A major insurance company analyzed its claims data and
concluded that its policy holders were 10 (TEN) times more likely to suffer
water damage than fire damage. In North
Carolina alone this insurance company determined that water damaged claims -
excluding water damage caused by catastrophes - accounted for 28% of its
property claims in the state. The
insurance company - in a predictable attempt to control this info and for its
own interests - went on to state that much of the damage was preventable thereby
parlaying its own realized risk onto the policyholder who may not have had any reasonable
expectation of control over the situation.
In response to such ongoing and unrealistic circumvention of
responsibility, an independent water damage restoration company in Illinois
recently decided to educate the insurance industry and created a "Flood
House Laboratory" ("FHL").
The FHL was conceptualized to, and is being used to, educate insurance
company adjustors, agents, and relevant personnel as to what full, proper, and
customer focused water damage restoration entails and requires. The FHL is a small scale "house"
that is complete with hardwood floors.
The continuing education insurance company representative is required to
flood the house and then physically work with a variety of tools ranging from low
level and ineffective "adjustor approved" tools and techniques
through professional equipment to see and experience the difference
firsthand. From this experiment even the
most blind adjustor was able to see, and have an appreciation for, the true
level of workmanship and expertise an independent water damage restoration
company has opposed to the standard, adjustor approved lapdog that under-prices
and under -performs simply to appease the adjuster and get work.
The scary part of this "appreciation" is that such
appreciation is something a reasonable policyholder would assume is common
knowledge to their insurance company and adjuster. The policyholder is reasonable to question
how their insurance company and insurance adjuster could properly and fairly assess
their water damage and assign a fair and reasonable indemnification valuation
to their loss if they are not properly educated in water damage
restoration. Unfortunately, the
policyholder soon realizes that their loss is nothing more than another
burdensome claim to be unfairly and prejudicially adjusted in favor of their
insurance company and in blatant disregard of their contractually bound and
written policy.
This article is composed by and offered as a public service by Jimmy K. Jimmy K is the Independent Owner and Operator of Emergency Response Restoration (http://www.emergencyresponserestoration.com/), 2665 N Atlantic Avenue, Daytona Beach, FL 32118. Jimmy K is a true consumer advocate who is not afraid to battle the insurance company to ensure the proper restoration of the consumer's water damaged home office or asset. |
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