Frankfort Fire District Weighs Property Insurance Renewal Amid 29% Rate Increase
Frankfort Fire Protection District Board of Trustees Meeting | April 21, 2026
Article Summary: The Frankfort Fire Protection District board heard competing property and casualty insurance renewal proposals at its April 21, 2026, meeting — a 29% increase from current carrier FirstFire and a lower bid from prior carrier Selective — and tabled a decision to its next meeting.
Property Insurance Renewal Key Points:
- FirstFire’s renewal came in at a 29% increase, or $113,908, after the district did not receive a required 60-day notice for an increase of 30% or more.
- Prior carrier Selective submitted a competing proposal at $101,585.
- The board concurred to continue the discussion at its next meeting rather than vote on a renewal.
FRANKFORT — The Frankfort Fire Protection District Board of Trustees on Tuesday, April 21, 2026, reviewed two competing property and casualty insurance renewal proposals for 2026-2027 but held off on a decision, agreeing to continue the discussion at its next meeting.
Mitch Backes, an agent with Assured Partners, presented the renewal information and walked the board through a spreadsheet comparing the FirstFire renewal against a proposal from Selective, the district’s previous carrier.
According to the figures Backes presented, the district did not receive a required 60-day notice from FirstFire regarding an increase of 30% or more; as a result, FirstFire’s increase was held to 29%, or $113,908. Selective, the district’s previous property and casualty carrier, submitted what the minutes characterize as an aggressive renewal proposal at $101,585.
Backes detailed several coverage distinctions between the two options. He noted that, per Selective, a corner of the Station 72 property borders a FEMA flood zone, so coverage there would be $2 million, while all other stations would carry $5 million in coverage each. He also explained that Selective’s policy carries 80% to 90% co-insurance, whereas FirstFire’s has no co-insurance requirement, and discussed how “agreed value” functions on guaranteed replacement cost coverage.
The agenda had listed the insurance item under new business for discussion and possible approval. After an open discussion, however, the board concurred to continue the matter at its next meeting rather than vote on a renewal. Backes was dismissed from the meeting at 5:30 p.m.
The decision leaves the district’s property and casualty coverage for 2026-2027 unresolved heading into the board’s next session. The source materials do not state when the current policy expires or a deadline by which the board must act.
Latest News Stories
Illinois law mandates pharmacies to sell needles, sparking safety debate
Report warns U.S. national debt predicted to pass $53 trillion by 2035
Courts remain firm against unsealing grand jury records from Epstein trial
White House TikTok garners 1.3 million views in 24 hours
Newsom responds to Bondi’s letter on sanctuary policies
U.S., NATO military officials discuss Ukraine security guarantees
Illinois quick hits: Governor bans school fines; Target fires hundreds over fraud
Industry advocates: More state regulation will drive insurance rates higher
Lawmakers, policy groups react to social media warning suit
From Mexico to Knoxville, five cartel leaders wanted in drugs, weapons conspiracy
Trump administration pushes to remove noncitizen Medicaid enrollees
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Executive Committee for August 14, 2025