By Dave Thomas
Thursday, Oct. 27 - The morning began in Pascaguola, Mississippi and an interview with insurance agent Aulton Vann. Vann, a longtime resident of the Magnolia State, had major damage to his office and lost his home. After interviewing him in what was left of his office, he took us on a tour of his neighborhood which overlooks the Gulf and showed us what was left of his home. He had the remains bulldozed because it was too painful for his wife to keep seeing what was left of their home. They are for now living out of a trailer, but are determined to rebuild. We drove a couple miles with him down the coastline and viewed other homes completely gone, including the home of Sen. Trent Lott. We then drove to Bay St. Louis area and met first with agent Dave Treutel, and then with Richard Davis, president of the Mississippi Big 'I' Association. Treutel and his staff were working out of a trailer. He then got in our car and road with us to show what was left of his neighborhood. While his home was still standing, it would need major repairs to say the least. Again, I couldn't get over how gracious these folks were who had been through so much. We then talked with Davis about how the Big 'I' and others have reached out to the agents and the community in general to assist in any way possible. It was back to Mobile for one more night.
Crawford & Company adjuster Mark Moon plans to be in the greater New Orleans area for some time to come, helping Katrina victims with their claims. Moon discusses the claims process and some of the challenges he faces in assisting residents.
Chalmette, Louisiana resident Judy Lunt and her husband, Charles, could only look on in disbelief when they viewed what was left of their rental properties on one block in this Louisiana neighborhood. Lunt's tragedy was made worse by an apparent arson of the properties weeks after Katrina hit.
Ninth Ward of New Orleans resident Louis Legier, 80, and his 88-year-old cousin made a mad dash for a nearby school as Katrina's flood waters swamped their street. Legier and his cousin survived, but his house didn't.
Insurance Journal Online Editor Dave Thomas shows the destruction that hit one Ninth Ward block of homes, along with the neighborhood school, as Katrina roared into town. Few buildings, cars and other property escaped.
In the Ninth Ward of New Orleans, resident Louis Legier discusses the devastation Katrina wreaked on his home. For Legier, life goes on and he will not let this storm ruin him.
Mississippi insurance agent Aulton Vann knows all too well what his policyholders are going through as a result of Hurricane Katrina. Vann's agency was damaged by flooding and he and his family lost their home overlooking the Gulf. Like many in Mississippi, though, Vann is determined to rebuild.
Mississippi independent insurance agent Aulton Vann vows to rebuild his home. The Pascagoula resident lost his family home which overlooked the Gulf. Vann talks about the loss of the property and the neighborhood he has called home for so many years.
Like other Mississippi independent insurance agents, Dave Treutel knows what his policyholders are going through. Treutel talks from what was his own property and how much work is necessary to rebuild his family home. While the home is still standing, it is months away from being inhabitable again.
Mississippi insurance agent Dave Treutel knows it could have been even worse, and for Treutel and his family, it was pretty bad. While he currently runs his insurance business out of a trailer, Treutel's home and business suffered major damage from Hurricane Katrina. Like many in the Bay St. Louis community, Treutel will pick up the pieces and rebuild in the area he calls home.
For Gulfport Deputy Fire Chief Derek Ladner (Fire Station #7), Hurricane Katrina was like nothing he and his co-workers had ever seen before. With their station damaged by the storm, the men and women from #7 spent a number of harrowing days searching for survivors and doing whatever they could to assist people. Like many in Gulfport, Ladner knows there is much rebuilding work ahead, but it is a job he would not trade for anything.
As Insurance Journal Online Editor Dave Thomas discovered in several Mississippi towns along the coast, Katrina spared just about no one. While some buildings were left standing in some shape, Katrina leveled others and unfortunately took lives with her.
Mississippi Big "I" President Richard Davis had seen storms before, but never of the magnitude of Katrina. Davis talked with Insurance Journal in Bay St. Louis about the Association's efforts to reach out to agents across the state.
Mississippi insurance agent Scott Naugle probably never dreamed he'd one day be working out of a tent on a busy street corner selling insurance. Naugle, like many other Magnolia State businessowners, was hit hard by Hurricane Katrina. With his staff working within tight confines outside to meet the needs of their policyholders, Naugle spoke with Insurance Journal about the challenges he and his co-workers have faced, the personal losses of many Mississippi residents and more.
"HurricaneNow.com's Jeff Flock reports from a parking garage in downtown New Orleans at the height of Hurricane Katrina." Watch Now
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