
~Steve once sent me a DVD of '911 In Plane Site' to convince me of his comprehension of government conspiracies.

Don't even get me started on this crap, not after spending the better part of saturday at a memorial for the victims of 9/11.loCAtek wrote:...no joke:
~Steve once sent me a DVD of '911 In Plane Site' to convince me of his comprehension of government conspiracies.
At least in California, that is an insurance company's one-way ticket to a whopping punitive-damages award. A lot of my work is advising property insurers. If I found out that an insurer client of mine (or even one of its employees) was doing something like this, I would be screaming (figuratively) at the head of claims adjustment to get letters out immediately assuring the recipients of those checks that they were free to cash them, that the checks were in fact advance payments and not claim settlements, and the the insureds should go ahead and submit their claims in the regular fashion.loCAtek wrote:Some raw news footage!!!
If anyone can get the word out to the victims, any one who's taken damage to their property; be careful of this insurance co. trick, this happened to my ex-grandmother-in-law when her town was hit by a tornado:
Of course, they don't want to pay out the whole sums to those who have lost their homes, so a representative will come around and hand the parties a check of about 10% the worth of the claim. This is supposedly an 'installment' on the rest of the claim. DO NOTHING with this check! The funds are good, the check will clear BUT if you do anything with it, even so much as deposit it, then that becomes your acceptance of the sole obligation the insurance co. has to pay on your claim.
If you do nothing but hold it, then they have to give you the full amount of your claim.
I don't know if all companies will try this, but I know some will.
Article:Pipeline fix was planned - but never happened
Pipeline fix was planned - but never happened
David R. Baker, Chronicle Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
(09-15) 16:24 PDT -- Three years ago, Pacific Gas and Electric Co. asked state regulators for $4.9 million to replace a portion of the same natural gas pipeline that ruptured last week and set a San Bruno neighborhood on fire.
State regulators agreed, and the work was scheduled to be done in 2009. The price became part of the rates all PG&E customers pay.
But the pipeline replacement - in South San Francisco, a few miles north of last week's blast site - never happened. And now PG&E wants an additional $5 million to do the same job, according to PG&E documents released today by a consumer group.
"If they'd fixed the section they said they said they were going to fix, maybe they would have found something a few miles south - we don't know," said Mike Florio, senior staff attorney for The Utility Reform Network, which released the documents.
PG&E did not respond to a request for comments.
The documents illustrate a problem that has long infuriated PG&E critics.
The company has a history, they say, of deferring repairs and using maintenance money for other purposes. In one infamous case, a 1998 report from the California Public Utilities Commission found that the utility had taken $77.6 million that was supposed to be spent trimming trees near power lines - a vital step in wildfire prevention - and used it to boost corporate profits instead.
Florio said it's often hard to track where money not spent on deferred maintenance goes. But PG&E, he said, had to spend $103 million in the last three years redoing a leak-detection survey of its natural gas distribution network that had been marred by record falsification and sloppy work. The company also spent, last year, about $62.5 million more than anticipated on employee bonuses, he said. Perhaps some of the money, Florio said, went there.
"The conclusion is, they're putting profits before customer safety," he said.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f ... 1FEM36.DTL
© 2010 Hearst Communications Inc.
Well, if "most property insurers get it," that doesn't seem to include State Farm (at least as of a few years ago), which was charged with racketeering for its denial of Hurricane Katrina claims. But in general, property claims are resolved more fairly and expeditiously because valuation is pretty straightforward and coverage/exclusions are required to be in reasonably plain language, and causation is usually readily identifiable. In my experience, the worst and most devious are the auto liability insurers in handling personal injury claims. Health insurers typically attempt to screw doctors far more frequently and systematically than they do the insured patients, but over the last 10 years health plans have gotten super aggressive in pursuing "reimbursement" claims against their beneficiaries who have gotten recoveries in personal injury cases -- regardless of whether medical expenses were even recovered, or whether the injured person received adequate compensation for other uninsured losses.Andrew D wrote:Most property insurers get it. Like most businesses, it's about the bottom line. And getting slapped with zillions of dollars in punitive damages that they could have avoided by paying a legitimate claim in the first place does not increase profits. (Which doesn't mean that they don't sometimes try to pull such crap anyway; it just means that they -- especially the smarter ones -- don't try it nearly as much as they used to.)
(I cannot say the same about other kinds of insurance; I don't have the requisite experience. I have heard that things are still far worse in the health insurance industry, but perhaps Sue U could shed more light on that.)
Okay, now let me make sure I've got this straight...But the pipeline replacement - in South San Francisco, a few miles north of last week's blast site - never happened. And now PG&E wants an additional $5 million to do the same job, according to PG&E documents released today by a consumer group.
Seems fair to meLord Jim wrote: Okay, now let me make sure I've got this straight...
PG&E get's approval to charge consumers 5 mil to fix a section of pipe....
They take the money, don't do the repair, and now they're asking for another 5 mil to do the same thing they didn't do with the money they were paid in the first place?
In context, I was saying that most property insurers in CA get it: "Most property insurers in California have become, through monetarily painful experience, quite familiar with the consequences of dicking their insureds around like that."Sue U wrote:Well, if "most property insurers get it," that doesn't seem to include State Farm (at least as of a few years ago), which was charged with racketeering for its denial of Hurricane Katrina claims. But in general, property claims are resolved more fairly and expeditiously because valuation is pretty straightforward and coverage/exclusions are required to be in reasonably plain language, and causation is usually readily identifiable. In my experience, the worst and most devious are the auto liability insurers in handling personal injury claims. Health insurers typically attempt to screw doctors far more frequently and systematically than they do the insured patients, but over the last 10 years health plans have gotten super aggressive in pursuing "reimbursement" claims against their beneficiaries who have gotten recoveries in personal injury cases -- regardless of whether medical expenses were even recovered, or whether the injured person received adequate compensation for other uninsured losses.
