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Donna
Kozik
www.DonnaKozik.com
Donna@DonnaKozik.com
619-297-1749
News Release Writing Sample
Erie
Insurance Catastrophe Teams Report To Areas
Suffering Hurricane Destruction
Erie,
Pa. --- September 21, 1999 --- Erie
Insurance's emergency response teams were dispatched to
North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania to
assist Policyholders in the aftermath of Hurricane
Floyd.
As
the hurricane threatened the Atlantic coast early last
week, Erie Insurance claims adjusters began their
preparations and arrived in the staging areas as Floyd
came ashore on Thursday.
Employees
from unaffected branches went to Raleigh, Richmond and
Silver Spring to adjust storm damage. ERIE insures
63,305 policyholders through its Raleigh, North Carolina
branch; 93,994 through its Richmond, Virginia branch;
277,071 through its Silver Spring, Maryland branch and
over 700,000 policyholders in eastern Pennsylvania.
Scott
Huber, vice president and manager of Erie Insurance's
property and subrogation claims department, visited the
scene over the weekend. "By Thursday night, just
hours after Hurricane Floyd made landfall, we had claim
centers in each area. Employees were taking calls from
insureds and adjusting losses," said Huber.
"ERIE
has a commitment to contact insureds within 24 hours of
first hearing of their loss," said Huber.
"With our well-organized emergency response teams,
we were able to accomplish that."
ERIE
Agents were also on the frontline during the
catastrophe, and usually were the first ones
policyholders called with a claim. The information was
then electronically uploaded to the Home Office and
quickly distributed to claims adjusters in the areas of
need.
Even
hundreds of miles away, employees from ERIE's Home
Office also fielded policyholder calls over the weekend
and then funneled the information to the claims teams in
North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland. By Monday
morning, ERIE had received claim reports from 4,500
policyholders with damaged properties and expected more
to come this week.
When
not taking claims, agents in the areas where the
hurricane struck were usually busy at the loss scenes
reassuring policyholders. Some took along chain saws to
help clear fallen trees. Adjusters stocked their car
trunks with tarps to help prevent further ruin from
damaged roofs.
"Even
if a house isn't flattened, heavy winds and falling
trees can cause a great deal of damage," said
Huber. "When the agent sells a policy, we are
selling our superior claims service. Responding with
such efficiency and effectiveness to Hurricane Floyd
means we're living up to our promise."
Known
for competitive rates and superior service since 1925,
Erie Insurance Group is the 16th largest
property/casualty insurers in the United States based on
surplus and has over 2.6 million policyholders. Group
member Erie Insurance Exchange is the 13th
largest auto insurer in the country. Erie Indemnity
Company (NASDAQ - ERIE) is the management company for
Erie Insurance Group, which includes seven companies
operating in 10 states and the District of Columbia. The
ERIE provides a complete line of auto, home business and
life insurance through more than 5,500 independent
insurance agents.
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