She saw opportunity where no one else did. Bedford-Stuyvesant was full of beautiful owner-occupied brownstones, but hardly anyone wanted insure them. Her firm would fill ...
Eliot Spitzer's political rehabilitation is in full throttle, with the latest evidence being the sympathetic cover story in the April 27 edition of Newsweek, headlined: "How Could I?"
Too much latitude is not always a good thing. We need to beware of the line of malarkey our bosses might sell us. If we are cautious, then there may be a bright future in being a high-value claim adjuster.
Eliot Spitzer's political rehab is in full throttle, as the disgraced former governor and crusading attorney general from New York says he told us so,commenting ...
Back in 1976 while editor of The Claimsman, the monthly newsletter of the South Florida Claims Association, I pitched the idea of a "George Bureau" in one of my editorials.
WASHINGTON--A bill in Congress to create a commission for a study of workers' compensation laws is aimed at securing change in a system that unions and others see as biased against unions, according
After a 2-year marathon race for president, with countless debates, advertisements, polls and predictions, the elections are now behind us. Voters spoke in record numbers: According to professors at George Mason
Insurance commissioner spots were up for grabs in five states on Election Day last week, with at least three going to Democrats, while voters also decided the fate of many state legislators who play
Voters have decided the outcome of races for five open insurance commissioners' seats, 11 gubernatorial spots and races for many legislators participating on insurance committees in their state legisl