So mom's house got a good 4 feet of water in it this weekend. She has flood insurance and thinks the house is pretty much a total loss. Is she required to rebuild, or does insurance just cut her a check?
This is a good list. But I would add the following:TXTransplant said:
The house probably isn't a total loss, but it will have to be gutted. As others have said, get everything that didn't get wet out of there and into storage asap. Most items that did get wet are now garbage (anything metal, like pots and pans, cloth/fabric, wood, or that plugs in). Depending on the height of the ceilings, you may want to take the sheetrock and insulation out up to the ceilings. The panels are usually 4 ft wide and hung horizontally. Taking it out just to the water line isn't sufficient. Then start cleaning everything with bleach and spraying the studs with mold inhibitor spray.
And lastly, wear a mask.SeMgCo87 said:This is a good list. But I would add the following:TXTransplant said:
The house probably isn't a total loss, but it will have to be gutted. As others have said, get everything that didn't get wet out of there and into storage asap. Most items that did get wet are now garbage (anything metal, like pots and pans, cloth/fabric, wood, or that plugs in). Depending on the height of the ceilings, you may want to take the sheetrock and insulation out up to the ceilings. The panels are usually 4 ft wide and hung horizontally. Taking it out just to the water line isn't sufficient. Then start cleaning everything with bleach and spraying the studs with mold inhibitor spray.
- As soon as you photograph the rooms, rip carpet and pad out right away. It's usually a dirty and nasty job. Wear long heavy rubber gloves, and be careful of the tack strip...the little tacks can rip gloves as well as flesh. And no telling what germs, bacteria or toxins may have collected there . In the carpet/pad as well.
- Wood flooring, when wet, swells. Rip out at least the perimeter course, to prevent it pushing against the framing. I have seen Oak Strip flooring push an exterior wall out 2". Engineered products, not so much.
- Above all, if water has risen above the electrical outlets, throw the main breaker (s) OFF, as well as each circuit breaker. Use dry rubber gloves, and stand on dry ground, or a dunnage pallet. Do not stand on wet ground unprotected. And keep it off until you can get a qualified electrician to check out the circuits.
Agsrock44 said:
I had 2-3 feet when we were rescued Wednesday at 10 AM and it was still rising. I live in Hardin County (NW of Beaumont) and it may be 2 weeks or more before we can get back to our house. Getting everything out quickly is not an option. What can we expect when we finally gain access?
RCR06 said:
FEMA has changed a lot since Katrina. At that time their solution was to throw money at the problem, but it didn't really solve the problem. If she has flood insurance don't expect to get anything from FEMA. If you didnt have flood insurance and you have a good job don't expect anything from FEMA outside of a low interest SBA loan. You may get some housing assistance while you rebuild. With that said it's possible to get something from FEMA, but in most cases will be very little compared to what you need to rebuild.
With insurance they send out and adjuster and look at what you had, what type of flooring, sheetrock, cabinets, personal belongings. A FEMA inspection is mainly to verify you had damage associated with the storm. They don't look at what type of furniture or flooring you had.
where the hell does all the donated money go, then? Billions (with a 'B') are being collected by our govt and private parties. If that $$ isn't used to rebuild homes, etc, what's it for?RCR06 said:
FEMA has changed a lot since Katrina. At that time their solution was to throw money at the problem, but it didn't really solve the problem. If she has flood insurance don't expect to get anything from FEMA. If you didnt have flood insurance and you have a good job don't expect anything from FEMA outside of a low interest SBA loan. You may get some housing assistance while you rebuild. With that said it's possible to get something from FEMA, but in most cases will be very little compared to what you need to rebuild.
With insurance they send out and adjuster and look at what you had, what type of flooring, sheetrock, cabinets, personal belongings. A FEMA inspection is mainly to verify you had damage associated with the storm. They don't look at what type of furniture or flooring you had.
This is my understanding of Flood Insurance:TXTransplant said:RCR06 said:
FEMA has changed a lot since Katrina. At that time their solution was to throw money at the problem, but it didn't really solve the problem. If she has flood insurance don't expect to get anything from FEMA. If you didnt have flood insurance and you have a good job don't expect anything from FEMA outside of a low interest SBA loan. You may get some housing assistance while you rebuild. With that said it's possible to get something from FEMA, but in most cases will be very little compared to what you need to rebuild.
With insurance they send out and adjuster and look at what you had, what type of flooring, sheetrock, cabinets, personal belongings. A FEMA inspection is mainly to verify you had damage associated with the storm. They don't look at what type of furniture or flooring you had.
