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by chrisplotz
2309 days ago
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Thanks! Yeah, if the whole industry ended up working the way we do, we'd be thrilled. To your question:
Premium: Our model has granular rating for high risk areas (fire is the biggest issue there). And part of that is the defensibility of the specific property for sure. But unfortunately the biggest factors there are all location specific - distance to water, slope, ease of access, distance to burnable area, etc, which not much can be done about. This is why although it is hard, communities investing in collective defense has the biggest impact on insurance prices. On claims: We have reinsurance, so no need to fear us being blown out capital-wise. To actually get the claims paid and work done we (like most others) have contracts with emergency-overflow claims administration teams, so that a force is ready at peak times. |
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A few months ago during the socal fires my community was up in flames, as were a lot of other's.
The house a mile down from me burned. We were evacuated
There is no insurance company willing to insure our area
> This is why although it is hard, communities investing in collective defense has the biggest impact on insurance prices.
100%. My neighbors and I self insure. We have built defensible areas and maintain it together.
It's cheaper (?) to self insure than pay premiums some, who managed to get a quote, said.
It is a lot of work maintaining that defensible area and keeping it up to spec!
We like to say our actions stopped the fire from spreading but when I saw embers in the air around me, I could not stay around to verify whether that was true.
Our firefighting department, incidentally less than a mile away from us, is one of our best buddies.
This is possible because of the rural location I have chosen to live in.
I see no way of pulling this off in a city.
I will keep checking with you and recommend to my community.
Please keep it up