Author: harpole@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu (Charles H. Harpole)
Date: Wed, 17 Jun 1998 23:12:48 -0400 (EDT)
Got directly contradictory replies: some said insurance will pay the owner/reinstaller and others said not (but WOULD pay a third party installer). I like the idea of a pro installer, but have never
The insurance company pays the claim which is the cost of repairing the damage. The cost is established by an estimate from a contractor. The situations that I've been involved in the check is normal
crew. hehe.....I've seen some work supposedly done by "professional tower crews" that looks just like this! Amazing some of the poor workmanship out there! I'd never tolerate it on one of my jobs! H
Author: harpole@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu (Charles H. Harpole)
Date: Thu, 18 Jun 1998 08:19:11 -0400 (EDT)
Clearly Steve has not seen parts of the real world, where insurance refuses to pay directly to the insured/homeowner and where really sloppy work is done. I'm glad someone can live in that kind of ra
One experience I've had with State Farm (NOT a tower claim) is the check was made out jointly to me and my mortgage company. The deal was I had to sign the check, forward it to the mortgage company,
Charlie, at least one of the responses I read seemed to be based on a misunderstanding of your query. I think the respondent was not saying that they would pay you, but that they would pay you for th
Hey, don't mention it. I guess my error was thinking that I was doing the work. Sorry. And yes, I've seen sloppy commercial work. Yes, you can get into a tussle with your insurance company. I've only
I had the same experience with 20th Century when my antenna crashed onto my roof. They paid the estimated sum (over 30,000) for roof /antenna/tower damage. The check was made out to me and the mortag
What you are describing is inadequate project management, not incompetent professionals (although the cable installer may well have been lazy!). You need to SPECIFY what you expect, INSPECT what was