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After The Fire
Recovering from a fire may take a long time and many of the things you
have to do will be new to you.
If you are not insured, your recovery from a fire loss most likely will
be dependent upon your own resources. Private organizations that can help
include the American Red Cross and the Salvation Army. You also could
talk with your church or synagogue.
Sadly, some people like to take advantage of your grief and try to turn
it into greed. Be careful of people that approach you and say they are
working for your insurance company unless you have been assured of their
credibility. The best thing you can have after a fire is usually a good
attorney to make sure that you protect yourself and get what you legally
deserve. The most common thing we will hear about is construction companies
or public adjusters telling you that they can save you large amounts of
money. While there are many good adjusters and construction companies
some are only designed to take advantage of your situation.
Insurance Information
If you are insured, your insurance will be the most important single component
in recovering from a fire loss. A number of coverages are available such
as - homeowner's, tenant's or condominium owner's insurance policies.
Your insurance policy is a contract between you and the insurer. The insurer
promises to do certain things for you. In turn, you have certain obligations.
Among your duties after a fire loss would be to give immediate notice
of the loss to the insurance company or the insurer's agent.
Protect the property from further damage by making sensible or necessary
repairs such as covering holes in the roof or walls. Take reasonable precautions
against loss, such as draining water lines in winter if the house will
be unheated for some time. The insurance company may refuse to pay losses
that occur from not taking such reasonable care.
Make an inventory of damaged personal property showing in detail the quantity,
description, original purchase price, purchase date, damage estimate and
replacement cost.
Cooperate with the insurer or his/her adjuster by exhibiting the damaged
property.
Submit, within a stated time period (usually 30 - 60 days), a formal statement
of loss. Such a statement should include:
- The time and cause
of loss
- The names and addresses
of those who have an interest in the property. These might include the
mortgage holder, a separated or divorced spouse or a lien holder.
- Building plans
and specifications of the original home and a detailed estimate for
repairs.
- The damage inventory
mentioned above.
- Receipts for additional
living expenses and loss of use claims.
Valuing
Your Property
A pre-fire inventory along with a videotape of all your property could
prove to be a valuable record when making your claim.
When adjusting your fire loss or in claiming a casualty loss on your Federal
income tax, you will have to deal with various viewpoints on the value
of your property. Some terms used are listed below:
- Your "personal
valuation" is your attachment to and personal valuation of your
property lost in a fire. Personal items have a certain sentimental value.
This term is not meant to belittle their value to you but is used to
separate feelings about the value from objective measures of value.
It will be objective measures of value, which you, the insurer, and
the Internal Revenue Service will use as a common ground.
- The "cost
when purchased" is an important element in establishing an item's
final value. Receipts will help verify the cost price.
- Fair market value
before the fire also is expressed as "actual cash value."
This is what you could have gotten for the item if you had sold it the
day before the fire. Its price would reflect its cost at purchase and
the wear it had sustained since then. Depreciation is the formal term
to express the amount of value an item loses over a period of time.
- "Value after
the fire" is sometimes called the item's "salvage value."
- The cost to replace
the item with a like, but not necessarily identical, item is the replacement
cost.
Adjusting
the Loss
"Loss adjustment" is the process of establishing the value of
the damaged property. This is the result of a joint effort among a number
of parties. Basic parties to the process are the owner or occupant and
the insurance company and its representatives.
The owner or occupant is required by the insurance contract to prepare
an inventory and cooperate in the loss valuation process. An insurance
agent may act as the adjuster if the loss is small. The insurer may send
an adjuster who is a permanent member of the insurer's staff, or the company
may hire an independent adjuster to act in its behalf. It is the insurance
adjuster's job, as a representative of the insurance company, to monitor
and assist in the loss valuation process and to bring the loss to a just
and equitable settlement.
Either you or the insurer may hire the services of a fire damage restoration
firm or fire damage service company. These firms provide a range of services
that may include some or all of the following:
- Securing the site
against further damage
- Estimating structural
damage
- Repairing structural
damage
- Estimating the
cost to repair or renew items of personal property
- Packing, transportation,
and storage of household items
- Securing appropriate
cleaning or repair subcontractors
- Storing repaired
items until needed
It is important to
coordinate with the insurance adjuster before contracting for any services.
If you invade the insurer's responsibility area by contracting without
its knowledge or consent, you may be left with bills to pay that otherwise
would have been.
