Are you covered for oil spills at home? Mass. bill would make sure [masslive.com]
She had to choose between spending money at a hotel for her family — which required three rooms for her nine family members — or returning back to the house after the oil was pumped out and living with the lingering fumes.
Lanzillo’s insurance company told her they would only cover
“At this point in time I did not hear from my insurance company and I didn’t know how to handle it,” Lanzillo said. “I was also relying on using my credit card to get some footwear and a couple of pairs of stuff for people in the basement who had nothing, and it was an expense that I was a little nervous about.”
When the Lanzillo family returned to the house, they converted their dining room into a makeshift bedroom and another person moved into a bedroom on the second floor. “We are very crowded,” she said, three weeks after the flooding incident.
Many homeowners who find themselves in predicaments like Lanzillo’s learn their insurance policies do not cover contamination-related spills due to heating oil, according to an environmental lawyer who spoke with MassLive.
Lawmakers are attempting to change that by creating a law that would require insurance companies to automatically provide fuel oil spill coverage to all Mass. homeowners with insurance.
A bill currently in the Massachusetts Statehouse would mandate
Since 2010, state law has required homeowner property insurers to offer coverage for leaks from oil heat systems and required homeowners to install leak-prevention systems.
The cost to clean up oil spills much smaller than the flood at the Lanzillo’s home can typically range from
In more extreme cases, when oil spills or leaks seep into the concrete and contaminate the soil or water beneath a home’s foundation, costs can rise to more than
Crane said many
“My phone is ringing off the hook with homeowners,” Crane said in an interview on Tuesday. “I can’t help them all there are so many. It’s horrible. Most of them are shocked to learn they don’t have homeowners insurance that covers something like this.”
About 110 homeowners report oil leaks annually, according to the Mass.
One of Crane’s clients is a
So far his insurance company has refused to “step up to the plate to take care of this,” Crane said, and the
“It’s a terrible position to be in,” Crane said. “He never ever expected to have this kind of catastrophic event.”
Compared to more common oil leaks from deteriorating gas tanks, Lanzillo’s situation is unique because the fuel company is responsible for delivering fuel to the wrong home and their insurance company is paying for the clean-up effort. Kutty’s Fuel Oil has not returned multiple requests for comment.
In both cases, however, clean-up efforts turned their homes into construction zones as excavation is required to dig up the concrete and into the ground to get the contaminated soil out.
As for getting the support she expected from her insurance company, Lanzillo said it is not there.
“I feel like I’m fighting for every inch that I’ll need,” Lanzillo said. Her insurance company is not representing her in assessing the lost damage and she’s had to work with Kutty’s insurance company to get compensation for items lost in the flood.
“You trust your insurance company and then this happens and then it’s like, ‘Oh, my god, it wasn’t covered,’” Lanzillo said.
A member of an insurance lobbyist group told MassLive that the proposed bill would place an additional burden on homeowners who do not heat their homes with oil.
Stark recognized that the “education factor is lacking,” but he said the group would support working with fuel oil dealers and insurance companies to educate the public on the availability of oil spill coverage policies versus mandating it in state law.
Members of a non-profit made up of scientists, engineers, and public health specialists called the
State Rep.
“Absolutely,” Willaims said about supporting the bill. “You have to give homeowners some kind of recourse in this nightmare.”
Licensed Site Professionals executive director
Rundle said a big problem is that many insurance brokers for homeowners don’t know that this type of insurance is available
Rundle said that insurance companies and brokers are not currently communicating well enough with homeowners about the existence of liquid fuel riders as part of their insurance coverage since the 2010 law. These typically can cost a homeowner less than
“Many of the reports that come back to us is that insurance brokers don’t know that this insurance is available,” Rundle said. “There are folks who work in this field, who know it exists, and they ask the brokers to please go back and check because I know this is available.”
Crane said homeowners currently have a lot of the burden in order to make sure their insurance policies cover oil spills.
“Insurance policies are 60 to 80 pages long and the terms are so esoteric,” Crane said. “You have to be an environmental lawyer to understand the pollution exclusions buried in various places.”
©2022 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit masslive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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