Introducing the 2026 Power Brokers

Poverty produces its own cruel chaos. Consider the work done by these 2026 Power Brokers in the realm of affordable housing.
By: | February 23, 2026

Call it ironic. Call it unfair. But if you were to examine the newspaper headlines and accompanying stories regarding fires in California, hurricanes in Louisiana, or floods in North Carolina, you might come away with the impression that insurance companies are villains that stand in the way of people wanting to live where they choose affordably. Withdrawn coverage, massive increases in insurance premiums, nasty settlement disputes that drag on and on; you’ve seen the story lines.

What you will not read about in the Los Angeles Times, or digest on CNN or NBC, are stories about how the insurance industry and the professionals within it serve to provide coverage for affordable housing. So let’s put aside for a bit the first-world struggles of those who want a storm-exposed house at the beach or a farmette in the wildfire-prone California wine country.

Let’s consider the work done by 2026 Power Broker Zoe Shaw, a California based business insurance consultant for the Marsh McLennan Agency and a winner in the nonprofit category. Shaw works with San Francisco based HomeRise, a nonprofit affordable housing provider that was burdened by multimillion-dollar premiums tied to a high-risk property portfolio. By leveraging catastrophe modeling, claims analysis, and refined statements of values, Shaw secured a 33% rate decrease and more than $700,000 in savings for the housing nonprofit. And what was done with the premium savings? It was redirected to help end homelessness.

Or consider the career arc of Peter Tallerico, an area vice president for Gallagher based in Michigan. After graduating from the University of Michigan, Tallerico spent eight years in the affordable housing industry. During that time, he was part of a team that successfully completed 4,200 units and $1 billion in affordable housing developments, utilizing a variety of funding sources such as Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC), Project-Based Section 8, CDBG, AHP, FHLB, HOME, and PA5 programs. Now Tallerico puts that experience to use as the broker of record for a multi-family housing concern that encompasses 25,000 units.

John Beres, chief business officer for SterlingRisk, worked closely with owners and developers of affordable housing. He saw a persistent problem: Insurers clinging to outdated perceptions of neighborhoods, such as Harlem, where upgraded housing has failed to earn bids for coverage. In one case, an insurer flatly refused coverage for one of Beres’ clients, saying they didn’t insure Section 8 housing. Beres joined a group of affordable housing advocates pushing to make such practices illegal, and a law making them illegal was passed in 2024.

Beres, Talerico and Shaw are not the only heroic advocates we praise in this year’s edition of Power Broker®. In fact there are more than 150 brokers who earned the title this year. But they are an important reminder that insurance underwriters and brokers do a lot of good in this world, and we should always defend them and push back against ill-informed perspectives that would seek to demonize them. &

 

All 2026 Power Broker Winners

 

What is a Power Broker?

A Risk & Insurance Power Broker® is an individual who stands out among their peers for the exceptional client work they have delivered over the past year. While brokers play many key roles in the insurance industry and risk profession, a Power Broker® award recognizes problem solving, customer service and industry knowledge.

Our goal is to broadly recognize and promote outstanding risk management and customer service among the brokerage community.

Who selects the winners?

Power Brokers are selected by risk managers based on the strength of the testimonials they provide to a team of 15 Risk & Insurance editors and writers.

Dan Reynolds is editor-in-chief of Risk & Insurance. He can be reached at [email protected].

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