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Commissioner Lara and Assemblymember Gipson Unveil the Smoke Damage Recovery Act

News: 2026 Press Release

For Release: February 11, 2026
Media Calls Only: 916-492-3566
Email Inquiries: cdipress@insurance.ca.gov

Commissioner Lara and Assemblymember Gipson Unveil the Smoke Damage Recovery Act
Nation’s First Public Health and Insurance Standards to Protect Families from Toxic Smoke Contamination

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In response to unprecedented smoke contamination from last year’s Los Angeles wildfires, the largest urban wildfire disaster in state history, Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara and Assemblymember Mike Gipson today announced AB 1795, the Smoke Damage Recovery Act, landmark legislation establishing California’s first enforceable public health and insurance claims standards for smoke damaged homes.

Despite the growing severity of wildfires, no state or national standards exist for testing, cleaning, or restoring homes contaminated by wildfire smoke. This gap in the law has left families navigating conflicting expert opinions, prolonged insurance disputes, and unsafe living conditions. AB 1795 directly confronts this decades old failure by creating science based, health driven standards for smoke testing and restoration and by providing immediate relief for Los Angeles wildfire survivors who cannot wait for statewide standards to be finalized.

Commissioner Lara has repeatedly emphasized that smoke damage is not merely an insurance issue — it is a public health crisis. A central feature of AB 1795 is its early action provision, designed specifically to address the delays and disputes facing survivors of the Los Angeles wildfires. If a state or local health or environmental agency issues specific standards for interior smoke testing, screening levels, or restoration, survivors will be able to use those local standards immediately to support and expedite their insurance claims.

This empowers a public health agency to issue interim guidance that insurers must follow, giving families a clear path to recovery now rather than waiting months for statewide standards to be completed.

This is the first bill in the nation to create a mechanism for immediate, locally driven smoke damage standard, a direct response to what survivors have been asking for.

“Wildfire survivors are being told to return to homes coated in toxic residue and that is unacceptable. This is not just an insurance dispute; it is a public health emergency. Families cannot wait for long processes or conflicting opinions. They need clear standards and real protection now,” said Commissioner Lara.  “We are delivering immediate relief for Los Angeles survivors while building the long term, science based framework Californians deserve. After more than 30 years without enforceable standards, it falls to us to lead.”

“Smoke contamination has left families uncertain about whether it’s safe to return home parents worried about their children’s health, older residents displaced from their homes, and entire communities caught in limbo,” said Assemblymember Gipson. “AB 1795 gives survivors what they have been pleading for: real standards, real protections, and real urgency. Strong, science based rules are the only way to ensure families get a fair and safe path back home.”

Why AB 1795 Is Needed Now

  • The Los Angeles wildfires produced historic levels of smoke contamination, affecting thousands of standing homes.
  • Survivors report severe health symptoms, conflicting expert assessments, and insurers denying or minimizing claims.
  • No state or national standards exist for smoke testing, remediation, or claims handling.
  • The Department of Insurance is investigating hundreds of consumer complaints and has taken enforcement action against the FAIR Plan for improper smoke‑claim denials.
  • The Department’s Smoke Claims & Remediation Task Force — including CAL FIRE, public health experts, restoration specialists, and survivor groups has identified urgent needs for uniform standards and will issue recommendations next month.

What AB 1795 Would Do

AB 1795 addresses the decades‑long absence of standards and the unprecedented damage caused by the Los Angeles wildfires by:

  • Establishing science‑based, health‑driven standards for inspection, testing, and restoration of smoke‑damaged homes.
  • Creating uniform insurance claims‑handling practices and required restoration protocols.
  • Developing health‑based guidelines to determine when a home is safe for families to return.
  • Designating the appropriate state and local agencies to implement and enforce these standards.
  • Providing immediate relief by allowing survivors to rely on local public health standards for smoke testing and restoration while statewide standards are being finalized.

These provisions reflect the consensus among California’s public health experts, environmental scientists, and survivor advocates that smoke contamination poses long‑term health risks requiring specialized, science‑based remediation not ad hoc, insurer‑driven decisions.

Commissioner Lara’s Actions on Smoke Damage Recovery

These efforts build on California’s broader modernization of insurance regulation and wildfire recovery practices.

A National Model

By establishing the nation’s first comprehensive smoke‑damage standards and by creating a mechanism for immediate, locally driven relief, AB 1795 positions California to lead the development of a national framework, much like the Department has done with climate disclosure, wildfire catastrophe modeling, and the Sustainable Insurance Strategy.

As wildfires intensify and smoke impacts reach communities far beyond traditional fire zones, states across the country are confronting the same lack of clear standards that California is addressing today. National media coverage in the New York Times and the San Francisco Chronicle has highlighted the growing public health implications of wildfire smoke and the absence of consistent remediation protocols underscoring the urgent need for the type of science‑based protections California is now advancing.

Next Steps

The Smoke Claims & Remediation Task Force will finalize its recommendations in March. These findings, along with public input from survivors, existing research, and ongoing investigations, will inform amendments to AB 1795 as it moves through the Legislature.

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Led by Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, the California Department of Insurance is the consumer protection agency for the nation's largest insurance marketplace and safeguards all of the state’s consumers by fairly regulating the insurance industry. Under the Commissioner’s direction, the Department uses its authority to protect Californians from insurance rates that are excessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory, oversee insurer solvency to pay claims, set standards for agents and broker licensing, perform market conduct reviews of insurance companies, resolve consumer complaints, and investigate and prosecute insurance fraud. Consumers are urged to call 1-800-927-4357 with any questions or contact us at www.insurance.ca.gov via webform or online chat. Non-media inquiries should be directed to the Consumer Hotline at 800-927-4357. Teletypewriter (TTY), please dial 800-482-4833.

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