| Katrina's
force changes insurance adjusters' tactics | | By
Holden Lewis Bankrate.com |
| The people who assess Katrina-related
property damage for insurance companies are working from the outside in, rather
than the usual inside out. That's welcomed news for residents on the hurricane's
periphery, but not so good news for residents of New Orleans and the St. Bernard
Parish, neighboring the city's east.
The inspectors, called insurance claims adjusters,
prefer to begin their work at the epicenter of a disaster and then work outward
so they can get checks into the hands of the worst-affected people first. But
with much of New Orleans and neighboring St. Bernard Parish underwater; and with
gasoline and shelter scarce on the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama,
adjusters are first looking at homes farther north, where the damage wasn't catastrophic. It
could be two or three months before an adjuster visits your home if it was in
the path of the worst destruction. Even so, the sooner you contact your insurance
company the better. Or maybe that should be "companies" -- plural. It's not unusual
to have a homeowner's policy with one company and a flood insurance policy with
another. Insurance adjusters recommend the following: - If
you can't contact the insurance agent and you don't know the name or phone number
of the insurance company, call the mortgage lender and ask. Or your state's department
of insurance might be able to track down the insurance agent to provide the information.
- Be
patient. That two- or three-month estimate for inspections in the worst-hit areas
might be optimistic.
- Try to be there when the adjuster visits
the home. If that's impossible or impractical, don't freak out. The adjuster will
make a damage estimate; if he or she missed something, you can request a return
visit.
- If your bank is destroyed and you can't make a deposit,
ask the adjuster if the insurance company has made accommodations with a functioning
bank.
Insurance companies are sending armies of adjusters
into the hurricane-affected areas. Allstate alone has 3,000 adjusters in the field,
says Greg LaCost, senior counsel for the Property Casualty Insurers Association
of America. The association doesn't have a head count on the total number of adjusters
out there; one official said it's in the "many thousands." Most
adjusters in the area drive trucks with adequate ground clearance to drive over
low obstacles. When they visit a house, they perform a visual inspection and enter
information into laptop computers that calculate damage estimates. Not
everyone is so high tech in the first days after the disaster. In some of the
harder-hit areas, claims adjusters are sleeping in offices with generator power.
Those adjusters are going out in the field and taking loss reports on paper, then
sending the documents by courier to an office farther north, where the information
is entered into computers, says Bob Warner, claims manager for Louisiana Farm
Bureau Insurance Companies. |