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PEMBELAJARAN: Sejarah Keramik Klampok Banjarnegara
PEMBELAJARAN: Sejarah Keramik Klampok Banjarnegara
Kamis, 23 Mei 2013
Water Will Find a Way
Water damage claims in Canada now make up 53% of all property insurance losses.*
As a former Insurance Broker I can attest to this statistic and even suggest that if all damage to property were reported & covered, that the number would be even higher. Why this growing trend? This is truly the fault of our own progression & modernization. If you consider that at only 100 years ago almost no one had water running or electricity into their homes, you can understand that damage from water was rare & in turn damage from fire was high. Electrical code (if you did have electricity running to your home) was non-existent & lighting your way by oil lamp & heating your house with firewood in a cast iron stove was the norm.
In this relatively short period of time we have evolved from indoor plumbing being a novelty of the rich to living in homes which in some cases have more bathrooms than bedrooms, appliances that wash our clothes & dishes and Hot water tanks sitting in our basements. This is the new normal. And although our electrical & heating prowess has grown to an art form in terms of safety and security, we haven't yet solved the water puzzle.
I recall years ago as I was navigating the ropes as a first time homeowner, I was wrestling with a leaky garage. Every time it rained the water entered and soaked the floor. My wise neighbor was having a laugh at the many attempts I had made to band aid the situation. I was sure I could avoid what I though was the large bill it would take to properly re mediate the situation. Being a good neighbor he didn't laugh too hard but instead offered the patient insight that I'll always remember; he said to me "Water will find a way". And it did, through every contraption, patch & quick fix I could throw at it.
I was lucky in the end that the water never did come into the house through the garage & after the painful reality of defeat had sunk in, I opened up my wallet and the phone book to call in a professional. I was however not so luck a few years ago when the washing machine malfunctioned a flooded my entire basement in 4 inches of water. I was so busy concerned about water coming in from the outside I never considered I'd get hit from the inside. My neighbors words echoed true: Water had found a way!
It turned out a simple $6 hose had burst and caused $25,000 in damage. (by the way: the cost of the upgraded braided hose I could have bought at the hardware store instead was only $12). Yes, two months and too many headaches later, I was able to rent out my basement again. Not only had I displaced my tenant and had to find a new one, I lost the income from rents, the deductible and my claims-free discount on my insurance policy (not mentioned the hours I spent on the loss salvaging property from the flooded basement).
Now my own personal mini-disaster described above is all too common for building owners of all types. As mentioned above 53% of all property damage claims are coming from water damage of one sort or another. This includes, burst pipes, storm damage, flood, malfunctioning appliances, faulty building envelope construction, sewer back-up losses, the list goes on. As building owners you can understand the potentially devastating effect water damage can have on your investment. Rents stop but bills continue to pile up. Tenants leave & find new premises to rent or lease. The mortgage still needs payments as do the utilities. Consider the even higher costs when the water is from grey & black water sources. Aside from the property damage you now have to consider mold and other airborne pathogens that can contaminate the property and even the air. Surely the solution isn't to knock down every building and reconstruct with today's latest technology in plumbing and water damage prevention. In my case a $12.00 investment would have saved $25,000.
Here's a few loss prevention techniques you can implement in your building maintenance program:
- keep floor drains clear of obstruction;
- ensure that there is proper grading around your building;
- install a sump pump;
- install back flow valves or plugs for drains, toilets and other sewer connections to prevent water from entering the home;
- for vacant buildings: drain the plumbing & arrange to have someone come in to ensure no signs of leakage has occurred. It is important to keep the heat on to avoid frozen pipes especially in older buildings.
- check water connections, hoses, pipes for signs of wear and tear.
Now there is no fool-proof way to ensure water damage will never occur. But if it does have on hand contact information for a Restoration Company as well as your insurance broker's phone number. Whether insured or not, it is important for property owners and managers to document damage with photographs or video, and immediately, to begin loss mitigation procedures themselves; or hire a qualified contractor to do this on their behalf. It is totally inappropriate to put off mitigation while waiting for an insurance claims representative to arrive on the scene to evaluate the loss. By that time, in all probability sufficient time will have passed to grow and amplify microorganisms, which may not be covered by insurance. Loss mitigation is defined by insurance policies as "reasonable and prudent measures designed to preserve, protect and secure property from further damage."
We do this because we know "water will find a way."
