Oh Where Oh Where Is My Claims Adjuster?

From Brad Barrett

We want to thank Orlando Public Adjuster Brad Barrett for authoring this insurance claim blog. Is there any future for Independent Adjusters? Some insurance companies would want you to believe that you should only see them from behind a glass window in a museum display.  Although we Public Adjusters sometimes have a contentious relationship with them because we represent the policyholder while they are paid by the insurance company, Independent Adjusters still provide a very important service in the claims handling process.


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    Policyholder Question: Who is responsible when your insurance company's preferred contractor causes additional damage or botches the job?

    Q. The restoration company who repaired our home after an attic fire caused a contamination of fiberglass insulation by improperly clearing and cleaning the attic from smoke damaged insulation.  We know that the restoration company should be the one to take responsibility and maybe even use their General Liability Insurance, however instead they went out of business. We have talked to several lawyers and they say we have no recourse with our property insurance carrier.  We feel that our insurance company should take responsibility and make the restoration company who messed our home up pay to have it cleaned up properly.   Does an insurance company have to use bonded and general liability covered contractors?
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    Policyholder Question: Buying Flood Insurance and What You Need to Know

    Here is an insurance claim question that we recently answered as a contributing member of insurance claim experts for United Policyholders who advocates for property owners. 

    Q. I have been offered a job in Wilmington, NC and would like to live in a nearby beach community such as Surf City, NC.  Other than USAA, What is the best insurance carrier for flood insurance? 

    A. Before I answer your question, please allow me to give you some background on flood insurance as our public adjusting firm has seen significant changes over the years. Because of the high risk of flooding and the widespread damages that often result, the insurance actuarial folks could not manage or price this peril so as to set an affordable premium. Thus the private insurance industry was simply not agreeable to assuming the flood risk. Thus, flood losses were excluded in most all standard property insurance policies. In 1968, the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) was created by an act of Congress as the lack of this coverage was affecting the economy and commerce. In the beginning years, this program while providing flood coverage, was very poorly run and claim service was terrible. Probably not surprising given that the NFIP was headquartered in Washington, D. C. as it quickly became a typical Washington bureaucracy, unresponsive and extremely difficult to work with.


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    Couple has Advice for Those Who Have Even the Simplest Insurance Claim

    An Orlando area client who filed what they thought was a simple property insurance claim for water damage to their home found them forced out of their home since September of last year due to mistakes made by the “preferred vendors” of their insurance company and the insurance company’s refusal to take responsibility for the situation.  Tutwiler Public Insurance Adjuster Brad Barrett  was eventually brought into the situation late and has been trying to bring the situation to what is called Appraisal, where an Umpire can hopefully rule in the client’s favor.



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    Post Loss Obligations of the Policyholder - Condominium Boards Need to Communicate

    This 42 page decision Biscayne Cove Condominium Association, Inc. v. QBE Ins. Corp., 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5194 (S.D. Fla. Jan. 14, 2013) makes for some very interesting reading. The case was one of those late blooming Hurricane Wilma condo claims that I suspect contributed to the thinking that a change in law regarding the time a policyholder has to file a claim might be a good idea. You can draw your own conclusions about what went on in this case (I know I have) but one of the clear take-aways is that in this case the Judge was not buying what was being sold.

    As an aside, the 30% rule this public adjuster was relying on and thought existed drew some chuckles in a meeting our firm recently attended with a group of condo lawyers. Seriously, there are some very interesting points made in the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. As the old saying goes; “it’s not my monkey and it’s not my circus” thankfully! 


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    Insurance Claim Preferred Vendors – A Growing Insurance Company Tactic

    We want to thank Orlando public adjuster Brad Barrett for contributing this insurance claim blog.
    When a policyholder experiences a loss, one of the first things they are supposed to do is contact the insurance company to report a claim. What we are being told by some policyholders, is that one of the first things some claims departments are doing is to instruct them not to speak with anyone (especially a Public Adjuster) and that they will be sending out their adjuster and their “approved” contractor to review the claim. This is a blatant effort to cut out public adjusters and independent restoration firms.

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    All Risk Insurance Coverage for Space Debris - Ask Your Agent or Broker About This

    If floods, landslides, fires, earthquakes and hurricanes are not enough to worry about, it seems a new peril is lurking that we just did not know about or pay attention to and may need to be added to the list of property insurance claims. Remember the asteroid that streaked across the northern Russian sky a few months back? Well, it seems another one was just recorded on a car dash cam and posted to all the internet news outlets. Not to be an alarmist, but there may be some credibility to this threat given the attention three former U.S. NASA astronauts have given to this.
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    The Case of the Claim for the Exploding Corpse

    It should not be surprising that insurance claims are reported in Florida on a fairly regular basis for damages to insured property resulting from decay, odor, and clean-up following an unattended death.  Florida was once known as heaven’s waiting room given all the elderly folks who came here to die or to be more polite, to retire and then die.
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    Understanding Depreciation Estimates for Your Property Insurance Claim

    When there is a storm event such as the flooding in the Pensacola, Destin, Gulf Breeze and the Ft. Walton Beach areas we always get questions about how depreciation works. As public adjusters, we deal with this type of situation all the time when we are managing a policyholder’s claim. Deprecation is figured in a number of ways depending on who is making the calculations. As an example; in the insurance adjusting field, the text book example is to come up with a percentage based on the age of an item and its full life expectancy. So if an item is one year old and the average life is 20 years the percent to be applied for deprecation is 5%.  If the cost of the item new is $5,000 then $250.00 in deprecation should be taken for each year of life. If an item is 5 years old and the life expectancy is 15 years then 33% would be reasonable.


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    Earth Movement, Foundation Damage Caused by Panhandle Flooding, Is it Covered?

    Property owners in the Pensacola, Destin, Gulf Breeze and the Ft. Walton Beach areas may be surprised to find that their flood claim for foundation damage is denied because the NFIP says the damage is caused by earth movement; even though the earth movement was caused by flood waters! Before I discuss this, let me remind any reader that each loss is fact specific to that property. You may have two homes or commercial buildings side-by-side in close proximity to each other and the loss conditions from the same insured event may vary.


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    "On Property" Insurance Claim Tips Blog

    Tips and advice about how to properly file and protect your property damage insurance claim and get a fair settlement. We invite all readers to ask questions about their claim so our public adjusters can post answers for others to benefit. Insurance claim expert guest bloggers welcome to submit posts via our contact form.

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    Local Office

    Tutwiler & Associates Public Adjusters, Inc.
    Licensed Public Insurance Adjusters & Loss Consultants
    Offices: Tampa, Orlando, Palm City, Florida; Dallas, TX; Pittsburgh, PA

    Executive Office
    4300 W. Cypress St.
    Suite 780
    Tampa, FL 33607
    Phone: 813.287.8090
    Toll Free: 800.321.4488

    Licensed in Florida # W840088 &
    Texas #1399706 plus 16 other states
    and the Virgin Islands