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Insurers limiting coverage of damage in New Jersey

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Geisenheimer had to run a generator, acquire wireless Internet service from Verizon and switch business calls to his wife’s cell phone to get his business up and running Wednesday to accept claims from customers.

The claims pouring into the Otterstedt Agency on Wednesday were very similar to types of claims filed in the aftermath of Irene in 2011. But instead of claims related to inland flooding, they include “a lot of flood claims in coastal areas and on the Hackensack River,” Bashwiner said.

State Farm, the top home insurance underwriter in New Jersey, insuring one in every eight homeowners in the state, as of Wednesday afternoon received 24,000 Sandy-related homeowner claims in the mid-Atlantic and northeastern states, as well as 3,000 auto claims.

“We expect the number will go up as folks get into areas that were inaccessible and as power comes up,” said State Farm spokesman Dave Phillips.

The insurers with the most exposure to property damage from Sandy in New Jersey include State Farm, Allstate, Travelers, Chubb and Liberty Mutual.

“The insurance industry response to Irene was very good,” said Marshall McKnight, spokesman for the state Department of Banking and Insurance.

The regulator said it received 498 written consumer complaints about insurance companies’ response to Tropical Storms Irene and Lee, which hit New Jersey in the summer of 2011. The regulator said 402 were flood-related, with customers complaining of problems such as processing delays and claim denials.

Of the 498 written complaints, only 27 were deemed valid by the department, meaning the insurer violated state insurance rules or laws or that the issue should have been resolved by the insurer without the department’s intervention.

“Sometimes there may have been confusion over what was covered,” McKnight said. “There were no administrative actions related to the storm.”

State Farm, the top homeowners’ underwriter in New Jersey, ranked sixth this year among 15 home insurers rated by Consumer Reports with a score of 80 out of a possible 100, based on satisfaction with the amount of damages paid, agent availability and timely payment. Allstate Insurance, the state’s second-largest underwriter, tied with Farmers Insurance — which has a smaller presence in New Jersey — for last place with a score of 77.

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