Lets just hope they don't need to lay any sod...Well if there is anything we can do on CF it is critique the design of structures.
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Lets just hope they don't need to lay any sod...Well if there is anything we can do on CF it is critique the design of structures.
As long as they don't send the I-35 US 30 flyover bridge teamSo you're saying send in the Jack Trice bridge team?
Yeah, that span won't get fixed for 5-8 years and it'll be off by a half mile.As long as they don't send the I-35 US 30 flyover bridge team
Close enoughYeah, that span won't get fixed for 5-8 years and it'll be off by a half mile.
What's left of downtown ft Meyers beach.......
A Tornado popping up in Iowa after they've had watches all day isn't quite the same as a Category 5 hurricane they've told you about 5 days in advance.
Basically at that point already.At some point the state insurance company is going to be the only one left.
At some point the state insurance company is going to be the only one left.
There are a ton of insurance companies that refuse to issue policies in Florida because of hurricanesI think they're pretty much already there from what i've read. What policies you can get are extremely limited on flooding and such.
There are a ton of insurance companies that refuse to issue policies in Florida because of hurricanes
Anything from the 90's or before is expensive and really hard to insure. Insurance is brutal in Florida and a complete mess.I think some also depends on when your house was built.
If it was built to the newer standards and is <20 years old, you'll have a better chance getting coverage than some of the older homes that are just a matter of time before the wrong hurricane hits them.
Anything from the 90's or before is expensive and really hard to insure. Insurance is brutal in Florida and a complete mess.
Yeah with the gulf being a warmer and warmer bathtub for hurricanes to suck up energy from It sounds like we're going to see this rapid strengthening of hurricanes before landfall more frequently. That's bad news for anywhere along the Gulf Coast.As it probably should be. If we aren't going to do anything to combat climate change, we are least need to deal with it. And that probably means that people need to start moving inland. Being able to insure poor decisions like rebuilding after hurricanes in a place that's going to get another hurricane seems like a bad idea.
Just like NOLA, federal dollars shouldn't go to rebuild in places that it'll happen again.
Colorado is headed that way too with the wildfire/front range hail double whammy they've got going.There are a ton of insurance companies that refuse to issue policies in Florida because of hurricanes
And while hurricanes are obviously a major reason, an even bigger reason for the lack of competition/availability in the Florida homeowners insurance market (at least over the prior few years, when there has been relatively little Florida hurricane activity) has been the level of fraud (especially among roofing contractors) in Florida as well as the presence of unique one-way attorney's fee and assignment of benefits statutes that encourage that type of fraud.There are a ton of insurance companies that refuse to issue policies in Florida because of hurricanes