Where are the insurance adjustors for new orleans people??

7up

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i work for an insurance co and we have 400-500 people staged in memphis, ready to go in, when they are allowed in.they are already working numerous claim in tn, miss and ala where you can find the people, inspect the property and handle the claim and working their way south, can't get set up on the coast yet.

flooding is not covered by regular homeowners policys, the ins co sell flood insurance but is is administered thru the federal flood ins program by the feds.it is very basic coverage, with high deductibles and damn expensive and only covers the actual cash value of the bldg not the replacement cost.

oh, insurance co's do make alot of money,most yrs, but we have to and have the cash on hand,so like last yr when the hurricanes hit, we had over 100000 extra claims and paid out 1 1/2 billion dollars, and we are not near the largest. state farm dwarfs everyone, they will have the most claims, but then again they have the most money.

i've been on the catastrophe's before and it's hard work, for long hrs, for weeks at a time 7 days a week.

the loss of use that was referred to is actually called "additional living expense",ie the additional money it is costing you to live while the covered property is uninhabitable from a covered loss.your mortgage payment goes on so the ins pays for the apartment.you spend 150 a week on groceries, you are in the apt and still spend 150 a week in groceries, the ins co pays nothing, nothing additional incurred.

just a prespective from an ins adjuster, we are there to help. i expect our co will get about 30000 claims from the storm.
 

VaNurse

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7Up explained it very well. Flood damage or seepage of ground water is specifically excluded for coverage on homeowners policies. If you live in a flood plain, your mortgage company would require you to carry flood insurance in order to protect their interest but it really doesn't provide much for the homeowner in the way of reimbursement for loss.

Flood insurance is a product of the Federal government and will, most likely, end up being handled like the rest of this cluster fcuk. Administrative red tape and endless completion of forms (in triplicate) probably await all of the claimants. It's the government way. :shrug:
 

homedog

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It will be interesting to see if the insurance companies have the funds to cover the claims. My opinion is that they will not.
 

oldschoolcapper

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if there ever comes a time when the largest insurance companies go broke, that will be the least of our concerns
 

oldschoolcapper

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if insurance companies that have hundreds of millions and bigger ones that have several billion stockpiled have to use all of their money, it will be because of a catastrophe that is 10 times worse than katrina. the economy would tank and most of us would be jobless, homeless, etc.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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Good job of explaining 7up.

Yep Edward I see where State farm donated a million on relief--how much did you/your firm send?
I would say the insurance personell down there outnumber the attorneys 100 to one "for now" and they aren't getting 1/3 of settlements either ----Question for you--can you name another element in addition to the looters who look at this event as opportunity???--- I can ;)
 

7up

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no big insurance co's will go out due to this storm, maybe some very small co's whose business might be concentrated in miss or la.

aticle in our paper this morning indicated only 45% of homeowers in la had flood ins and although there might be 100 billion of damage, only est of 25-30 billion of insured losses.

in general, this is a slower time for claims for the ins co as kids are back in school and the weather around the country is generally good(except for the hurricanes).

in hurricane andrew a few small ones went out but the bid co's can handle it. the big problem is with the 4 last yr, and katrina, and we still have time for another this yr, is in the future if people living on the coast will even be able to get ins coverage and if so, at what cost. tough call.
 

Agent 0659

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homedog said:
It will be interesting to see if the insurance companies have the funds to cover the claims. My opinion is that they will not.
:mj07:
They wont go under, they are required to have a certain amount of money on "reserve" vs number of policies. They have the money.
 

homedog

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You may be correct Agent, but when does "requirement" prevent people/companies from disobeying the law.

I guess Enron had no such "requirement". :mj07:
 
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