Walk away and start over? Connecticut flooding strands family as insurers deny damage claims
Minutes before, a huge oak had toppled and crushed her partner's Ford F-350 work truck and catapulted another car off the edge of the driveway -- and the rain was still coming down. The catastrophic storm on
Michols told her partner, "Alright, we have to go... We have to leave, because any minute, trees could fall. We need to get out of here before it's dark."
As rain continued to hammer down, the pair packed up necessities like laptops and treasured photo albums and hiked over a ridge to safety. Neighbors had reported that the road from Michols' property had been completely washed out.
The house on
"I have ups and downs, emotional ups and downs," Michols said. "I have to sit down and do some math, see if it's even worth it. It might just be a 'walk away and start over' or take pennies on the dollar."
River transforms from a trickle to a torrent
Still in shock from the flood disaster, Michols and her neighbors on
Michols' family's two destroyed vehicles -- along with two undamaged ones -- are now stranded by a road that is completely washed out in spots and weakened in others by the raging waters of a flooded
That river, which trickled harmlessly at the bottom of a ravine for decades -- and even dried up completely at times -- turned into a destructive torrent on
Swollen by the storm runoff, the river surged a dozen feet above its traditional banks in spots and swept away
The raging river also scooped away sections of the property of Michols' neighbor,
Farther down
Marrin has lived on
"You look at the trees and you think, 'Are you going to attack, are you going to fall on the house?' I'm just afraid that trees are going to crack and they're going to fold and they're going to fall," Marrin said. "I just don't feel safe."
Closer to Michols' home, rocks from smaller landslides broke windows and major slides along the river undermined the section of road right in front of her home. Repairing the road, which is considered private by the town, will likely cost more than
"I've had contractors here every day... getting numerous quotes to see who's interested in fixing the (road).. just to understand what my next move is," Michols said.
'Earth movement' not covered
That much of the damage to the properties on
And why would someone living in
Michols' home and auto insurer,
The exclusion is typical in homeowners policies, but coverage can be found "through federal programs as well as some standard insurance companies and the surplus lines insurance market," Trevallion said.
"This is an unfortunate situation," Trevallion said of Michols' case.
The insurance company also balked on paying for a rental car as Michols' vehicle wasn't actually damaged -- just stranded by a washed-out road.
"I called my insurance agent first and told him the story. I'm not sure he fully understood the depth -- that we're trapped. There's a landslide and the driveway's compromised," Michols said.
Coverage gap puts homeowners at risk
Most
"The recent storms serve as a stark reminder that flood damage can happen anywhere, not just in designated flood zones,"
"Any time we get these storms that come up, we get calls from folks who don't realize that floods are not covered under a homeowner policy," said
Michols and her neighbors might benefit from contacting the insurance department directly with concerns about coverage, O'Sullvan said. "We'll take a look at it... we'll look at the facts of the individual case and give them our feedback and what their options are at that point."
More state homeowners are likely to be in Michols' position as storms intensify and insurers seek to control their catastrophe losses, O'Sullivan said.
"They always use the term 'one-in-1,000-year storm,' but it seems like every month or so there's a one-in-1,000-year storm somewhere," O'Sullivan said. "People should at least understand what it costs for them to purchase a flood policy and have that peace of mind. You don't want to be in that situation where you're looking for assistance from the federal government, which may or may not be granted."
Federal disaster aid may in fact be off the table for the
Gov.
Lamont also singled out landslides for causing damage, including a
"Approximately 90 percent of the damages occurred in areas that had not been designated as flood zones," the declaration request said. "Therefore, even those residents with homeowners or business insurance are not likely to have carried flood insurance."
Adding to the
"We went to town hall together, and then said, 'We need help here,'" Michols said. "They're like, 'Oh,
The office of Monroe First Selectman
Homeowners crowd-fund for repairs
A reading specialist at
Marrin, who raised her kids as a single mom at her
"(Flood water) came up to the stone walls of my house, and I feel like there's damage underneath it, but I just don't see it," Marrin said. She was denied coverage by her insurer as well.
Elsewhere in
Even as they worry about the cost of repairs and the potential of having to move or make major life changes, the two women try to keep things in perspective. They have both raised their kids as single parents and become closer as neighbors as they struggle to recover from the storm.
"I went to church yesterday and I feel a little bit better. I feel like I could just be with people to say some prayers," Marrin said. "I feel like this situation will not overpower me, and I tell Lily, 'We're both safe, so we will be okay.'"
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