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Is It Really Just The Money ,(The Bonum and the Summum Bonum)?

Roy
/ Categories: Cat Adjusting

by Steve Ebner first posted 12/7/2004

Last week I was driving from Fairfax, Virginia, into the mountains to look at two claims in Winchester. I had been there before. There was the trip I took in high school and the ten days I spent on the Appalachian Trail in that area back in 1981. Those prior trips came flooding back into my memory as I began to see the foothills in the distance. It occurred to me that this was just another perk of being a catadjuster. I have lived in many places, been a gypsy most of my life. When I think back, my life comes back to me in bits and pieces, as a bit of what happened in this place and a bit of what happened in that. The traveling involved in this job has taken my wife and I to surprising places. Some of the assignments have allowed me to reconnect with old friends and rarely visited relatives (Philadelphia and Syracuse). Other trips have taken me to places I always wondered about but have never been (Miami and Detroit). And still others have been to places I never considered visiting (Saginaw and Des Moines). If you haven't tumbled to it already, let me explain that this article is going to be intensely personal. If you don't want to read stuff about my personal pilgrimage, don't bother writing to me, JUST STOP READING NOW.

As I had more than a few rural miles to travel, I began to think about why I do this catadjusting. The money is good. There's no doubt about that. But I can make this much money elsewhere and, besides, most of the money is eaten up by a combination of costs on the road and maintaining the family through the downtime. For me, the money is just what allows me to live my life this way. So far, that seems to be its purpose. I'm not getting rich, never really sure if the money is ultimately going to be enough to get through the year. When I started in this business I remember telling several people that the whole point was to have time off with money. I'm not sure that is exactly accurate anymore.

But the very existence of downtime is a great reason to do this type of work. I look back and realize I have always begun each job strongly and finished strongly. It is the middle that bogged down, became mundane and boring. This profession consists of nothing but beginnings and endings. We go into a catastrophe situation, start strongly, see the end in sight, finish strongly and go home to watch the weather channel for the next job to materialize. I have never worked so hard in my life nor have I ever had so much time off. Both feel very good unless the downtime gets too long. The rhythm of working very hard -- then resting very well -- feels like the way things were meant to be.

And there's the adventure. I have held several jobs since I was sixteen a long time ago (day before yesterday). Among other things I have been a canoe livery driver, a waiter, an ordained minister, a shoe salesman, a taxi driver, and (yes, Phantom) I have flipped a few burgers. The best of these occupations have included an element of adventure, a bit of risk that leaves me wondering what's coming next. Sometimes I think the adventure is the thing, why I do what I do. Of course, any one who is in a glamour job can tell you that it often is not all that glamorous. For example, I showed up at a loss last week, let myself in (it was a foreclosure and I had been supplied a key) and went in to discover a wall of urine stench and dog excrement scattered about the house. Gas masks should be standard equipment on some losses. Fortunately there was only water damage in one room on that loss. I had no need to measure every room. Still, I love a good adventure and this career supplies that regularly. It's not really THE THING though. Someone said recently on these CADO pages that the storm is THE THING. The storm is certainly part of THE THING. I remember feeling the adrenaline rush when the 75 mph straight line winds blew our motel door open and I had to struggle like an actor in an old movie to get it closed again. The storm is worth at least as much as the money to me, but there is more. It's not just the storm.

I think when the bottom line is reached, I do this catadjusting thing not just because of the money, the adventure, the travel, or the time off. That's all part of the bonum (the good). The quest for meaning is not done until we recognize the summum bonum (the highest good). In some cases the summum bonum is easy to recognize. For instance, when we roll into town at the heels of the Red Cross and survey the piles of rubble that before the tornado used to be houses and realize we are part of the solution. Other times the summum bonum is evident in smaller ways, like when we go to the home of a young couple with a new infant who just bought their first house and don't have a penny left to replace the siding that is laying all over their lawn. Or it can be less obvious as it was when I went to the Georgia home of a rather wealthy couple who easily could afford to rebuild their tornado ravaged home, only to discover that they had moved to Atlanta because the wife had not been able to sleep through the night since Hurricane Andrew blew through their former home in Miami six years previous. And in times like that a little extra time and handholding becomes part of the summum bonum.

