Guest guest Posted October 12, 2005 Report Share Posted October 12, 2005 The ironic thing for this woman is that she would of been better off having her house destroyed by the winds of the hurricane, because then she would be covered by insurance. tigerpaw2c <tigerpaw2c@...> wrote:The next disaster: mold http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Insurance/Insureyourhome/P131151. asp After a water disaster, mold is everywhere. It's disgusting, a possible health hazard and costly to fix. The worst horror is that you're probably not covered by your insurance. By Liz Pulliam Weston Diane Beauchamp knows she's among the lucky ones. After Hurricane Katrina, her home in Ocean Springs, Miss., is still standing and apparently wasn't flooded. But it's covered in mold. Rain seeped in through the wind-damaged roof and siding, Beauchamp said. Then the moisture sat and " cooked " in humid 100-degree heat for days, leading to mold growth in every room. The mess Beauchamp found when she was finally able to return home after a week was almost Technicolor: Black spores crept up the walls. An ottoman, once dark green, had turned white with fuzzy growth. Green splotches sprawled on a cream-colored sectional sofa. Carpets that didn't even seem damp had mold growing in the padding underneath, and Beauchamp isn't sure how much of the drywall can be saved. " It was really gross, " Beauchamp said. " In the bedrooms, it was also on blankets on top of the beds, not just on stuff that was on the floor. " As bad as it was, Beauchamp said her mold growth couldn't hold a candle to the damage suffered by homeowners whose houses were actually flooded, where mold sprouted in a thick rug on nearly every surface. " I know I'm fortunate, " Beauchamp said, " but fixing it still involves a lot of work. " And it takes a lot of money, much of it likely to come out of her own pocket. Skyrocketing mold claims around the turn of the century led many insurers to sharply limit or even eliminate coverage for fungus growth, which has left many hurricane-afflicted homeowners on their own in dealing with the moldy aftermath. FAIR USE NOTICE: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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