Replacement of Valuable Documents and
Records
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Item
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Who
to Contact
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Driver's
license
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Secretary
of State
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Bank
books
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Your bank, as soon as possible
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Insurance policies
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Your
insurance agent
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Military discharge papers
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Local
Veterans Administration
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Passports
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Local
passport office
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Birth, death, marriage
certificates of birth,
death or marriage
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County
Offices
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Divorce papers
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Circuit Court where decree was issued
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Social Security or
Medicare cards
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Local Social Security Office
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Credit Cards
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The issuing companies, as soon as possible
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Titles to deeds
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Records department of city or county in which the property is located
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Stocks and bonds
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Issuing company or your broker
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Wills
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Your lawyer
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Medical records
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Your doctor
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Warranties
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Issuing company
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Income tax records
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The Internal Revenue Service
where filed or your accountant
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Citizenship papers
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The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service
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Prepaid burial contracts
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Issuing
company
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Animal registration papers
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Society
of registry
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Salvage
Hints
- Clothing -
Smoke odor and soot sometimes can be washed from clothing. The following
formula often will work for clothing that can be bleached:
4-6 tbsp. of Tri-Sodium Phosphate
l cup Lysol or any household chlorine bleach
l gallon warm water
Mix well, add clothes, rinse with clear water and dry well.
Be aware that Tri-Sodium Phosphate is a caustic substance used as a
cleaning agent. It should be used with care and stored out of reach
of children and pets. Wear rubber gloves when using it. Read the label
carefully. To remove mildew, wash the fresh stain with soap and warm
water. Then rinse and dry in sun. If the stain has not disappeared,
use lemon juice and salt, or a diluted solution of household chlorine
bleach.
- Cooking Utensils
- Your pots, pans, flatware, etc., should be washed with soapy water,
rinsed and then polished with a fine-powdered cleaner. You can polish
copper and brass with special polish, salt sprinkled on a piece of lemon
or salt sprinkled on a cloth saturated with vinegar.
- Electrical Appliances
- Appliances
that have been exposed to water or steam should not be used until you
have a service representative check them. This is especially true of
electrical appliances. In addition, steam can remove the lubricant from
some moving parts. If the fire department turned off your gas or power
during the fire, call the electric or gas company to restore these services
- DO NOT TRY TO DO IT YOURSELF.
- Food -
Wash your canned goods in detergent and water. Do the same for food
in jars. If labels come off, be sure you mark the contents on the can
or jar with a grease pencil. Do not use canned goods when cans have
bulged or are dented or rusted.
If your home freezer has stopped running, you still can save the frozen
food. Keep the freezer closed. Your freezer has enough insulation to
keep food frozen for at least one day - perhaps for as many as two or
three days. Move your food to a neighbor's freezer or a rented locker.
Wrap the frozen food in newspapers and blankets or use insulated boxes.
Do not re-freeze food that has thawed.
To remove odor from your refrigerator or freezer, wash the inside with
a solution of baking soda and water, or use one cup of vinegar or household
ammonia to one gallon of water. Some baking soda in an open container,
or a piece of charcoal can be placed in the refrigerator or freezer
to absorb odor.
- Flooring and
Rugs -
When water gets underneath linoleum, it can cause odors and warp the
wood floor. If this happens, remove the entire sheet. If the linoleum
is brittle, a heat lamp will soften it so it can be rolled up without
breaking. If carefully removed, it can be re-cemented after the floor
has completely dried. Small blisters in linoleum can be punctured with
a nail and re-cemented if you are careful. Dilute regular linoleum paste
thin enough to go through a hand syringe and shoot adhesive through
the nail hole. Weigh down the linoleum with bricks or boards. It usually
is possible to cement loose tiles of any type. Wait until the floor
is completely dry before beginning.
Rugs and carpets also should be allowed to dry thoroughly. Beating,
sweeping or vacuuming, and then shampooing then can clean throw rugs.
Rugs should be dried as quickly as possible. Lay them flat, and expose
them to a circulation of warm, dry air. A fan turned on the rugs will
speed drying. Make sure the rugs are thoroughly dry. Even though the
surface seems dry, moisture remaining at the base of the tufts can quickly
rot a rug. For information on cleaning and preserving carpets, call
your carpet dealer or installer or qualified carpet cleaning professional.