* Insurance Bureau of Canada (2009 stats cited)
As a former Insurance Broker I can attest to this statistic and even suggest that if all damage to property were reported & covered, that the number would be even higher. Why this growing trend? This is truly the fault of our own progression & modernization. If you consider that at only 100 years ago almost no one had water running or electricity into their homes, you can understand that damage from water was rare & in turn damage from fire was high. Electrical code (if you did have electricity running to your home) was non-existent & lighting your way by oil lamp & heating your house with firewood in a cast iron stove was the norm.
In this relatively short period of time we have evolved from indoor plumbing being a novelty of the rich to living in homes which in some cases have more bathrooms than bedrooms, appliances that wash our clothes & dishes and Hot water tanks sitting in our basements. This is the new normal. And although our electrical & heating prowess has grown to an art form in terms of safety and security, we haven't yet solved the water puzzle.
I recall years ago as I was navigating the ropes as a first time homeowner, I was wrestling with a leaky garage. Every time it rained the water entered and soaked the floor. My wise neighbor was having a laugh at the many attempts I had made to band aid the situation. I was sure I could avoid what I though was the large bill it would take to properly re mediate the situation. Being a good neighbor he didn't laugh too hard but instead offered the patient insight that I'll always remember; he said to me "Water will find a way". And it did, through every contraption, patch & quick fix I could throw at it.
I was lucky in the end that the water never did come into the house through the garage & after the painful reality of defeat had sunk in, I opened up my wallet and the phone book to call in a professional. I was however not so luck a few years ago when the washing machine malfunctioned a flooded my entire basement in 4 inches of water. I was so busy concerned about water coming in from the outside I never considered I'd get hit from the inside. My neighbors words echoed true: Water had found a way!
It turned out a simple $6 hose had burst and caused $25,000 in damage. (by the way: the cost of the upgraded braided hose I could have bought at the hardware store instead was only $12). Yes, two months and too many headaches later, I was able to rent out my basement again. Not only had I displaced my tenant and had to find a new one, I lost the income from rents, the deductible and my claims-free discount on my insurance policy (not mentioned the hours I spent on the loss salvaging property from the flooded basement).
Now my own personal mini-disaster described above is all too common for building owners of all types. As mentioned above 53% of all property damage claims are coming from water damage of one sort or another. This includes, burst pipes, storm damage, flood, malfunctioning appliances, faulty building envelope construction, sewer back-up losses, the list goes on. As building owners you can understand the potentially devastating effect water damage can have on your investment. Rents stop but bills continue to pile up. Tenants leave & find new premises to rent or lease. The mortgage still needs payments as do the utilities. Consider the even higher costs when the water is from grey & black water sources. Aside from the property damage you now have to consider mold and other airborne pathogens that can contaminate the property and even the air. Surely the solution isn't to knock down every building and reconstruct with today's latest technology in plumbing and water damage prevention. In my case a $12.00 investment would have saved $25,000.
Here's a few loss prevention techniques you can implement in your building maintenance program:
- keep floor drains clear of obstruction;
- ensure that there is proper grading around your building;
- install a sump pump;
- install back flow valves or plugs for drains, toilets and other sewer connections to prevent water from entering the home;
- for vacant buildings: drain the plumbing & arrange to have someone come in to ensure no signs of leakage has occurred. It is important to keep the heat on to avoid frozen pipes especially in older buildings.
- check water connections, hoses, pipes for signs of wear and tear.
Now there is no fool-proof way to ensure water damage will never occur. But if it does have on hand contact information for a Restoration Company as well as your insurance broker's phone number. Whether insured or not, it is important for property owners and managers to document damage with photographs or video, and immediately, to begin loss mitigation procedures themselves; or hire a qualified contractor to do this on their behalf. It is totally inappropriate to put off mitigation while waiting for an insurance claims representative to arrive on the scene to evaluate the loss. By that time, in all probability sufficient time will have passed to grow and amplify microorganisms, which may not be covered by insurance. Loss mitigation is defined by insurance policies as "reasonable and prudent measures designed to preserve, protect and secure property from further damage."
We do this because we know "water will find a way."
* Insurance Bureau of Canada (2009 stats cited)
Rabu, 22 Mei 2013
Marine Underwriters and Wharfinger's Liability Insurance
When most people think of insurance for the marine and shipping
industry, they think of vessels on the water and the cargo that they
carry. While the shipping industry receives a lot of visibility and
attention, there is more to day-to-day shipping operations than
watercraft traversing seas to a delivery destination. The same marine
underwriters who can provide hull insurance and marine insurance are
also instrumental in helping wharfingers protect themselves against a
variety of claims that take place as a result of business activities.