Of course, the highest good is not always performed in the interest of the insured. Often it is performed to the benefit of the insurance carrier and ultimately those who pay the premiums. Sometimes it involves putting the brakes on someone who decided they would let someone else pay for their badly needed roof replacement by taking a ballpeen hammer to it after the nearby hailstorm. Sometimes it involves refusing to pay the price of a contractor who decided to double his prices after the earthquake to the misfortune of every earthquake victim he encounters. 

There are plenty of reasons why I love doing what I do. Your reasons may be very different from mine. But in the final analysis I would be hard pressed to say that there is any better reason to be a catadjuster than that it is important work, this man's quest for the summum bonum.

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SKETCHMYROOF Hurricane Helene

From the KB

Identification of Water Damages in Adjusting Hurricane Claims for Water Losses Other Than Flood

....

In adjusting hurricane damage claims for homes within the 1968-1997 applicable residential code period, it is important that the inside of the walls be checked more carefully than
newer construction to ensure that moisture hasn’t seeped into the walls that will eventually result in mold and interior wall rot. If adjusters do not look for moisture build-up trapped inside the wall, then this damage could be missed, causing mold and rot to proliferate and resulting in bigger problems for homeowners in the future.

...

Hurricane and Windstorm Deductibles

The source of the information below is the Insurance Information Institute, iii.org

Nineteen states and the District of Columbia have hurricane deductibles: Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia and Washington DC. Listed below are reports for these states detailing hurricane deductibles.

 

Historical Hurricane Tracks

Subject: Historical Hurricane Tracks
Description: The Historical Hurricane Tracks tool is an interactive mapping application that allows you to easily search and display Atlantic Basin and Eastern North Pacific Basin tropical cyclone data. 

Source: NOAA Climate.gov 
 

Some Notable Cane Activity since we have been online

2012

Hurricane Sandy (unofficially known as "Superstorm Sandy") was the deadliest and most destructive hurricane of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season, as well as the second-costliest hurricane in United States history. Classified as the eighteenth named storm, tenth hurricane and second major hurricane of the year, Sandy was a Category 3 storm at its peak intensity when it made landfall in Cuba.[1] While it was a Category 2 storm off the coast of the Northeastern United States, the storm became the largest Atlantic hurricane on record (as measured by diameter, with winds spanning 1,100 miles (1,800 km)).[2][3] Estimates as of March 2014 assess damage to have been over $68 billion (2013 USD), a total surpassed only by Hurricane Katrina.[4] At least 286 people were killed along the path of the storm in seven countries. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Photos - Discussions: Sandy Disscussion -

2011

Hurricane Irene, the storm slowly leveled-off in intensity as it struck the Bahamas and then curved northward after passing east of Grand Bahama. Continuing to weaken, Irene was downgraded to a Category 1 hurricane before making landfall on the Outer Banks of North Carolina on August 27, becoming the first hurricane to make landfall in the United States since Hurricane Ike in 2008. Early on the following day, the storm re-emerged into the Atlantic from southeastern Virginia. Although Irene remained a hurricane over land, it weakened to a tropical storm while making yet another landfall in the Little Egg Inlet in southeastern New Jersey on August 28. A few hours later, Irene made its ninth and final landfall in Brooklyn, New York City. Early on August 29, Irene transitioned into an extratropical cyclone hitting Vermont/New Hampshire after remaining inland as a tropical cyclone for less than 12 hours. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Photos - Discussions:

2008

Ike developed a large wind field as it moved northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico over the next 3 days, with tropical-storm-force winds extending up to 275 miles from the center and hurricane-force winds extending up to 115 miles from the center. The hurricane gradually intensified as it moved across the Gulf toward the Texas coast. Ike made landfall over the north end of Galveston Island in the early morning hours of September 13 as a Category 2 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 110 mph. The hurricane weakened as it moved inland across eastern Texas and Arkansas and became extratropical over the middle Mississippi Valley on September 14. It then moved rapidly through the Ohio valley and into Canada, producing wind gusts to hurricane force along the way. Source: NOAA

