Are Captives the Answer for Uninsured HOAs? Utah Opens Door

 When actuary Greg Fears attended a Western Region Captive



Insurance Conference in April, he expected to learn and share informa


tion about emerging uses of captives for commercial risks, including trucking captives—a recent focus of his attention.


But during the last session of the conference, Fears, a dir


ector and consulting actuary for Pinnacle Actuarial Resour


ces, heard something he hadn’t heard in his 20-plus years of captive advisory work. When Utah’s representative sp


oke up at that final pan


el, consisting of a group of regulators reporting new developments in their state, Utah’s captive director said his st


ate passed legislation to allow homeowners associations to form captives in Utah.


Fears checked the law after the session. As of May 1, 2024, Utah Code Section 31A-37-202 states that “if


approved by the commissioner….an association captive insurance co


mpany that satisfies the requirements of this chapter may provide homeowners insurance.”


“This is a monumental change in the captive insurance market,” Fears wrote in a blog post on the Pinnacle w


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ebsite that he penned after the captive conference to delive


r the game-changing


news. Noting that there are 30 or 40 states that have captive legislation, “what hasn’t been included in the past in


that captive legislation is allowing personal lines type insurance,” he told Carrier Management during a recent interview.


There’s only one exception that’s come close previously—laws allowing tenant legal liability insurance for capti


ves owned by landlords—”but typically it’s a fronted program


with an A-rated carrier, and the captive is assuming part of the risk,” Fears said.


Utah is different. Utah is allowing captives in response to the current struggles of homeowners in any catastrop


he-prone states where traditional residential insurance coverage


is becoming increasingly unaffordable—and unavailable. “You are seeing traditional insurance companies pull o


ut of Florida, pull out of California, or send nonrenewal notic


es to reduce the writings in those states. Some customers are going bare with their insurance,” Fears said.


The director of Utah’s Captive Insurance Division, Travis Wegkamp, who spoke at the captive conference, con


firmed to Carrier Management that this opens up opportunities for HOAs in wildfire-exposed areas of California as well as Utah, and even those located in hurrican


e-exposed regions

of Florida. “The captive itself would be a Utah entity but the parent company or the association can be from anywhere in the world really,” Wegkamp said.

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