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hay rick

hay rick's Journal
hay rick's Journal
May 14, 2023

My Verbs (Biden and Trump)



There is a long list of other verbs that Trump can also rightfully claim as his own: lie, cheat, abuse, steal, betray, etc.
April 6, 2023

A message from Lindsey.


If you can't send money, how about a little damn prayer?
April 3, 2023

Trump and DeSantis on a Menace to Society.



Irony is dead.
March 12, 2023

Insurers slashed Hurricane Ian payouts far below damage estimates, documents and insiders reveal

Source: Washington Post

Florida’s insurance market has been teetering toward collapse for years. After destructive storms in 2005, several big carriers including State Farm pulled back coverage in the state, and newer, more thinly financed, smaller companies swooped in and began to operate. Then came 2017, one of the costliest hurricane seasons ever. Hurricane Michael battered Florida the following year.

Adjusters said they started to see carriers greatly reduce damage estimates, fully deny roof replacements more often and force claims of a certain value into litigation. Payouts started to get delayed or not come at all, adjusters and attorneys said.

At the same time, rates kept rising, and fast. Florida homeowners paid an average of $4,231 for home insurance in 2022, nearly three times the price in any other state — and rates are expected to increase again this year. Ten property insurers that operated in Florida have gone insolvent since January 2021. About 125 property insurers remain in the state, but experts said many are either not taking on new business or are greatly limiting policies because of the volatile market.

But the adjusters interviewed for this investigation said the major cuts and revisions to Hurricane Ian survivors’ claims are unlike anything they’ve ever seen before.

Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2023/03/11/florida-insurance-claims-hurricane-ian/



The Florida homeowners insurance fiasco is metastasizing. DeSantis called two special legislative sessions to address the crisis last year but ultimately acted to protect insurance companies, not homeowners.

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