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The Importance of Renter’s Insurance

A recent fire in Waterford again showed the importance of perhaps the cheapest yet least common insurance, renter’s insurance.

Friday, there was a fire at 520 Boston Post Road that destroyed all the possessions in a home a Waterford family was renting. The family had no renter’s insurance, and was left with nothing.

The event was a tragedy. But perhaps the bigger tragedy is that exact situation happens far too often, according to Sue Bolen of the Red Cross.

“It is one of those things that happens more often than not,” Bolen said. “When somebody has renter’s insurance, they are standing there and lost everything. It is already devastating. It is just compounded when the person doesn't have renter’s insurance. It’s heartbreaking.”

Bolen responds to approximately 200 fires a year through the Red Cross, many of which are fires that destroy apartments. And in those cases, it is much more common for the families not to have renter’s insurance than to have it.

She pushes renter’s insurance on every renter she meets, saying it is something that everybody “just has to have.” It costs about $20 a month, and makes all the difference in the world, Bolen said.

“If a family has renter’s insurance, that can help them guide through that process,” Bolen said. “Getting that check from the insurance policy, that means they can continue on with their life. The people without renter’s insurance are left with nothing.”

Renter's Insurance

Renter’s insurance is cheap, with policies generally costing between $200 and $250 a year, according to Kevin Reardon, who owns Reardon Agency Insurance on Clark Lane. And yet it is “criminally common” for renter’s not to have it, he said.

Reardon said many renters think the landlord’s homeowner’s insurance will cover their possessions. That is absolutely not true, as none of the “content” within a rental property is covered under a homeowner’s insurance policy, Reardon said.

Bolen said there were times when an apartment burned down, and the family thought their possessions were covered by the landlord’s homeowner’s insurance. Bolen had to tell them that wasn’t true, that none of their possessions are covered, which she described as “awful, just awful.”

Another big reason people don’t buy renter’s insurance is because they don’t want to take on another bill, Reardon said. However, Reardon said if a person uses the same company for renter’s insurance as they do for their car insurance, they get a discount. There were even times where the discount on the car insurance policy was actually bigger than the renter’s insurance policy, he said.

“I’m not kidding,” Reardon said. “It has happened.”

The third big reason people don’t get it is because they say they “don’t have that much stuff,” Reardon said. But once their apartment is burglarized or burned down, they realize how much stuff they have, he said.

“We invariably get from the renter, ‘I don’t have that much stuff’,” Reardon said. “When the place burns down and you have nothing, suddenly you have a lot of stuff.”

The normal renter’s insurance policy covers $20,000 of content, and provides another $4,000 more loss of use. That means the insurance company will pay for a hotel room and even the difference in rent, if a new place is more expensive, for up to a year, he said.

Renter’s insurance also is renter’s liability insurance as well. If somebody sues a person renting, the renter’s insurance policy will cover the cost, he said.

“A lot of people don’t realize they need renter’s insurance, when they really, really do,” Reardon said.

Bolen also said that renter’s insurance just doesn’t cover fires, but if the apartment is burglarized or something else happens. She said that other people within an apartment building can forget to blow out a candle or leave a stove running, and that means another family loses everything.

“You dont’t have control over it,” Bolen said. “It can happen to anybody. It doesn’t matter how careful you are, it can happen.”

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Richard Waselik May 19, 2013 at 05:57 am
There is no "suckles away". The money is deposited by those that use it. The rest isRead More relentless retoric...
Daniella Ruiz May 19, 2013 at 05:44 am
another 'not for profit' that suckles away at the very core of peoples generosity?? better toRead More 'retire' the banking/WS thieves that casually gore the system with relentless greed, schemes and secrecy.
Ivy's Simply Homemade
nascarblue May 17, 2013 at 08:05 am
happy happy anniversary, i love your food, you can tell when a business takes pride in what they do.Read More wishing you many many more years, i will definatly be back, along with my friends, we love your food.
Kate May 22, 2013 at 06:57 pm
That's wonderful Naty! If we can get enough people like yourself, who care, we really might be ableRead More to save Cohanzie!
Naty Bush May 22, 2013 at 05:12 pm
I'll try my best to get others to go!
Kate May 19, 2013 at 02:05 pm
Oh, and please spread the word, and bring a friend to the meeting! :)
Liz May 12, 2013 at 09:06 pm
Mr. Steiner wants to build 72 three story homes on 32 acres in addition to the 60 condos in the twoRead More large buildings. That is more than two individual units per acre or if you include the 60 condos - that is MORE than 4 units per acre! The area around the property for new building is zoned 3 acres per unit. The average of currently built housing abutting the property is about one acre per unit. That is not in keeping with the neighborhood character.
Daniella Ruiz May 12, 2013 at 05:36 pm
Mr Steiner may be the last hope for this decrepit place. The neighbors need to move along, or buyRead More the place themselves. Change might help the stonewalling attitude that has become evident in nearly the entire town, revolving around exclusive entitled old farts with nothing better to do than remember their glory days of Seaside. Its gone, & it's not going to revert back to a pasture either. (too many complaints about that cow smell and so forth). My advice is to listen carefully and try to work something out, get over your own selfish grandious dreams of Pelham Manor style estates and do SOMETHING before it simply falls apart like Norwich Hospital, the countless thread/manufacturing mills, and every other historic building that has been left to rot.
Daniella Ruiz May 14, 2013 at 08:53 am
mary m>> common sense? heee hee. in this day and age? lawyers have made every attempt toRead More eradicate that concept from our every life activity. write it into some law, that can be thence used as future gurantee of use of, by and for their own existence? it's like job security for that entire group, keep the general public at a disadvantage, unable to apply common sense (whats left of it they havent entombed in laws) and uneasy about acting on their own. John Y has the right attitude, heave the cra.pp on the peoples lawn, and hope it doesn't lay there for days as well!
John Yannacci, Sr. May 13, 2013 at 10:09 am
Mary May, I don't know the legality of posting signs on telephone poles. But, take a ride aroundRead More Waterford on Saturday mornings and you'll see signs on anything that is verticle. Take a ride around the same neighborhoods on Wednesday and half the signs will still be there. I wonder if the folks who have had the same yard sale sign at the corner of Great Neck and Rope Ferry Rds. for two and a half weeks wonder why cars are still stopping at their house every Saturday morning.
Mary May May 13, 2013 at 09:53 am
Um I believe it is ILLEGAl to post ANY sign on a telephone pole ANYWAY but free standing signsRead More should be removed after sale is over ! Really a state law just COMMON SENSE we have lost along the way !