Some condo buildings unable to buy insurance
Stratas reporting they are unable to renew coverage or face unexpected large premium hikes
Dan Fumano
The Province
More B.C. stratas are reporting unpleasant surprises when they try to renew condo insurance, with some facing shocking premium hikes and others unable to buy building insurance at all.
At least one federally regulated insurance provider has ceased selling new policies in British Columbia, citing “rapidly emerging challenges,” in a statement to Postmedia.
An increasing number of stratas have been shocked to learn they’re unable to renew their insurance, a development that experts say could throw the local condo market into a state of uncertainty unlike anything they can recall.
Brokers are reporting condo insurance renewal premiums increasing between 50 and 400 per cent over last year and deductibles increasing from $25,000 a claim to $500,000 or more.
But the precise cause of the situation remains unclear.
When the issue was raised Thursday in the B.C. legislature, Finance Minister Carole James cited increasing real estate prices and climate change.
New Westminster condo owner Trevor Morgan learned this week that his building’s insurance would run out at the end of the month after Hub International Insurance Brokers sent the strata formal notification that they were “not currently able to secure insurance for the building and coverage will cease Feb. 29, 2020.”
Morgan said of his reaction when he read the news: “My heart was beating in my chest, I felt like I (was) ready to throw up.”
The strata had voted overwhelmingly in favour of selling the building to a developer and a tentative sale is in place, Morgan said.
Now he worries this news will jeopardize the deal. Many of the building’s residents are seniors on fixed incomes, and “they’re freaking out,” he said, at the possibility of the insurance problem scuttling the planned sale.
If building insurance rates end up doubling or tripling — as they have done in many Metro Vancouver condos in recent weeks — many of these seniors won’t be able to afford to keep their homes, Morgan said, “and they are going to have to walk away from their properties.”
Tony Gioventu, executive director of the Condominium Home Owners Association of B.C., said Morgan’s strata should be making a series of calls: to his association office, to a new insurance broker and to a lawyer. Hopefully, Gioventu said, the insurance problems won’t scuttle the sale of the building, but strata members “should be deeply concerned.”
Morgan’s strata — or any other in a similar situation — should try not to panic, Gioventu said. “But they should stay on high alert and be concerned about how they are going to get insurance.”
Gioventu said Thursday he knows of roughly 11 stratas in British Columbia currently unable to secure building insurance.
In a normal year there wouldn’t be any buildings in that situation, Gioventu said. “This is certainly unusual.”
There are generally two kinds of insurance in condos: building insurance, which stratas are required to have under the Strata Property Act, and condo unit owner insurance, which owners can choose not to have to carry their own contents.
Building insurance premiums have been skyrocketing in the first weeks of 2020, and Gioventu expects condo homeowner rates might increase too.
Chuck Byrne, executive director of the Insurance Brokers Association of B.C., said his group is hearing, anecdotally, about more “non-renewals,” where stratas can’t secure building insurance.
He’s not sure exactly how many “non-renewals” there are around B.C., he said, but he expects more to come.
“We didn’t hear about them, usually, previous to now,” Byrne said. “I’ve never seen anything this bad for a long time.”
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