John Wortman
announces retirement as CEO of Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance
Corporation, Commissioner Donelon praises his contributions
Released: July 2, 2010
John
Wortman, CEO of Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance Corporation
(Citizens), the state’s property insurance of last resort, has
announced his upcoming retirement. “John Wortman has been a tremendous
asset to Louisiana during our recovery from the catastrophic hurricanes
of 2005. He came to Citizens in a time of great turmoil within the
organization and worked tirelessly to set Citizens on a course for
future efficiency and professionalism. I am grateful to him for his
extraordinary contributions and I wish him well in his much deserved
retirement,” said Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon.
Commissioner Donelon hired John Wortman as the CEO of Louisiana
Citizens in April of 2007 in the wake of financial and administrative
problems
following the upheaval in the Louisiana property insurance market
brought on by hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Wortman took over
the corporation
with several organizational challenges. He first hired insurance
company managers with the knowledge and experience to run Citizens
properly
and then spent the next years overhauling Citizens from top to
bottom to insure a stable property insurance market of last
resort. Wortman
and his management team introduced new computer systems, new applications
and underwriting procedures, catastrophe management plans, and
comprehensive depopulation programs. The goals of producing
reliable financial statements,
improving services to policyholders and agents, and decreasing
the size of Citizens were achieved and the end result is a
residual market
that is a model for coastal states with similar catastrophe exposure.
Following Katrina and Rita, the Citizens book of business had ballooned
to 170,000 policies. Since Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Citizens
has held three depopulation offerings to the insurance industry
and succeeded
in reducing their total policies by 43,000 with 15 companies
participating in the three offerings. Citizens now has 127,000
policies, which
is approaching the number held before Hurricane Katrina, and
continues on the downward trend. This benefits not only policyholders
who
get
less expensive policies than they would with Citizens but depopulation
also reduces risk of exposure for every property insurance policyholder
in our state.
As evidence
of the reforms implemented under Wortman’s
leadership, the bond market responded last year to an offering of
$300 million
of auction rate bonds that enabled Citizens to save approximately
$15 million per year as a result
of that refinancing. During the crisis facing Citizens as a
result of a class-action
lawsuit
filed in Jefferson Parish, Wortman
was able to access a bond that allowed Citizens to pursue its pending
appeal largely due to his reputation earned over a 40 year career in
the insurance industry. The offer to write that bond was communicated
to Citizens from Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway Company by
Mr. Ajit Jain, who is Mr. Buffett’s right hand man, and knew
Wortman from their years working in the insurance industry. Donelon
cited that as one of the most important contributions Wortman has made
to our state’s ongoing recovery from the hurricanes of 2005 as
it avoided the need to do an assessment on every property insurance
policy in Louisiana.
“John Wortman stated in his initial interview for the Citizens CEO position
that he wanted to contribute back to the industry he had worked in throughout
his career in the aftermath of the worst catastrophic event in the history of
insurance, and he certainly fulfilled that goal. The people of Louisiana owe
a great debt to John Wortman who has made as important a contribution as anyone
to our state’s recovery,” Donelon added.
Questions regarding
this press release can be directed to the Louisiana Department of
Insurance Division
of Public Affairs at 225-342-4950.