is in the works if Congress doesn’t approve a new farm bill by the end of the year.

The 2018 version — good for five years — has finally expired, The Texas Tribune reported, after being extended until Sept. 30.

In a letter to the House Republican leadership signed by 140 members of Congress, the signers warned that waiting until next year to pass a bill will have a nationwide effect.

“The negative impacts of failing to act will not just stop at the farm gate,” the letter said, “but will (affect) Main Street businesses, rural communities and the national economy.”

The Farm, Food and National Security act is considered a “must-pass” piece of federal legislation. The bill supports more than 230,000 farmers and ranchers in Texas, and the state’s food and agriculture sectors reportedly contribute more than $860.8 billion in economic activity while employing more than 4.5 million people.

The farm bill also funds the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which provides more than 3.4 million low-income Texans with food benefits.

“We need our members of Congress and leadership in Congress to recognize there’s no room for delay anymore,” said Laramie Adams of the Texas Farm Bureau. “It’s time to actually work together to get something done.”

Texas has more than 18 million registered voters Texas has hit a highwater mark with more than 18 million registered voters. The voter registration rolls are growing at a faster pace than the population’s growth, indicating increased interest in signing up to vote. The Chronicle reported the state has added nearly 2.6 million voters since 2018.

Most of the growth has come in Harris County and along the Interstate 35 corridor, areas that tend to vote more Democratic. While Republicans have not lost a statewide race in 30 years, results are getting tighter.

“We are in a competitive state, and we are not going to win just sitting on our laurels,” said Dave Carney, a veteran Republican strategist who has been a key political adviser to Gov. Greg Abbott and former Gov. Rick Perry.

Judge ends probe into alleged vote harvesting A federal judge has stopped the state’s ability to investigate alleged cases of vote harvesting, such as the probe into the League of United Latin American Citizens by Attorney General Ken Paxton, The Tribune reported.

The probe was being conducted under a provision of a law passed in 2021 that targeted voteroutreach groups suspected of offering vote-harvesting services. Voter-outreach groups have complained of overreach by Paxton’s office and widespread confusion over the law’s implications.

Paxton last week vowed to appeal.

“A ruling — weeks prior to an election — preventing my office from investigating potential election violations is deeply troubling and risks undermining public trust in our political process,” he said.

Voter-outreach groups hailed the ruling, saying the restrictions violated the U.S. Constitution by being vague and restricting free speech.

Gary Borders is a veteran award-winning Texas journalist. He published a number of community newspapers in Texas during a 30-year span, including in Longview, Fort Stockton, Nacogdoches, Lufkin and Cedar Park. Email: [email protected]


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