2005

Hurricane Katrina Was the deadliest and most destructive Atlantic tropical cyclone of the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season. It is the costliest natural disaster, as well as one of the five deadliest hurricanes, in the history of the United States. Katrina is the seventh most intense Atlantic hurricane ever recorded, part of the 2005 season that included three of the six most intense Atlantic hurricanes ever documented (along with #1 Wilma and #4 Rita). At least 1,833 people died in the hurricane and subsequent floods, making it the deadliest U.S. hurricane since the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane; total property damage was estimated at $108 billion (2005 USD),[1] roughly four times the damage brought by Hurricane Andrew in 1992. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Photos Discussions: 

2004

The 2004 Atlantic hurricane season was the costliest Atlantic hurricane season, until the following year. More than half of the 16 tropical cyclones brushed or struck the United States. The season officially began on June 1, and ended on November 30. Due to a Modoki El Niño – a rare type of El Niño in which unfavorable conditions are produced over the eastern Pacific instead of the Atlantic basin due to warmer sea surface temperatures farther west along the equatorial Pacific – activity was above average. The first storm, Alex, developed offshore of the Southeastern United States on July 31. It brushed the Carolinas and the Mid-Atlantic, causing one death and $7.5 million (2004 USD) in damage.[nb 1] Several storms resulted in minor impact, including tropical storms Bonnie, Earl, Hermine, and Matthew. In addition, hurricanes Danielle, Karl, and Lisa, Tropical Depression Ten, Subtropical Storm Nicole and Tropical Storm Otto caused no impact on land while tropical cyclones. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2003

Hurricane Isabel was the costliest, deadliest, and strongest hurricane in the 2003 Atlantic hurricane season. The ninth named storm, fifth hurricane, and second major hurricane of the season, Isabel formed near the Cape Verde Islands from a tropical wave on September 6 in the tropical Atlantic Ocean. It moved northwestward, and within an environment of light wind shear and warm waters it steadily strengthened to reach peak winds of 165 mph (265 km/h) on September 11. After fluctuating in intensity for four days, Isabel gradually weakened and made landfall on the Outer Banks of North Carolina with winds of 105 mph (165 km/h) on September 18. It quickly weakened over land and became extratropical over western Pennsylvania the next day. Source: Wikipedia Photo Credit: Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC
Discussions: 458,000 ISO- Hurricane Isabel Claims, "Isabel", is a Hot Potato headed behind? and more..

2024 Atlantic Hurricane Storm Names

  • Alberto
  • Beryl - CENTER OF BERYL MAKES LANDFALL NEAR MATAGORDA TEXAS at 4AM 7/8
  • Chris
  • Debby - DEBBY MAKES LANDFALL NEAR STEINHATCHEE FLORIDA at 7AM 8/5
  • Ernesto
  • Francine - Made landfall as a Category 2 storm on 9/11 near Cocodrie and Morgan City, in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana
  • Gordon
  • Helene - Made landfall in the Florida Big Bend area as a Cat 4 Hurricane at 1120 PM EDT Sep 26 2024
  • Isaac
  • Joyce
  • Kirk
  • Leslie
  • Milton - Made Landfall Near Siesta Key Florida as Cat 3 Hurricane at 830 PM EDT Wed Oct 09 2024
  • Nadine
  • Oscar
  • Patty
  • Rafael
  • Sara
  • Tony
  • Valerie
  • William

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Cane Categories

  • Cat 1 Hurricane
    - Sustained Winds 74-95 mph
  • Cat 2 Hurricane
    - Sustained Winds 96-110 mph
  • Cat 3 Hurricane
    - Sustained Winds 111-130 mph
  • Cat 4 Hurricane
    - Sustained Winds 131-155 mph
  • Cat 5 Hurricane
    - Sustained Winds greater than 155 mph

About

The Storm Page, this is the CADO version of a weather page. On this page we provide information on current weather events, links to weather sites and weather related discussions. All adjusters are invited to share weather information by posting it in the forum or adding your favorite weather links to the Resource Directory. Also, if you have photos of weather related damage please share them by adding them to the Photo Gallery.

 

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