TARPON SPRINGS, Fla. —
Condo owners in the Tampa Bay area may be facing a double
whammy in the coming months between homeowners insurance and
inspection costs.
The rate increases come as private homeowners insurance
companies have failed or moved out of state. Taxpayer-backed
Citizens Property Insurance has also announced plans to shed
thousands of policies.
|
Condo owners in the Tampa Bay area may be facing a double whammy in the coming months between homeowners insurance and inspection costs. The rate increases come as private homeowners insurance companies have failed or moved out of state. Taxpayer-backed Citizens Property Insurance has also announced plans to shed thousands of policies. |
“It could quadruple the cost of living in this condo. And that would be devastating to a lot of fixed-income senior people,” he said.
And
there’s another big concern from a law that passed after the
Champlain Towers condo collapsed in Surfside, FL, in 2021,
killing 98 people.
“I know that they are going to have engineers looking at
this to try to identify what happened,” Gov. Ron DeSantis
said at the scene during a press briefing the day after the
collapse.
Inspections and reserve funds mandated by the new law
An investigation revealed concrete columns, and the pool
deck weren’t constructed properly and didn’t meet building
codes. Documents also showed the Champlain Towers condo
board was warned about problems but put off recommended
repairs.
State Sen. Jason Pizzo, who represents Surfside, introduced
a bill calling for statewide condo inspections.
“There are 4.5 million condos in Florida. And we need to
make sure this doesn’t happen again,” Pizzo said when
proposing the legislation.
The law, passed in a special session last year, requires
condo buildings three stories or higher to have structural
inspections 30 years after construction and once every 10
years after.
If the building is near a coastline, inspections start at 25
years.
“They’re going about it wrong”
But Severson worries the law will force condo boards to put
millions of dollars in reserve.
Structural integrity studies must be completed by the end of
2024, and reserve accounts must be funded for future major
repairs, including the replacement of the roof, load-bearing
walls, and foundation.
“Nobody wants a Surfside to happen again. Nobody wants
unsafe buildings. But they’re going about it wrong,”
Severson said.
Seversen worries a worst-case scenario could force his
association to raise monthly dues from $500 a month to
$3,000, forcing some residents to move. That increase in
dues would also make units in the complex nearly impossible
to sell.
“That’s almost twice what the average person collects in
Social Security,” Severson said.
Severson was able to negotiate a policy for $98,000 from
Citizens Property Insurance, but only after paying $262,000
to replace a roof on a building that was installed in 2016.
Severson said his association is proposing a nearly $3,000
assessment this year to cover those insurance increases and
the repairs.
He worries the association’s financial picture could be much
worse next year.
“I’ve asked the lawyer what would happen if we just refused
to comply. And she said, well, you could go to jail,”
Severson said.
