Many residents of Florida whose homes were destroyed by Hurricane Ian are now facing the arduous task of rebuilding without insurance – or paying even steeper prices in an insurance market that was already struggling.Wind and storm-surge losses from the hurricane could reach between $28bn and $47bn, making it Florida’s costliest storm since Hurricane Andrew made landfall in 1992, according to the property analytics firm CoreLogic.Hurricane Ian, which made landfall in Florida last week, has resulted in at least 84 confirmed deaths, including 75 in Florida. Ian’s powerful winds and punishing storm surge knocked out power lines, flooded homes and destroyed businesses.
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