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11/18/2008
Tuesday morning
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| Last july I was involved in an accident where I was hit from behind.
The person who hit me was uninsured, and completely at fault. Well, I
had to pay the 200$ deductible to have my jeep fixed, and it was fixed
very well. My insurace carrier at the time was Allstate, and I had no
problems till last September. The main reason I had d Allstate so
much was that before last june, I had a job which didnt pay too
much, and I was strapped for cash occasionally, so I was a week or so
late on a payment every once in a while; I was always in contact with
my agents, and they were always willing to help me out. I always got
my premiums paid, just sometimes late. Well, I was a few days late on
my payment in August, and in september, I was notified that I owed a
certian amount of money that seemed to be 2 months of premiums. I
called and paid the amount, and was then informed that my policy was
terminated. That was the beggining of a long drawn out insurance
battle that is still haunting me. |
| How do you find a company that sells level term insurance? Consider
companies that are rated A++ by A.M. Best. Dont purchase a plan from a
company rated below A+. Use the Internet as a source of price
comparison. Enter the words - insurance quotes - at your favorite search
engine to receive instant quotes. You must be completely truthful about
your medical history as you go through the medical exam process for
approval. |
| First of all, there may be a law in your state regarding this, but most
likely the reason is that this is the insurance companys policy.
Insurance companies have to file their rules and rates with the state
department of insurance. When they go back on one of their rules, and
dont have justification to, it looks really bad when the state audits
them. So, when asked, they just say its the law. |
| 5. Another case of cash-paying customers being screwed: Rite Aid
used to program their cash registers to surcharge prescription
drugs $1 if the customer didnt have insurance. This wasnt an
accident; it took work to implement since it involved checking
another database in real time. Ref: Computerworld, Feb 26, 2001. |
| 4. Concerning your right to sue the insurance company if they
dont come thru, in most cases you will collect only the cost of
the service they refused to provide. Consider the statistical
implications of this. Say the company provides to provide 3
treatments you need, because theyre experimental or whatever.
You survive the first two, but lack of the 3rd kills you. If your
heirs sue and win, they will recover only the cost of that 3rd
treatment that should have been performed. This makes it just
good business for the company to pay as little as it can.
Remember that the companys legal duty is to make as much money as
possible for its shareholders. Some are quite successful; one of
the richest men in the US a few decades back got that way by
selling insurance policies to poor people. |
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