- Mattresses
and Pillows
- Reconditioning an innerspring mattress at home is very difficult,
if not impossible. Your mattress may be able to be renovated by a company
that builds or repairs mattresses. If you must use your mattress temporarily,
put it out into the sun to dry. Then cover it with rubber or plastic
sheeting. It is almost impossible to get smoke odor out of pillows.
The feathers and foam retain the odor.
- Leather and
Books - Wipe leather goods with a damp cloth, then a dry cloth.
Stuff purses and shoes with newspapers to retain shape. Leave suitcases
open. Leather goods should be dried away from heat and sun. When leather
goods are dry, clean with saddle soap. You can use steel wool or a suede
brush on suede. Rinse leather and suede jackets in cold weather and
dry away from heat and sun.
Wet books must be taken care of as soon as possible. The best methods
to save wet books are to freeze them in a vacuum freezer. This special
freezer will remove the moisture without damaging the pages.
If there will be a delay in locating such a freezer, place them in a
normal freezer until a vacuum freezer can be located.
- Locks and Hinges
- Locks (especially iron locks) should be taken apart, wiped with kerosene
and oiled. If locks cannot be removed, squirt machine oil through a
bolt opening or keyhole, and work the knob to distribute the oil. Hinges
also should be thoroughly cleaned and oiled.
- Walls and Furniture
- To remove soot and smoke from walls, furniture and floors, mix together:
4 to 6 tbsp. Tri-Sodium Phosphate
1 cup Lysol or any chloride bleach
1 gallon warm water
Wear rubber gloves when cleaning. After washing the article, rinse with
clear warm water and dry thoroughly.
Walls may be washed down while wet. Use a mild soap or detergent. Wash
a small area at one time, working from the floor up. Then rinse the
wall with clear water immediately. Ceilings should be washed last. Do
not repaint until the walls and ceilings are completely dry.
Wallpaper also can be repaired. Use a commercial paste to repaste loose
edges or sections. Contact your wallpaper dealer or installer for information
on wallpaper cleaners. Washable wallpaper can be washed like an ordinary
wall, but care must be taken not to soak the paper. Work from bottom
to top to prevent streaking.
Do not dry your furniture in the sun. The wood will warp and twist out
of shape. Clear off the mud and dirt by scrubbing with a stiff brush
and a cleaning solution. You can also rub the wood surface with a 4/0
steel wool pad dipped in liquid polishing wax, wipe with a soft cloth
and then buff. Remove the drawers and let them dry thoroughly so there
will be no sticking when you replace them. Wet wood can decay and mold,
so allow it to dry thoroughly. Open doors and windows for good ventilation.
Turn on your furnace or air conditioner, if necessary. If mold forms,
wipe the wood with a cloth soaked in a mixture of borax dissolved in
hot water. To remove white spots or film, rub the wood surface with
a cloth soaked in a solution of a half cup of household ammonia and
a half cup of water. Wipe dry and polish with wax, or rub the surface
with a cloth soaked in a solution of a half cup turpentine and a half
cup of linseed oil. Be careful because turpentine is combustible.
- Money Replacement
- Handle burned money as little as possible. Attempt to encase each
bill or portion of a bill in plastic wrap for preservation. If money
is only half-burned or less (if half or more of the bill is intact),
you can take the remainder to your local Federal Reserve Bank for replacement.
Ask your personal bank for the nearest one. Or you can mail the burned
or torn money via FIRST CLASS REGISTERED MAIL to:
U.S. Treasury Department
Main Treasury Building, Room 1123
Washington, D.C. 20220
Mutilated or melted coins can be taken to the Federal Reserve Bank,
or mailed via FIRST CLASS REGISTERED MAIL to:
Superintendent, U.S. Assay Office
32 Old Slip
New York, NY 10005
If your U.S. Savings Bonds have been mutilated or destroyed, write to:
U.S. Treasury Department
Bureau of Public Debt
Division of Loans and Currency
537 South Clark St.
Chicago, IL 60605
Attn: Bond Consultant
Include name(s) on bonds, approximate date or time period when purchased,
denominations and approximate number of each.
Local Contacts
Several contacts will play a big role for you after a fire in Calumet
City/ Please refer to the list below and you can also contact the City
hall switchboard at 891-8100, 9-5 each weekday for additional services.
Fire Reports - 891-8145
Building Permits, Reconstruction, Inspections, Contractor Registration
891-8120
Police Dept. 868-2500 (non-emergency)
Youth & Family Services 891-8180
Public Works 891-8160
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