Moved over from the Floridian
A state representative is pushing Arizona to take wildfire threats more seriously, not just because of the flames themselves, but because of a growing financial nightmare facing everyday homeowners.
Representative Selina Bliss (R-AZ) recently joined an Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC) town hall focused on wildfire risk and a problem that doesn't always make the headlines: insurance companies dropping or refusing to renew policies for people living in fire-prone areas.
The event brought together utility companies, fire experts, state officials, and members of the public to tackle what's becoming a two-front crisis.
So what's the big deal? Wildfires in Arizona aren't just destroying homes and forests; they're also making it harder and more expensive for people to get basic insurance coverage.
In high-risk zones, some homeowners are finding their policies canceled entirely, even if they've done everything right. Without insurance, owning a home becomes a serious financial gamble.
Rep. Bliss didn't hold back on where she stands. She argued that when families start getting priced out of the insurance market, the state has a responsibility to step in. Communities like Prescott, Sedona, and areas throughout Yavapai County face real, immediate danger every fire season.
On the legislative side, Bliss pointed to several bills passed in 2025 aimed at strengthening Arizona's response.
These include requiring utility companies to submit wildfire mitigation plans, clearing roadblocks for the State Forester during emergencies, extending tax breaks tied to forest restoration, and creating a task force specifically to review fire insurance issues.
The state also approved a 15% pay raise for state firefighters and increased funding for wildfire preparedness through the Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management.
Recent research also shows that in Arizona's forested communities, the insurance crisis is already playing out in real numbers. Gila County saw roughly 2.5% of homeowners' policies non-renewed in 2022, well above the statewide average.
Unlike California or Texas, Arizona has no state-backed insurer of last resort, leaving dropped homeowners to navigate a shrinking private market at significantly higher costs.
Experts say the best defense is mitigation: cleared vegetation, fire-resistant roofing, and maintained gutters can make the difference between keeping coverage and losing it.
The town hall wrapped up with a broader agreement that the ACC and the Legislature need to work more closely together going forward, coordinating on everything from grid reliability to keeping insurance accessible.
For now, with another fire season on the horizon, Arizona is racing to get ahead of a problem that affects not just forests, but family finances too.
“Arizona is making progress, but there is more work to do,” Representative Bliss concluded.
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