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09-03-2017 08:01 PM
My friend and I were talking about this today.
If your home/ car/ yard was flooded with raw sewage how could you go back?
Would you let your children/pets ever play in the yard again? Are there tests for this to see if it is safe? Is there enough rain to wash it away?
I am not sqeamish but, I am not sure I would want to go back to a home that had been floating in sewage.
I do hope and pray that jobs can be found/created/returned to, so that there is a place to begin to start over.
09-03-2017 08:03 PM
I may be off base... but maybe it should be a requirement we all have flood insurance if we own a home?
09-03-2017 08:04 PM
@Kachina624 wrote:The engine in my almost-new car was ruined when my son drove it through some flood water (not Harvey). My insurance paid for a new engine and a rental car. Yes, cars are covered if they are damaged by flood water minus the deductible.
I did the same thing to my new car! It was totalled after that and insurance covered it.
09-03-2017 08:06 PM
@SahmIam wrote:I don't know the answer. What I would do now is look at what those who lived through Hurricane Katrina did and what the state/county/government did.
In my neck of the woods, Hurricane Isobel almost bankrupted us due to the damage done to our property; not due to the hurricane first hand but due to the loss of power for a week which led to our property flooding (6 feet in our basement) and costing us $110,000 worth of repairs NONE of which was covered by insurance. My in-laws had a boat that was the ONLY ONE in the marina not to be destroyed; why, no one knows but the photo of their boat at the dock surrounded by pieces of wood from 34 other boats was shown on air, in papers as how bizarre Mother Nature works sometimes.
There are still people living in FEMA trailers on the Eastern Shore.. and Isobel hit in 2003.
I wonder if at this level of devastation if loans are forgiven/written off; if the state has something in place that helps with these loans when President declares it a state of disaster or if people are hounded till the end for money owed.
Excellent question.
Sorry for your losses...unimaginable.
09-03-2017 08:08 PM
@croemer, I'm w/ you. I can't stop thinking about it either. Those poor, poor people.
If you'd had a job, chances are that place was also destroyed. No money coming in, no home, no car, no nothing.
What do you do?
It's heartbreaking.
09-03-2017 08:08 PM
I think that some people will walk away from the mortgages and/or car loans and I worry about the effect that will have on the overall economy nationwide.
09-03-2017 08:08 PM
@Lapdog wrote:My friend and I were talking about this today.
If your home/ car/ yard was flooded with raw sewage how could you go back?
Would you let your children/pets ever play in the yard again? Are there tests for this to see if it is safe? Is there enough rain to wash it away?
I am not sqeamish but, I am not sure I would want to go back to a home that had been floating in sewage.
I do hope and pray that jobs can be found/created/returned to, so that there is a place to begin to start over.
All good questions...I would be so upset and worry my self to death over it.
09-03-2017 08:10 PM - edited 09-03-2017 08:13 PM
@SilleeMee wrote:
@Kachina624 wrote:The engine in my almost-new car was ruined when my son drove it through some flood water (not Harvey). My insurance paid for a new engine and a rental car. Yes, cars are covered if they are damaged by flood water minus the deductible.
I did the same thing to my new car! It was totaled after that and insurance covered it.
Lets say your car is 2 years old...do they cover the value of the car or you owe on it?
09-03-2017 08:11 PM
@sabatini wrote:@croemer, I'm w/ you. I can't stop thinking about it either. Those poor, poor people.
If you'd had a job, chances are that place was also destroyed. No money coming in, no home, no car, no nothing.
What do you do?
It's heartbreaking.
@sabatini EXACTLY!
09-03-2017 08:11 PM
I feel like it would be like grieving when you (I) suddenly lose someone. At first I was very busy with all the at hand aspects. The drive of people and having all the tasks at hand. Then after awhile it all settles in. That's when it will all come crashing down. Imagine the older people displaced. Those that are alone. I hope they all have a strong faith,
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