Katrina Might Spur Claims By AdjustersSome might seek overtime pay for endless days and weekends in disaster zonesWith the amount of human tragedy and ...
House, Senate Brace ForTRIA Showdown This WeekBills have big differences; Bush backs Senate versionOverwhelming House passage of a bill substantially reshaping the Terrorism Risk ...
NAMIC Blasts Compromise On SOX RuleMutual group opposes internal control reporting requirements approved by regulatorsChicagoThe National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies remains opposed to ...
Katrina Makes The CaseFor Better Building CodesBy Harvey RylandWhen a storm smashes homes and businesses in three states into piles of kindling, devastates a ...
When insureds complete improvements or repairs around their properties themselves, the question arises whether actual cash value would be calculated differently than if contractors did the work.
A total of seven natural catastrophes in the third quarter of this year cost the nation's property and casualty insurers an all-time high of $40.8 billion in insured property losses in 14 states.
Lawmakers At Odds Over Katrina LessonsFederal, state officials discuss solutions, but lack consensus on any approachWashingtonThe destruction wrought by Hurricane Katrina might have spotlighted ...
Boost Building Codes, Congress UrgedHigher standards in three states hit by Katrina could have saved 80 percent of lossesWashingtonThree of the states in the ...
Claims News Service, Nov. 7, 01:05 p.m. EST -- Pummeled by Hurricane Katrina and six other natural catastrophes in the third quarter, U.S. property/casualty insurers paid an all-time record $40.8