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Insurance Claims for Farmers in the Spillway

Posted on 5/13/11 at 7:29 am
Posted by lsuhunt555
Teakwood Village Breh
Member since Nov 2008
38977 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 7:29 am
LINK

Is it possible that they are not publicly saying "It will be opened" because of the insurance claims for farmers? This quote, "We got a letter from the Corps saying the property would flood whether they open the spillway or not, so it's a natural disaster," sounds to me like they are going to try to wait it out as long as possible to make sure these farmers get their money.

I know it will be opened, but I have not heard Jindal definitively say it will be opened.
Posted by tiger91
In my own little world
Member since Nov 2005
40010 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 7:47 am to
I don't know how that works. My husband is a farmer but we're not near that area. I know that we have crop insurance ... some farmers don't. And I think that what they do is give you a low interest loan ... try a low interest loan to pay off a crop loan of I don't know ... $500K or so???

The whole flooding situation stinks so much for all involved. God bless everyone and help them to move on after it's over.
Posted by The Mick
Member since Oct 2010
44906 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 7:51 am to
Interesting
Posted by lsuhunt555
Teakwood Village Breh
Member since Nov 2008
38977 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 7:53 am to
quote:

I don't know how that works


Yea I'm not real sure how it works either. That's why I brought this up. Maybe by Jindal making that comment it could limit the amount of wiggle room the Insurance companies have to try and get out of paying the claims by saying it wasn't a natural disaster. Whatever the case, I am certainly hoping for everyone one of those farmers to get whatever they can from them.
Posted by JudgeHolden
Gila River
Member since Jan 2008
18566 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 8:55 am to
quote:

could limit the amount of wiggle room the Insurance companies have to try and get out of paying the claims by saying it wasn't a natural disaster.


The "insurance company" is the taxpayer. We all pay for crop insurance through the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. In the last year reported, '09, it cost us $7,000,000,000. It has cost about $30 billion over the last ten years.
Posted by 34venture
Buffer Zone
Member since Mar 2010
11369 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 9:18 am to
quote:

Is it possible that they are not publicly saying "It will be opened" because of the insurance claims for farmers?


Doubtful.
Posted by kfizzle85
Member since Dec 2005
22022 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 11:14 am to
The whole "is it a natural disaster or did you evacuate on your own" only applies to business interruption insurance, not property insurance.
Posted by TigerDog83
Member since Oct 2005
8748 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 11:20 am to
quote:

The "insurance company" is the taxpayer. We all pay for crop insurance through the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. In the last year reported, '09, it cost us $7,000,000,000. It has cost about $30 billion over the last ten years.


That is nauseating if true.
Posted by JudgeHolden
Gila River
Member since Jan 2008
18566 posts
Posted on 5/13/11 at 11:32 am to




quote:

That is nauseating if true


$36,000,000,000 over five years between 05 and 09.

LINK

Yesterday the oil company execs got their asses handed to them over "tax breaks" totaling $10 billion over five years. The farmers get one hell of a lot more. No one will touch them. AND, that does not begin to take account of the favorable tax treatment, price supports, and other subsidies given to farmers by the government.
Posted by Geauxtiga
No man's land
Member since Jan 2008
34400 posts
Posted on 5/14/11 at 8:35 am to
quote:

Yesterday the oil company execs got their asses handed to them over "tax breaks" totaling $10 billion over five years. The farmers get one hell of a lot more. No one will touch them. AND, that does not begin to take account of the favorable tax treatment, price supports, and other subsidies given to farmers by the government.
No shyt there!
Posted by nrtiger
Paradise
Member since Nov 2003
1352 posts
Posted on 5/14/11 at 8:48 am to
There are no poor farmers if they know how to work the system.
Posted by guttata
prairieville
Member since Feb 2006
22630 posts
Posted on 5/14/11 at 9:17 am to
Go talk to people in Nebraska. The far majority of farmers are simply paying off the previous generation's debt. and once they can't do it any longer, they sell out to the big guy of the county and get out of farming totally.
Posted by JudgeHolden
Gila River
Member since Jan 2008
18566 posts
Posted on 5/14/11 at 9:20 am to
quote:

they sell out to the big guy of the county and get out of farming totally.


Which is sad, but here is what it means. We have set up this huge safety net for family farmers. And now the real beneficiary is Archers Daniel Midland and other agri-giants.
Posted by El Josey Wales
Greater Geismar
Member since Nov 2007
22710 posts
Posted on 5/14/11 at 11:49 am to
I know lots of farmers and they are all far from being poor.
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