PG&E's gas pressure hikes over legal limits raise grave concerns
By Steve Johnson
Mercury News
Posted: 02/03/2011 08:04:32 PM PST
Updated: 02/03/2011 08:13:11 PM PST
PG&E's revelations this week that its natural gas pipelines "accidentally'' exceeded the legal pressure limit 24 times over five years suggests the utility's gas operations are out of control, according to several pipeline experts.
"If you have frequent occurrences of over-pressure, something is seriously wrong with your systems," Richard Kuprewicz, a Washington state pipeline safety expert, said Thursday. Given this and past disclosures about PG&E after the Sept. 9 San Bruno gas-line explosion, "it's getting to where it's just embarrassing."
Others experts had never heard of a pipeline operator having so many illegal pressure hikes, and said PG&E's admission raises worrisome questions about how well the company is training its employees and the condition of its gas-line equipment.
"They should not have repeated incidents of the same kind of problem," said Robert Eiber, a Columbus, Ohio, pipeline consultant. "That says they are not maintaining their system the way they should."
Asked how many times its pipes exceeded the legal limit in other years, PG&E spokeswoman Katie Romans said that information "is not readily available."
However, she defended the company's operations.
"While we are unsatisfied with any over-pressure events in our service area,'' she said, that does not indicate "a more global issue regarding poor training or poor maintenance. PG&E has taken action as appropriate to address the
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root cause of each over-pressure event. "
The company, which manages more than 48,000 miles of gas lines, disclosed the extent of the problems in a letter Wednesday to the California Public Utilities Commission. Because of concerns that some of the gas lines might have been weakened by the pressure hikes -- which were as much as 50 percent above the legal limit on two Milpitas portions of pipe -- the state regulatory agency ordered PG&E to immediately lower the pressure to 20 percent below the legal limit on the four affected transmission lines.
The commission was concerned in part because of earlier revelations by the National Transportation Safety Board investigating the San Bruno explosion, which killed 8 people and destroyed 38 homes. The board disclosed that the pipe -- which experienced a pressure surge -- burst at a level below the maximum PG&E had set for it. PG&E also had incorrect information about the pipe's construction, which might have led the company to give it a higher maximum operating pressure than the segment could withstand.
"Now that we're aware that there is some uncertainty about what PG&E knows about its pipes," any new revelations that raise doubts about how well those pipes are managed are regarded with grave seriousness, said Paul Clanon, the PUC's executive director. His agency intends to learn all it can about how the utility could have spiked the pressure beyond the legal limit so many times.
"I don't want to jump to conclusions," Clanon said of the pressure increases. "They can sometimes happen in swarms coincidentally. But it's an obvious question."
While minor pressure hikes above a pipe's legal limit aren't uncommon, they have to be reported to authorities when they exceed the limit by 10 percent, which happened in all 24 instances reported by PG&E. Eight of the excessive hikes were on the sort of transmission lines that exploded in San Bruno. The rest were on much smaller distribution lines that feed gas to customers.
In some cases, PG&E said, the pressure boost surpassed the limit by far more than 10 percent. It not only exceeded the limit by 50 percent in the Milpitas pipes on June 22 last year, but was 300 percent higher in a distribution pipe in the Salinas area in 2008.
Several pipe segments had been pushed past the legal limit more than once. The two in Milpitas, for example, each went past that mark three times -- on June 22 last year, Nov. 13, 2009, and Dec. 15, 2009. That suggests the pipes are linked together in a way that caused their pressure to rise simultaneously. But what caused those and the others to exceed the limit remains unclear.
PG&E has said only that inadvertent pressure spikes can stem from such factors as equipment failure, human error and liquid contamination. Romans said liquids can get into pipelines and clog filters and equipment that can control downstream pressure.
It also sometimes can freeze, causing a pipe's pressure-control unit to malfunction, said Terry Boss, senior vice president of environment, safety and operations for the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America. Nonetheless, when asked how unusual it is nationwide for the pressure in pipes to exceed their legal limit by 10 percent, Boss said, "in interstate transmission lines, it is very, very rare."
Bob Bea, a professor of engineering at UC Berkeley, agreed that the instances reported by PG&E were unusual.
"This many accidental pressure increases indicate something is wrong with the pressure-control system -- including the people parts of the system," he said.
http://www.seattlepi.com/archives/1990/9005090054.aspWATER WAR ON TAP S. CALIFORNIA WANTS TO SHARE COLUMBIA RIVER
By Gil Bailey P-I Reporter
Tuesday, May 8, 1990
Section: News, Page: A1
Los Angeles County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn wants states in the Northwest to be ``good neighbors."
For Washington and Oregon, that means giving up 3 billion gallons of fresh, Columbia River water. Each day.
Dumping 90 billion gallons a day of Columbia River water into the Pacific Ocean is ``wasteful and sinful," the Southern Californian claims, and some of it would go a long way toward alleviating the devastating drought - the worst in four centuries - that has hit the area.
The response from Hahn's ``neighbors" so far has been uniformly unenthusiastic.
Still, Hahn plans to ask his board of supervisors today to approve a motion calling for diversion of the water, by way of a huge new aqueduct. He also suggested diversion of Snake River waters before they enter the Columbia to the Colorado River system, which also serves Southern California.
The call from Hahn reopens old water wars between California and the Pacific Northwest. The Pacific Northwest seemed to have won those 1967-68 and 1988 fights. Federal law requires that even a study of such diversions must have the approval of the governors of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Nevada, Utah and Arizona.