#30 Postby Persepone » Wed Sep 07, 2005 9:11 am
Here in Massachusetts (according to my agent) you MUST have separate flood insurance for just about any sort of water damage to your home. The only time water in the home is covered (according to my agent--who says that things have changed here a lot in the last couple of years because of the Florida experience) is if you have (and can prove) a hole in the wall or the roof and the water in question comes through that hole in the wall or roof and if the wall or roof had not failed that the water would not have come into the house! So even if you have the hole in the wall or roof, if there was also flood water, you'd only be covered for the damage that was due to the hole in the wall or roof, not the water that came "up" or "into" the house as a result of flooding...
Note that all these new clauses in our policies up here sort of crept in. We have different deductible (5%) for any damage caused by a "Named Storm." So the minute a storm gets a name, our deductible is substantially higher than our regular deductible. You have to use a magnifying glass to actually READ these changes to your homeowner's policy and then you have to have a clue about what they might mean in actuality!
I'll bet that this has happened all over the country and people just are not paying attention. You've had the insurance policy for 10 years or so and it has one of those automatic inflation increases on it, etc. you just get that renewal bill and write a check--grumble a little about the increased cost--and don't take a magnifying glass out and read the stuff that came with the renewal that is disguised as "junk mail." In fact, ours sort of looked like an ad for something... But it actually is an amendment to our policy....
So, yeah. Wherever you are in the US, you'd probably better get out your insurance policy, read it, read all the junk that came with your renewal bill, and then get on the phone and make an appointment to sit down with your agent and have a serious discussion of all the fine print, etc. You may be totally shocked.
And about that flood insurance. Even if you do live on some mountain top, there is some sort of "upland flooding" that could affect you. And, as my insurance agent put it when pressed, almost no water damage is covered under insurance policies because water damage is the worst and the companies have been putting more and more and more exclusions in to the policies. We have a very low limit on "mold and mildew." It might buy a few cans of Lysol or bottles of bleach--but if we got flooded, it would not begin to address the issue. And if, for example, we had a pipe burst or a dishwasher malfunction etc. and cause water damage, it looks as if there are 100 weasel clauses that would prevent a claim for the resulting water damage. And then there is some new concept of "maintenance"--if the pipe is old, they weasel out because old pipes break sort of reasoning....
And someone else pointed out that there needs to be a separate rider for damage from backed up sewer pipes, backed up drains, municipal water feeds, etc.
Go and study your insurance policies.
By the way, our insurance agent claims that we would be "throwing our money away" by buying flood insurance because our area "never floods." I think a lot of people hear this from their agents--which is why they don't have flood insurance. The whole idea, however, is that if everyone does buy flood insurance, the cost will be lower because the claims will even out across the US. Yeah, some of us will pay for coverage we may never use--but that is a good thing, isn't it? Heck, I don't want to use my fire insurance--EVER! But I pay the premiums for that insurance. I think perhaps it should be the same for flood insurance!
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