
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - Oct. 26, 2009 - There is a change of heart for some insurers. Florida's public insurance company reversed course this week and said it will cover a couple's Gulf Coast retirement home, after previously telling the homeowners their policy wouldn't be renewed because of the home's tainted Chinese drywall.
Citizens Property Insurance Corp., a state-backed insurer of last resort, told The Associated Press for an Oct. 15 story that it generally couldn't continue to cover homes with such defective materials because of a "pollution" exclusion in policies.
"Without walking into a courtroom, this is one of my most proudest victories," said David Durkee, the couple's attorney.
Following reports by media groups including AP, the company asked to perform a second home inspection last week. It told the couple on Thursday it reversed its decision and would continue the policy at least into 2011.
"We're just elated," said James Ivory, who has sued his builder to replace the wallboard. "I mean, you never hear of an insurance company changing their mind."
Citizens spokesman John Kuczwanski said "this is all just so new" that insurers are only now beginning to determine how to address it. He added, however, "If someone has Chinese drywall, they can still get a policy with us."
U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson of Florida had sent letters to 11 insurance companies requesting policy guidelines on Chinese drywall and expressing outrage at cancellations.
"The Associated Press raised serious questions in its recent coverage of insurance companies and homeowners' drywall claims," Nelson said Friday. "Some of these companies need to be shamed into doing the right thing."
Thousands of homeowners nationwide who bought houses built with the defective materials are finding their lives in limbo as hundreds of lawsuits like the Ivorys' work through the courts.
Experts warn that cases like the Ivorys', in which insurers drop policies or send notices of non-renewal based on the presence of defective drywall, will become rampant as companies process hundreds of claims.
At least two private insurers have already canceled or refused to renew policies after homeowners sought their help replacing defective drywall. No law prevents the cancellations.
On Friday, top U.S. safety officials met with Chinese counterparts in Shanghai to discuss American complaints about the drywall.
Construction companies imported the wallboard at the height of the U.S. housing boom. Many of the homes are concentrated in the Southeast, especially Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi.
Regulators say the defective materials emit fumes and contain traces of a chemical that can produce a rotten-egg odor that appears to grow worse with heat and humidity.
Homeowners complain the fumes are corroding copper pipes, destroying TVs and air conditioners and blackening silverware. Some believe it is also making them ill.
Insurers are in a quandary. Some say they can't continue providing insurance until the problem is fixed, something some say could cost homeowners more than they paid for their homes.
Robert Hartwig, president of the Insurance Information Institute, has said homeowners policies were never meant to cover "faulty, inadequate or defective" construction or materials. He said it's too soon to say whether private insurers will make the same move as Citizens.
"It's hard to get a ripple when there's such a tiny number of these cases to begin with right now," he said.
Citizens said there has been no policy change. The company still won't pay to fix the problem, but after a "more detailed" inspection of the Ivorys' home, it found "signs of corrosion on pipes and wiring, however not to the extent warranted for non-renewal," a letter to the couple stated.
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