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- Sep 12, 2017
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This has nothing at all to do with drones.Story here: ABC7 News Bay Area
The story explains several times that the insurance companies mentioned aerial photography from fixed wing aircraft and satellites.
The consumer advocate is a prime example of someone automatically assuming that aerial photography must come from drones.I thought that too, then immediately after that in the segment the consumer advocate does say they are using drones too.
Spot on, they MIGHT use a drone to assess closer any risk they spot from aerial photos to get a more accurate view of any perceived problem property.Insurance companies are all about the bottom line. Unless they are seeking visual information about a claim submitted by a homeowner, they are not going to deal with the hassle of flying drones over neighborhoods when they can just purchase the imagery from commercial sources.
With the rise of natural disasters in the last few years. insurance companies have been pulling out of California, Florida, and Louisiana. For their remaining customers, they have become aggressive in finding ways to decline to renew the policies or cancel them outright.Spot on, they MIGHT use a drone to assess closer any risk they spot from aerial photos to get a more accurate view of any perceived problem property.
But as with the roof example in the news story, they might just blanket ban dodgy looking places and let the property owners inform them of an insurers misjudgment.
That was my very first thought. Trip and fall into an empty pool, especially on the deep end, you're going to be seriously injured... and, like you said, a huge potential liability in the eyes of the insurance company. Probably the reason for the cancellation.That's a huge liability issue if someone fell in.
Exactly, that would have cut down drastically on the water evaporation problem and having to add more so often. But sadly, too many people don't have enough common sense to come in out of the rain.the homeowners who drained their pool should have just covered over the pool.
In the video, the homeowner gave the reason for the cancellation. By draining the pool, it was no longer being maintained and that violated a covenant in the insurance policy that the homeowner was responsible for maintaining the home and the assets belonging to the home.That was my very first thought. Trip and fall into an empty pool, especially on the deep end, you're going to be seriously injured... and, like you said, a huge potential liability in the eyes of the insurance company. Probably the reason for the cancellation.
It's not that they want to raise rates, they are looking for any reason to cancel the policy and to close down their operation in that state.Like it really takes a reason for insurance companies to raise rates.
It's not that they want to raise rates, they are looking for any reason to cancel the policy and to close down their operation in that state.
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