| |
Contents:
Find more articles on our website, or follow us on Facebook and Twitter for immediate notification of posted articles.
|
|
| |
Help us serve the newest disaster survivors! Just click HERE for your donation options. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Dealing With Disaster: Are You Ready?Disaster can happen quickly and without warning. Would you and your family be ready in the event of an earthquake, fire, flood, hurricane or tornado?
"Planning makes a big difference in coping with disaster," says Charles Valinotti, senior vice president of insurer QBE. "The better prepared you are, the better you can cope in the aftermath of an emergency."
Read More: http://www.10news.com/houseandhome/29126219/detail.html
---
|
Fire-weary Texas residents looking to insuranceBASTROP, Texas — Texas residents whose homes have been destroyed by wildfires are now turning to insurance claims to get by and rebuild.
Wildfires that have burned in Central and East Texas since Labor Day have created losses estimated at $250 million, making them the costliest in the state's history, according to the Insurance Council of Texas.
In Bastrop County, where the most destructive wildfire in Texas history left hundreds of families homeless, many residents are surviving on insurance money they can get for living expenses — and on the hope that comes as claims adjustors begin to assess the damage.
Read More: http://www.statesman.com/news/texas/fire-weary-texas-residents-looking-to-insurance-1852670.html
---
|
Bastrop TX: Fire victims face tough emotionsBASTROP — In the parking lot at the Home Depot, over coffee and pancakes in the Whataburger, at the Shell convenience store, the recovery of Bastrop County has begun.
In conversations. Between neighbors, friends, even strangers.
"After everything that's happened — we lost everything we had, except ourselves and the clothes on our back — it feels good to talk to someone who's in the same boat," said Dona Suarez, 56, talking with a group of seven neighbors about what to do next outside the home supply retailer on Texas 71.
Read More: http://www.statesman.com/news/local/fire-victims-face-tough-emotions-1865798.html
---
|
|
|
|
Insurance Claims: Wind Versus Water? Not This TimeHurricane Irene won’t come close to reviving the wind vs. water debate that occupied the court systems of Mississippi and Louisiana for years following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
The wind vs. water debate and the mind-bending, tongue-tying “anti-concurrent causation clause” language within insurance policies will not be an issue.
Not by a long shot.
Flood, including storm surge, is not covered by a standard homeowners policy. Moreover, multiple forces cannot combine to cause the exact same loss. This is what the anti-concurrent causation clause debate was about. During Katrina, two events—wind and then surge—caused two different losses. But the debate after Katrina was a heck of a lot more complicated than that because all that was left of many, many homes was a concrete slab.
Read More: http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2011/09/02/wind-versus-water-not-this-time
---
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
When it is dark enough, you can see the stars. Ralph Waldo Emerson
|
|
Help CARe provide assistance to disaster survivors and continue our free services: http://www.carehelp.org/donate.html ... Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/CommAssistRecov or on Facebook: http://bit.ly/CAReFacebook Community Assisting Recovery, Inc. 19360 Rinaldi Street, PMB 220, Northridge CA 91326 www.carehelp.org 888-216-8264
|