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Even if your
apartment has an orange crate for a coffee table, concrete blocks
and plywood boards for a bookshelf, and the living room seating
is the chair you hauled in from your mother's basement, you still
need renter's insurance.
Your possessions,
even the most dismal junk, are valuable if you must replace them.
Most important, insurance protects you when your negligence causes
accidents that injure other people or damage their property.
"Younger tenants
don't understand that," said Mike McCarthy, a fire claim team manager
for State Farm Insurance Cos. Renter's insurance "covers you for
negligence, and that's where it really impacts."
A renter's policy,
often referred to as a Tenants Form HO-4, is like a homeowner's
policy without the home. A tenant's policy insures your household
contents and personal belongings against certain perils, and like
a homeowner's policy, provides coverage for additional living expenses
and personal liability protection.
The primary
causes of property loss are fire and water, followed closely by
theft, McCarthy said.
Fire can wipe
out some or all of one's belongings, water ruins what the fire missed,
and smoke permeates everything. An apartment fire is especially
damaging because it may spread destruction and smoke to other units
in the building. Consequently, liability coverage protects you in
lawsuits by other tenants.
McCarthy said
some of the most common causes of accidental fires are:
- Burning candles
left unattended. "They're only as safe as the container they're
in," he added. "Glass can fracture if the candle is allowed to
burn too long."
- A chimney
fire, especially prevalent in winter.
- Grease or
other kitchen fires.
- Children
playing with matches or lighters.
- Hot light
sources, such as halogen bulbs, placed too close to flammable
material.
- Wiring. Electrical
cord bound up in a knot can overheat. Electrical wraps to keep
cords compact pose a fire hazard. Overloaded circuits and frayed
extension cords also fall into this category.
- Electrical
appliances can overheat; a washer drain hose can break; dryer
lint can ignite, especially when the appliance is not properly
vented or the vent is clogged.
McCarthy said
people become complacent, leaving a pot-holder on or near a hot
stove burner, for example, or placing flammable materials too near
a wood-burning stove.
Some renters,
especially freshfrom-the-nest, first-time apartmentdwellers, may
argue that they're living from paycheck to paycheck, that the $10,
$20 or even $40 a month cost of insurance is too much and that nothing
the renter owns has much value.
"People don't
realize how much of value they have," said Bev Anderson, property
casualty administrator in the Nebraska Department of Insurance.
"Some companies have a minimum of $5,000 (coverage) and people think
they don't even have that much. But they should just look at the
shoes, clothes, linens, towels, pantry - all the incidental things
that add up."
A homeowner
usually gets insurance because the mortgage holder requires it and
because losing a house would be costly.
But renters
often need a nudge, McCarthy said. "It's not unusual for half the
people in an apartment complex not to have it."
McCarthy urges
apartment dwellers to look at their lease for the wording on responsibility
in cases of negligence. A lease or rental agreement may include
a clause alerting you to the fact that your landlord's coverage
won't protect you if your carelessness causes damage to your rental
unit or other tenants' property, loss or damage to your belongings
and injuries to you or others.
Taking an inventory
will make it easier to determine how much coverage you should have
and, if the need arises, to make a claim. McCarthy said there is
no minimum, but agents may recommend starting around $20,000. Liability
can be as little as $100,000 or boosted to $300,000, $500,000 or
more.
Taking photos
of your rooms will help you recall what you have in case of a loss.
Ideally, these photos should be kept in a safety-deposit box or
similar safe place.
When you're
ready to start scouting for renter's insurance, "Every Tenant's
Legal Guide" suggests following these guidelines:
- Shop around.
There may be a savings in insuring your property with the same
company that holds your auto insurance.
- Check what's
covered. Ask about things not covered. Cash is usually not covered;
jewelry, computers and table silver coverage often is limited.
Bicycles are usually covered but cars, vans, boats and trucks
are not. If you run a home business, you may need to purchase
additional insurance to cover office equipment.
- Do you want
replacement-value coverage - what it costs today to replace an
item - or do you want actual cash value? Replacement cost is the
amount needed to replace items without deducting for age and wear.
Actual cash value is the amount it would take to repair or replace
damaged items after depreciation.
- Check the
amount of the deductible. The range is typically $250 to $500
for property loss claims. The higher the deductible, the lower
the premium. There are no deductibles for liability claims against
the policy.
The
Omaha World Herald
Published Sunday, February 18, 2001
by Rhonday Stansberry
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