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Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2022

About the Author

Gene Ward

Rep. Gene Ward (R-Hawaii Kai) is a former entrepreneur trainer and consultant with the United Nations in Africa and former Peace Corps volunteer in Asia. He represents House District 18.


Emergency meetings are happening in condos across the state, though our local government does not feel the same level of urgency.

It was only a few years ago that almost half of Hawaii households could afford or qualify for a mortgage on a median-priced home. Though today, according to a newly published University of Hawaii Research Office study, only 2 in 10 of us can afford to buy that same house.

As though this is not a big enough problem, it is soon to be compounded by the looming home insurance crisis which will cast our elderly out of their homes — many of whom have worked a lifetime to pay off their mortgages just to be unable to afford skyrocketing homeowners insurance premiums.

As many of you have already heard, condo and homeowners insurance costs have gone through the roof. Take for example a prominent Hawaii Kai condo whose annual insurance premium has risen tenfold from $365,000 to $3,650,000 in a single year.

On an individual basis, owners are now being left to foot massive assessments and increases in their monthly HOA costs. To avoid this, associations are searching for cost-saving alternatives such as insuring for less than 100% of the building’s replacement cost, leaving their residents with diminished borrowing power and even greater financial risk down the line.

And, as all else fails, owners are increasingly scrambling to exit the mess by selling their units in an environment of high-interest and unaffordability, which disincentivizes many possible buyers.

Emergency meetings are happening in condos across the state, though our local government does not feel the same level of urgency. What’s happening to Hawaii homeowners now is partially due to this tone-deaf nature.

We had Senate Bill 3234 to stabilize the property insurance market and a watered-down study of the issue in House Bill 2686. But in the end, all concerns were neglected and left on the House-Senate Conference table, clearing the way for the insurance crisis to continue with no end in sight.

Sadly, the collateral damage the negligence has created is now hurting our kupuna the most. When our elderly on fixed incomes get hit with anywhere from a 100% to 1,000% increase in homeowners insurance, they panic, but expect relief and assistance in order to be able to stay in their homes.

For example, when Hurricane Iniki hit Kauai in 1992 and all hurricane insurers pulled out of Hawaii (like they are doing now) the Legislature quickly created the Hurricane Relief Fund to assure bankers and mortgage holders that condo and homeowners would not be abandoned.

Condo developments all over Hawaii are being affected by skyrocketing insurance costs. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2015)

The solution to our present situation? Two options come to mind.

The first: The Legislature could create a Homeowners Insurance Relief Fund, much like the Hurricane Relief Fund after Iniki. This means the state of Hawaii’s good faith and credit stands between the private sector insurers and Hawaii homeowners if anything catastrophic occurs. This relief fund would tamp down insurance rates and make insurance affordable again as it did after Iniki hit Kauai.

The second option is to keep the Legislature from sitting on its hands and start solving this issue after failing to come to a resolution in the 2024 Regular Session.

With enough planning and oversight the Hawaii State House and Senate should call for a Special Legislative Session to address this insurance crisis and nip it in the bud before our elderly homeowners panic further, have their credit ratings tank or are foreclosed on.

Yes, this is an election year, and many legislators may have been thinking more about their reelection than insurance fixes. But now there’s one big flaw in this thinking, and that is that our kupuna own the most homes and condos in the state and are the largest and most reliable group to show up at the polls. Legislators neglecting the immediate insurance woes of these Hawaii residents do so at their own peril.

For my constituents and anyone who would like to join, I am sponsoring a town hall meeting with the Insurance Commissioner and the insurance industry along with representatives from the governor’s office, mayor’s office and Legislature. If you have been affected by the unfolding crisis I have just outlined, I encourage your attendance on July 2 at 6 p.m. at Hawaii Kai’s Hahaione Elementary School to share your situation and provide your feedback on solutions.

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About the Author

Gene Ward

Rep. Gene Ward (R-Hawaii Kai) is a former entrepreneur trainer and consultant with the United Nations in Africa and former Peace Corps volunteer in Asia. He represents House District 18.


Latest Comments (0)

As a prelude, IMO banks and insurance carriers are so intertwined they function nearly as one. If you need a loan to buy, refinance, or simply acquire a HELCO the bank requires you to have insurance to secure their their piece of the asset. In new home financing, the purchaser is normally required to put down 15% of the purchase price, but with a HELOC, this loan ratio could be less than 10%, but the same requirement for insurance exists.This is skewed and puts unfair burden on the property owner. If the bank's exposure is only 20% of the asset value, why should the property owner be insurance for 100% replacement cost, if they are willing to shoulder the risk of loss? Why not have no hurricane coverage and just 50% of homeowners coverage. That's the scam. If a property owner is willing to accept the risk it should be their choice and that is true if you own your home outright. However, if you have a loan of 25% of the property value, why should the bank require you to purchase insurance as if they have 100% rights to that property? This is where change and savings can be had; insurance only for the loan value, if the owner is willing to carry the remaining risk.

wailani1961 · 7 months ago

We need a special session to solve our housing crisis We need a special session to solve our cost of living crisis We need a special session for insurance crisis We need a special session for our high tax crisis We need a special session to fire our present politicians as they lead us from crude to cris but never solving any of the crisis.

peters · 7 months ago

Excellent article!Owners and lawmakers can do a short, formal request to the DCCA Insurance Division under Hawaii Revised Statutes section 92F for:1. Procedures and memoranda regarding investigation and discipline of insurers engaged in boycotting, and2. For the list of insurers and their ratings authorized to transact the business of property/casualty insurance in Hawaii who may or may not be licensed here.3. For the data on Hawaii boycotting cases in the past, and4. For policies/procedures for DCCA to refer such cases to the FTC (there is no immunity for boycotting markets)

solver · 7 months ago

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