This is exactly what I thought - except you shouldn't expect any money from FEMA even if you DO have insurance? I'm a bit confused by that. I would expect them to pay out something, but not more than ~maybe~ $20-$30k for a few feet of water.
The people in my 'hood who still have done nothing waiting on adjusters (and there are still a few) can't be helped at this point. So many others hired Servpro or companies like that. I've heard the cost for Servpro to do what our volunteers have been doing the past few days (ripping out sheetrock and all that) is $20k. That's going to eat up entire insurance settlements really quickly. A couple of people said they had supplemental flood insurance (like through USAA) and expect that to make them whole. I have no experience with that, so I don't know.
But you don't just get the max $250k/$100k just because you live in a fancy house or have really nice things, right? I live in an area where homes took in anywhere from 6" to 2' of water. So, not enough to totally destroy a house, but enough to make a big freaking mess. I was talking to people this week who seemed to be under the impression that FEMA would pay them enough to put their house back exactly like it was (these are $300k-$700k houses). We are also not in a zone that requires flood insurance, so the most anyone is paying in premiums is $450/year. I just can't think that $450/year is going to get you a settlement that makes you whole, but maybe I'm wrong.SeMgCo87 said:This is my understanding of Flood Insurance:TXTransplant said:RCR06 said:
FEMA has changed a lot since Katrina. At that time their solution was to throw money at the problem, but it didn't really solve the problem. If she has flood insurance don't expect to get anything from FEMA. If you didnt have flood insurance and you have a good job don't expect anything from FEMA outside of a low interest SBA loan. You may get some housing assistance while you rebuild. With that said it's possible to get something from FEMA, but in most cases will be very little compared to what you need to rebuild.
With insurance they send out and adjuster and look at what you had, what type of flooring, sheetrock, cabinets, personal belongings. A FEMA inspection is mainly to verify you had damage associated with the storm. They don't look at what type of furniture or flooring you had.
This is exactly what I thought - except you shouldn't expect any money from FEMA even if you DO have insurance? I'm a bit confused by that. I would expect them to pay out something, but not more than ~maybe~ $20-$30k for a few feet of water.
The people in my 'hood who still have done nothing waiting on adjusters (and there are still a few) can't be helped at this point. So many others hired Servpro or companies like that. I've heard the cost for Servpro to do what our volunteers have been doing the past few days (ripping out sheetrock and all that) is $20k. That's going to eat up entire insurance settlements really quickly. A couple of people said they had supplemental flood insurance (like through USAA) and expect that to make them whole. I have no experience with that, so I don't know.
FEMA designates one coverage limit, $250k flood damage and $100 for content. Supplemental coverage will cover excess value over $250k and $100k content, and perhaps some specific items. If you have s flood policy, FEMA can pay upfront to cover hotel and other expenses, but it goes against your limit.
The insurance adjuster will estimate refurbishment costs from standard rate tables for installed products. That's why pictures are so important and samples of the installed product, as well as an inventory list of furniture and belongings (and value). They can use that as a basis, but they will still depreciate everything for age, including cabinets and fixtures. Likewise, if you have purchased replacement value insurance, you can get like for like.
If you don't have Flood Insurance, FEMA can authorize a little cash, but not much. This is what happened last August in Baton Rouge. They may also provide a contact for a disaster loan, but that will be tied to your credit.
Hope this helps.
I'm no expert, but I saw one house today (it may not have taken on a full 6", though), and the cabinets looked fine (even after sitting for the entire week). Another house that took on about that much had cabinets that I would want removed if I lived there (they had definitely started to warp and the veneer was cracking).hatchback said:
I guess I'll re ask my question. If the house had 6-8 inches inside does all cabinetry that sat in water have to come out?
Now that I ask it out loud, I realize how simple it sounds. I just want to confirm.
Houses have a lot of intrinsic value, more than just the hard materials used to construct them. Replacement insurance can cover a lot of that hard material cost, but very seldom the intrinsic value. Memorial area, West U and Bellaire are examples with lots of intrinsic value. Take a Bungalow from West U ($300k - $400k) and drop it in Ashford Village off Briar Forest. Do you think it's worth $300k there? Hardly. Maybe $175k.Quote:
But you don't just get the max $250k/$100k just because you live in a fancy house or have really nice things, right? I live in an area where homes took in anywhere from 6" to 2' of water. So, not enough to totally destroy a house, but enough to make a big freaking mess. I was talking to people this week who seemed to be under the impression that FEMA would pay them enough to put their house back exactly like it was (these are $300k-$700k houses). We are also not in a zone that requires flood insurance, so the most anyone is paying in premiums is $450/year. I just can't think that $450/year is going to get you a settlement that makes you whole, but maybe I'm wrong.