NUECES COUNTY — Nueces County commissioners voted May 24 to renew the countyalendar-year property and casualty program with a $50 million named-storm loss limit, a change the countyonsultant said was driven by dramatically higher market pricing and shrinking insurer capacity.
Insurance consultant Chase (county consultant) told the court that county replacement values had been revised from about $344 million to $387 million and that buying $50 million in named-storm coverage — rather than the $100 million the county carried last year — would still align with catastrophic-model results while limiting an otherwise steep premium increase. "We are recommending purchasing $50,000,000 this year," the consultant said, noting that carriers had reduced capacity and that premiums overall were increasing rapidly.
Why it matters: the court
ccepted a package that raises overall premiums while cutting the countylood/windstorm policy limit in half and increasing named-storm deductibles. Under the plan commissioners approved, properties on barrier islands would face a 10% named-storm deductible; most inland county properties would have a 3% named-storm deductible. The consultant warned that the market had tightened such that many peers were buying far less relative coverage this renewal season.
Parametric option for pier: Commissioners asked staff to pursue a parallel parametric insurance option — a trigger-based policy that pays out when specified wind or surge thresholds are met. The consultant said parametric policies could be structured to trigger by wind speed or an eye-of-storm gate and be used broadly (for cleanup, lost revenue, payroll and repairs) rather than limit payouts to a single structure. "Depending on how we structure that policy, it could be anywhere from, like I said in the letter, 280,000 or ... $800,000 or $850,000," the consultant said when describing parametric-price estimates for limits between $5 million and $10 million.
Court
ction and next steps: the commissioners voted to accept the recommended renewal package, and separately directed the consultant and staff to return with detailed parametric proposals for a future meeting, including trigger locations, payout schedules and pricing scenarios. Several commissioners said they wanted the parametric analysis folded into the budget process before finalizing coverage for new pier and concession projects.
What remained unresolved: commissioners and staff acknowledged the trade-offs: the county would pay more in premiums and face higher deductibles while the countyxamines whether a parametric policy can mitigate coastal exposures such as a new Bob Hall pier or restaurant concessions.
Estimated figures and budget effects: staff told the court the renewal would increase the countyosts roughly $610,000 for the year when compared with the prior package, while reducing the named-storm limit from $100 million to $50 million. Commissioners asked for a follow-up package that includes parametric options and a clear summary showing the countyxposure and how a parametric feature might subsidize higher deductibles on coastal properties.
The court agreed to revisit parametric proposals within 30 days or at the June 7 meeting if staff could provide more detail.
Ending note: the court
pproved the renewal by voice vote and asked the consultant to return with concrete parametric options and cost/benefit scenarios before the next budget cycle.