IBHS Offers Tips to Begin Recovery Process After Hurricane HumbertoMedia Contact: Wendy Rose (813) 675-1045, wrose@ibhs.org
The Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) has outlined key steps to help residents and business owners work toward recovery following Hurricane Humberto.
Protect yourself. Always be careful when entering a damaged building. If there is serious structural damage, contact local officials before entering. Report downed power lines or gas leaks. Keep electricity turned off if the building has been flooded.
Protect your property. Take reasonable steps to protect your property from further damage. This could mean boarding up windows and salvaging undamaged items. Your insurance company can tell you what they will pay for regarding protection.
Report the loss as soon as possible. Contact your insurance agent or insurer as soon as you can. Provide a general description of the damage and have your policy number handy if possible. Write down the adjuster’s name, phone number and work schedule as soon as you have them.
Prepare a list. Keep damaged items or portions of them until the claim adjuster has visited, and consider photographing or videotaping the damage to document your claim. Prepare a list of damaged or lost items for your adjuster.
Keep receipts. If you need to relocate, keep records and receipts for all additional expenses. Most insurance policies cover emergency living arrangements.
Return claim forms. After your insurance company has been notified of your claim, it must send you the necessary claim forms within a certain number of days (time period varies by state). Fill out and return the forms as soon as possible. If you do not understand the process, be sure to ask questions and write down the explanation.
Cleanup. When starting the cleanup process, be careful, and use protective eyewear and gloves if available. Adjusters may tell business owners to hire a professional cleaning service.
Build stronger. When you’re ready to start repairs or rebuild, work with your contractor to make the new structure disaster-resistant.
The Institute for Business & Home Safety works to reduce the social and economic effects of natural disasters and other property losses by conducting research and advocating improved construction, maintenance and preparation practices.
Visit
http://www.disastersafety.org/ for more information
or
http://www.tdi.state.tx.us/consumer/storms/hhumberto.html
Fortified… for safer living® is a national residential construction designation granted by the Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS), a national nonprofit organization based in Tampa.
The inspection-based program features affordable construction options designed to help safeguard homes from the ground-up against the natural hazards they face.
Depending on location, this could include protection from high wind, flood, earthquake, freezing weather, hail and/or wildfire. Homes built to this criteria earn the Fortified...for safer living® designation upon completion.
On the Bolivar Peninsula,
Crown Team Texas is building homes that are certified by the I.B.H.S as Fortified...for safer living®