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(610)446-9000
or Toll Free
866-446-2476
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| Frequently Asked
Questions
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| What should
I do if I'm involved in an automobile accident? Many people panic when they are in an auto accident. They worry
how it will affect their insurance rates and other matters. Sometimes, panic causes people
to say things they will later regret and to overlook information that would be helpful if
a dispute arises regarding the accident.
- Here are steps to follow if you are in a car
accident. They can reduce the hassles and increase your chances of receiving fair
compensation for your injuries.
- Call an ambulance for anyone seriously hurt.
- Write down the name, address, phone and
drivers license numbers, and insurance company of the other driver and the other
cars owner (if the other driver does not own the car).
- Write down the names, addresses and phone
numbers of all witnesses, including passengers in the other car.
- Write down the other cars make, model,
year and license number.
- Make a diagram of the accident. Show the
positions of both cars before, during and after the accident. If possible, measure skid
marks, and show them on the diagram. Be sure your diagram shows traffic signals, stop
signs, and crosswalks.
- Make notes on weather conditions, road
conditions, the location of the accident, and the time that it occurred.
- Do not admit responsibility. Things you say
can be used against you later and can affect the outcome of your claim. Call us before you
take any blame for the accident. You may think you caused the accident and then learn that
the other driver was more at fault.
If a dispute arises regarding the accident,
or if you have any questions about your right to make a claim for your personal injuries
or property damage, call us. Procedures for obtaining compensation are complex. Call as
soon after the accident as possible, as the time right after the accident can be crucial
in making your claim. |
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| What
happens if you don't have full insurance protection? If you have not made the right elections on your automobile
insurance policy, you could be at risk. Injured parties can be left helpless if the other
driver is uninsured or underinsured. You could be left helpless to collect money from the
driver who hit you.
Don't Lose Your Right To Sue
- You and your family need complete insurance
protection: What insurance companies may call "full coverage" is not always
complete protection.
- Insist on full tort: It gives you the
unlimited right to sue for pain and suffering. Limited tort can limit this right.
- Insist on uninsured/underinsured motorist
insurance: They protect you even if you are in an accident with a driver who isn't insured
or is poorly insured.
- You don't have complete protection if you do
not have both kinds of insurance: Full tort and uninsured/underinsured motorist works
together to give you complete protection.
Remember
Only full tort
+ uninsured/underinsured motorist
= full protection
A careless driver hits your
car. You suffer soft-tissue injuries, but it will take several months to fully recover.
You've chosen the limited tort option. You might not be able to collect for pain and
suffering.
You can't collect when
uninsured drivers hit you.
Drunk and careless drivers are everywhere. More than one in thirteen vehicles that you
encounter on Pennsylvania highways will be uninsured. If you don't have uninsured motorist
insurance, you could end up paying for catastrophic injuries.
You lose the right to
collect. Limited tort restricts your right to collect for personal injuries.
You and your family are at
risk in your car. Shouldn't your family members also have the right to collect? Under
limited tort, they can't.
You and your family are at
risk in someone else's car. Your limited tort election will keep your children from being
able to collect, even when they're in a car driven by someone who has full tort.
You're at risk if you don't
have both full tort and insured/underinsured motorist. Even with full tort, you don't have
uninsured/underinsured motorist protection unless you insist on that, too.
Think about increasing your
medical benefits coverage (PIP) under your automobile insurance policy to $100,000.00. The
minimum your insurance carrier is required by law to provide is $5,000.00 in medical
cover-age. This type of coverage is more comprehensible than most other insurance, since
there is no deductible and covers many items directly related to the accident not covered
by other insurance. What happens in a typical accident is that medical bills are paid
first by your automobile insurance carrier, up to the limit you've picked (again the
minimum is $5,000.00) and then paid by your primary medical insurance carrier. The primary
insurance carrier, depending on the way the plan was established, may have a right to be
reimbursed for monies they have paid out on your behalf.
There is no right to
reimbursement for monies paid under your PIP coverage.
Also available are Extraordinary
Medical Benefits (EMB).
This is coverage of a 1 Million Dollars which pays after the $100,000.00 policy is
exhausted
Total medical benefit to you would be $1,100,000.00.
Contact us now so you don't have
trouble later.
Every week we hear from people we can't help.
Because if they're not fully insured, we can't turn the clock back.
We'll be glad to explain your rights and the kind of insurance that will keep you fully
protected.
Then call your agent, you'll be surprised how little changing your policy will cost |
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