Wharf Operations
Activities abound at wharf and dock facilities where vessels are loaded and unloaded daily. Ships come into port and rely upon stevedores and other shore-based personnel to organize and load cargo onto vessels in keeping with their manifests and container delivery orders. These ships also need to refuel and restock their supplies before the next time they venture out to sea. Workers are responsible for loading the waiting cargo that has recently arrived from trucks, containers and railcars onto the vessels when they come into port. This involves small and heavy equipment operation, such as loaders, forklifts and cranes. Conveyors are also used in transporting cargo from the docks to the ships and barges. Vessels tie up at the wharf for a short or long period of time in between arrival and departure. Some require repairs, while others just need a place to stop and wait for new cargo to arrive and be loaded before they can leave on their next voyage.
Incidents
Since wharves and docks are busy places, there are often a multitude of different activities for various vessels happening at the same time. While one crew is loading a container ship, another may be unloading a barge. Even with strict attention paid to safety regulations and company procedures, incidents and accidents do sometimes occur. They may involve personal injury, unmanned breakaways and equipment failures causing damage to cargo and vessels.
Claims
While most vessels have their own marine insurance for incidents and accidents, sometimes wharf owners find themselves involved in claims regarding damage to cargo, equipment and ships at or on their docks and facilities. They may need insurance available through marine underwriters to cover claims for wreck removal, cargo damage and equipment replacement. Custom liability insurance policies can be created to offer peace of mind to wharf owners which will cover unexpected issues that may arise in day-to-day operations.
Wharf Operations
Activities abound at wharf and dock facilities where vessels are loaded and unloaded daily. Ships come into port and rely upon stevedores and other shore-based personnel to organize and load cargo onto vessels in keeping with their manifests and container delivery orders. These ships also need to refuel and restock their supplies before the next time they venture out to sea. Workers are responsible for loading the waiting cargo that has recently arrived from trucks, containers and railcars onto the vessels when they come into port. This involves small and heavy equipment operation, such as loaders, forklifts and cranes. Conveyors are also used in transporting cargo from the docks to the ships and barges. Vessels tie up at the wharf for a short or long period of time in between arrival and departure. Some require repairs, while others just need a place to stop and wait for new cargo to arrive and be loaded before they can leave on their next voyage.
Incidents
Since wharves and docks are busy places, there are often a multitude of different activities for various vessels happening at the same time. While one crew is loading a container ship, another may be unloading a barge. Even with strict attention paid to safety regulations and company procedures, incidents and accidents do sometimes occur. They may involve personal injury, unmanned breakaways and equipment failures causing damage to cargo and vessels.
Claims
While most vessels have their own marine insurance for incidents and accidents, sometimes wharf owners find themselves involved in claims regarding damage to cargo, equipment and ships at or on their docks and facilities. They may need insurance available through marine underwriters to cover claims for wreck removal, cargo damage and equipment replacement. Custom liability insurance policies can be created to offer peace of mind to wharf owners which will cover unexpected issues that may arise in day-to-day operations.
Senin, 20 Mei 2013
The National Flood Forum Reports Variations in the Handling of Flood Victims by Insurance Companies
Some home owners will not realise that some insurers are offering
cheap home insurance and cheap landlord's home insurance by removing
flood protection altogether, or increasing the excess beyond what would
be considered reasonable and affordable.
No consistency?
The National Flood Forum reports, the problem of neighbours getting different flood insurance offers is widespread.
If you decide to compare your insurance policy with neighbours, please ensure that you not only compare the price - but consider all of the factors which have contributed to that price - for example - specified items, or high value contents. Landlords Home Insurance is priced differently to regular Home Insurance. The age of the policy holder and previous claims will also have an impact. It is of concern that The National Flood Forum is encouraging neighbours to think that everyone on the same street should be paying similar premiums, home insurance varies from home to home just like car insurance does.
Risk Characteristics
Homes which look similar may have very different risks attached. For example some properties will subside while the house next door does not. Every property has different security features (key locks on the window and burglar alarms). Properties may have different materials used in the construction (brick or stone, slate or tile). Policies can be bedroom rated; some insurers assess the risk of flooding by the height above the water table, it varies greatly how insurers will assess the risk and quote. The main reason however for neighbour's policies all having different premiums despite having similar properties usually comes down to the value of the contents, and the personal circumstances of the policy holder including previous claims.
