http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/12412183.htmBY BEATRICE E. GARCIA
bgarcia@herald.com
South Florida homeowners are getting battered.
State Farm, the state's largest home insurer, on Wednesday filed for an average 8.6 percent rate increase on its homeowner and condo policies statewide. But because of higher construction costs and greater numbers of nonhurricane claims, the company said some areas of Miami-Dade and Broward may face increases of well over 30 percent.
State Farm's latest rate request is not related to hurricane damage, but it would be the second hike since last year's storms. State Farm has 925,000 policies in force in Florida, covering one out of every five homes in the state.
The filing came on the same day Citizens Property Insurance, the state-run pool, approved an assessment to cover its $516 million shortfall. All insured homeowners in the state will have to pay a one-time charge of 6.8 percent, meaning someone with a $3,000 insurance bill would have to pay an extra $204.
The prospect of being hit with a rate increase and the Citizens assessment at the same time certainly didn't make Barbara Maddox's day.
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