The Ohio Department of Insurance is advising residents to move quickly to check for storm damage to homes and vehicles.
Insurance Director Mary Jo Hudson says if your property was hurt by high winds on Sept. 14, take notes and photographs, and contact your insurance company as soon as you can.
The Ohio Insurance Institute says a standard homeowners, renters or auto insurance policy will cover much of the damage from wind gusts, falling trees and flying debris.
However, the industry group says insurance typically won’t pay to replace trees. And, you normally won’t be compensated for food that spoils in a power outage, unless you purchased special “refrigerated property coverage.”
Remnants of Hurricane Ike whipped Ohio with winds of up to 78 mph.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
India’s Largest Nuclear Power Plant Hit by Data Breach
Premiums Will Skyrocket by 2035; Discounts Not Enough for Wind Mit, Studies Say
US P/C Industry Books Best Result in a Decade but Not All Lines Enjoy Success
Allianz Unit to Cut as Many as 1,800 Jobs in Push to Adopt AI 