Whilst these factors all affect the premium understandably, it does not excuse insurers for increasing flood excesses without making the policy holder clear about what they will be expected to pay in the event of a claim for flooding, or removing and reducing the level of flood cover altogether! It most certainly doesn't excuse the insurer for treating flood victims with poor customer service or delays. This is really what consumers should focus on - Am I adequately covered? Anyone who lives in a flood risk area should be aware of it, and they ought to focus on what is included in the Home Insurance policy - whether it be Landlords Home Insurance or regular Home Insurance. If you have a cheap home insurance policy - and have sacrificed some quality to balance the premium - you must be prepared in the event of a claim to perhaps not be as well protected as you would like. It is essential that you take advice and understand fully what is included in your policy and what the claims procedures are - this will eliminate nasty surprises! I am worried for flood victims in the future with regards to becoming uninsurable. Premiums will become unaffordable for properties and policy holders who have made flood claims, especially in more high risk areas.
No consistency?
The National Flood Forum reports, the problem of neighbours getting different flood insurance offers is widespread.
If you decide to compare your insurance policy with neighbours, please ensure that you not only compare the price - but consider all of the factors which have contributed to that price - for example - specified items, or high value contents. Landlords Home Insurance is priced differently to regular Home Insurance. The age of the policy holder and previous claims will also have an impact. It is of concern that The National Flood Forum is encouraging neighbours to think that everyone on the same street should be paying similar premiums, home insurance varies from home to home just like car insurance does.
Risk Characteristics
Homes which look similar may have very different risks attached. For example some properties will subside while the house next door does not. Every property has different security features (key locks on the window and burglar alarms). Properties may have different materials used in the construction (brick or stone, slate or tile). Policies can be bedroom rated; some insurers assess the risk of flooding by the height above the water table, it varies greatly how insurers will assess the risk and quote. The main reason however for neighbour's policies all having different premiums despite having similar properties usually comes down to the value of the contents, and the personal circumstances of the policy holder including previous claims.
Whilst these factors all affect the premium understandably, it does not excuse insurers for increasing flood excesses without making the policy holder clear about what they will be expected to pay in the event of a claim for flooding, or removing and reducing the level of flood cover altogether! It most certainly doesn't excuse the insurer for treating flood victims with poor customer service or delays. This is really what consumers should focus on - Am I adequately covered? Anyone who lives in a flood risk area should be aware of it, and they ought to focus on what is included in the Home Insurance policy - whether it be Landlords Home Insurance or regular Home Insurance. If you have a cheap home insurance policy - and have sacrificed some quality to balance the premium - you must be prepared in the event of a claim to perhaps not be as well protected as you would like. It is essential that you take advice and understand fully what is included in your policy and what the claims procedures are - this will eliminate nasty surprises! I am worried for flood victims in the future with regards to becoming uninsurable. Premiums will become unaffordable for properties and policy holders who have made flood claims, especially in more high risk areas.
Selasa, 14 Mei 2013
Geography, Flood Risks and Distribution Business Insurance
The transport of products and goods and the risks to storage have
always been determined by the geography, more specifically the
topography, of a particular location.
The physical location in space by businesses involved in the movement of goods, are determined by market factors such as population and demand, such that the physical risk location is usually found at the most appropriate place close to the market and main communication routes, to satisfy this demand.
For example, Warehouses have traditionally been built next to water courses such as rivers or canals to supply hinterlands and regions, or around ports and ocean harbours for shipping imports and exports temporary storage.
After industrialisation railway hubs then became surrounded with storage and shipping facilities for internal regional supply. Often the largest existing town, built on a river, would become the central storage centre.
In more recent years large warehousing and distribution centres have also grown up around airports or near motorway intersections, which both require large flat expanses of land.
Many towns have often grown in response to supplying these warehousing functions and include businesses that rely upon the physical presence of the distributors.
It is these very historical physical locations that the distribution process requires, that are now threatening the availability and costs of business insurance for enterprises such as warehouses, wholesalers and storage facilities, due to the increased frequency of recent extreme weather or geophysical events.
In the UK over 75% of warehouses and industrial centres or parks, are built on river floodplains or coastal locations. These properties are currently at a much higher risk of serious water damage and flooding, on a far more frequent scale, than was previously calculated by underwriters.
Over the last ten years large losses have been suffered by insurance companies that underwrite warehouses close to rivers, the length and breadth of the country.
Since the 2002 Glasgow floods, serious loss to stored goods and transport running into the hundreds of millions of pounds, has occurred at places as diverse as Carlisle, Cumbria, Kent, Somerset, Severn Valley, Tewkesbury, Thames Valley, Sheffield, Northern Ireland, East Yorkshire, North Wales and The Midlands, to name just a few of the larger floods.
This high level of loss and claims has inevitably led to more on site risk assessment surveys before confirming cover, less choice of provider, inflationary premiums and more policy clauses and exclusions to cover.
Dependant businesses who supply or are supplied by the suppliers warehouses locally, have also had the costs of insurance increase, both by perhaps being flooded themselves, or seeing the costs of their business interruption and loss of profits cover increase, due to more claims for failures in the supply chain caused by flooding.
Moving forward, both Insurance policy holders and those providing the cover need to adapt in order to manage and reduce flooding risks and keep policy premiums at a reasonable cost level.
In order to achieve this many insurance companies will now insist on more active risk management. For example, policies may include wordings that all goods stored in an 'at risk' warehouse, must be on water resistance dexion type shelving at a certain height above the maximum expected flood level as determined by the Government hydrological flood risk map. Or that all motor fleets at risk must be moved to safer storage areas on higher ground.
These types of clauses whilst enabling warehouse cover to be issued, have led to increased business costs to implement.
Many properties nationwide are at risk due to the nature of local planning decisions and water management policies. Although the UK Government has committed further spending to flood protection schemes, the impact to date has been small.
Whilst flood risk in the UK, unlike in the USA, has yet to become a fundamental risk controlled by Government, the failure of the UK insurance industry to provide adequate cover for domestics risks such as home insurance for a large and growing proportion of the population, coupled with rising business insurance costs and more frequent extreme weather, may soon force the Government to offer some type of national flood insurance program, alongside its responsibility to manage runoff.
The physical location in space by businesses involved in the movement of goods, are determined by market factors such as population and demand, such that the physical risk location is usually found at the most appropriate place close to the market and main communication routes, to satisfy this demand.
For example, Warehouses have traditionally been built next to water courses such as rivers or canals to supply hinterlands and regions, or around ports and ocean harbours for shipping imports and exports temporary storage.
After industrialisation railway hubs then became surrounded with storage and shipping facilities for internal regional supply. Often the largest existing town, built on a river, would become the central storage centre.
In more recent years large warehousing and distribution centres have also grown up around airports or near motorway intersections, which both require large flat expanses of land.
Many towns have often grown in response to supplying these warehousing functions and include businesses that rely upon the physical presence of the distributors.
It is these very historical physical locations that the distribution process requires, that are now threatening the availability and costs of business insurance for enterprises such as warehouses, wholesalers and storage facilities, due to the increased frequency of recent extreme weather or geophysical events.
In the UK over 75% of warehouses and industrial centres or parks, are built on river floodplains or coastal locations. These properties are currently at a much higher risk of serious water damage and flooding, on a far more frequent scale, than was previously calculated by underwriters.
Over the last ten years large losses have been suffered by insurance companies that underwrite warehouses close to rivers, the length and breadth of the country.
Since the 2002 Glasgow floods, serious loss to stored goods and transport running into the hundreds of millions of pounds, has occurred at places as diverse as Carlisle, Cumbria, Kent, Somerset, Severn Valley, Tewkesbury, Thames Valley, Sheffield, Northern Ireland, East Yorkshire, North Wales and The Midlands, to name just a few of the larger floods.
This high level of loss and claims has inevitably led to more on site risk assessment surveys before confirming cover, less choice of provider, inflationary premiums and more policy clauses and exclusions to cover.
Dependant businesses who supply or are supplied by the suppliers warehouses locally, have also had the costs of insurance increase, both by perhaps being flooded themselves, or seeing the costs of their business interruption and loss of profits cover increase, due to more claims for failures in the supply chain caused by flooding.
Moving forward, both Insurance policy holders and those providing the cover need to adapt in order to manage and reduce flooding risks and keep policy premiums at a reasonable cost level.
In order to achieve this many insurance companies will now insist on more active risk management. For example, policies may include wordings that all goods stored in an 'at risk' warehouse, must be on water resistance dexion type shelving at a certain height above the maximum expected flood level as determined by the Government hydrological flood risk map. Or that all motor fleets at risk must be moved to safer storage areas on higher ground.
These types of clauses whilst enabling warehouse cover to be issued, have led to increased business costs to implement.
Many properties nationwide are at risk due to the nature of local planning decisions and water management policies. Although the UK Government has committed further spending to flood protection schemes, the impact to date has been small.
Whilst flood risk in the UK, unlike in the USA, has yet to become a fundamental risk controlled by Government, the failure of the UK insurance industry to provide adequate cover for domestics risks such as home insurance for a large and growing proportion of the population, coupled with rising business insurance costs and more frequent extreme weather, may soon force the Government to offer some type of national flood insurance program, alongside its responsibility to manage runoff.
Rabu, 08 Mei 2013
5 Easy Ways to Making a Successful Home Insurance Claim
If you've taken out insurance and something happens like an
accident, fire, theft or flood then the likelihood is you need to make a
home insurance claim.
This can be a very worrying time and it is imperative you do this properly, otherwise you could find your claim rejected. This is the last thing you want after paying your premiums for years!
If you need to make an insurance claim then you need to get in touch with your insurance provider ASAP and ask them to post or email you a claim form.
Also, if the claim is of a significant value (usually over £3000) it might be wise to employ the services of a loss assessor. They specialise in helping you get your full entitlement under the terms and conditions of your insurance policy - and they usually work on a small percentage of the settlement, meaning it's in their interests to get you as high a settlement as possible.
When you have received the claim form make sure you fill it in properly and make sure you keep a duplicate for yourself.
Check the following factors before you send in your claim:
Sometimes your insurance provider may also ask if you have other policies (such as contents insurance) in place. It is very important you let your provider have these details on any additional cover.
Perhaps the most important piece of advice is not to overstate or embellish your insurance claim. We have seen many instances where this has resulted in a rejected claim, or a reduced settlement.
Do you always have to make an insurance claim?
You don't have to claim on your insurance, even if you're eligible to do so. In some cases, if your claim is relatively small, you may decide not to as your future rates could increase by more than the quantity you have stated.
Important: even if you don't want to declare on your insurance coverage, you must always tell your insurance coverage provider about an incident. If you don't report it, you might discover that this results in problems further down the line.
Dean Foster is an insurance claim expert, and the owner of Foster & Rowe Ltd - the UK's leading Loss Assessor.This can be a very worrying time and it is imperative you do this properly, otherwise you could find your claim rejected. This is the last thing you want after paying your premiums for years!
If you need to make an insurance claim then you need to get in touch with your insurance provider ASAP and ask them to post or email you a claim form.
Also, if the claim is of a significant value (usually over £3000) it might be wise to employ the services of a loss assessor. They specialise in helping you get your full entitlement under the terms and conditions of your insurance policy - and they usually work on a small percentage of the settlement, meaning it's in their interests to get you as high a settlement as possible.
When you have received the claim form make sure you fill it in properly and make sure you keep a duplicate for yourself.
Check the following factors before you send in your claim:
- You're definitely protected for what you're declaring for.
- You're within the deadline for making a claim.
- How much the excess is. If you have a high excess, and the claim is small, it may not even be worth making an insurance claim.
- Check the dreaded small print, and make sure there isn't any criteria that could stop you from claiming (the type of locks etc).
- Whether it's a new for old plan. The insurance company can deduct for wear and tear, so the amount you get may be less than the cost of replacing them new.
Sometimes your insurance provider may also ask if you have other policies (such as contents insurance) in place. It is very important you let your provider have these details on any additional cover.
Perhaps the most important piece of advice is not to overstate or embellish your insurance claim. We have seen many instances where this has resulted in a rejected claim, or a reduced settlement.
Do you always have to make an insurance claim?
You don't have to claim on your insurance, even if you're eligible to do so. In some cases, if your claim is relatively small, you may decide not to as your future rates could increase by more than the quantity you have stated.
Important: even if you don't want to declare on your insurance coverage, you must always tell your insurance coverage provider about an incident. If you don't report it, you might discover that this results in problems further down the line.
After 20 years of working for some of the top loss adjusting companies, we became "poacher turned gamekeeper" and represent the policy holders interests only. We know exactly how your insurance company will try and settle your claim for less than what you are entitled to, and we use our knowledge and experience to get you your highest possible settlement.
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