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Published August 25, 2008 09:15 pm - National Weather Service meteorologist Roger Erickson said it’s easy to tell the new forecasters from the old ones.

Insurance key element in hurricane preparedness


The Port Arthur News

By Amy Moore

The News staff writer

National Weather Service meteorologist Roger Erickson said it’s easy to tell the new forecasters from the old ones.

“The new ones still get excited about storms coming, but those of us who’ve lived through them know what damage they can do,” the Lake Charles meteorologist said.

With many years’ background in weather forecasting and the experience of surviving hurricanes, Erickson knows that while storms do bring an element of excitement to his job, they also bring the threat of damaging winds and rain.

To help Texas coast dwellers prepare for whatever the hurricane season brings, Erickson and the National Weather Service teamed up with the Insurance Council of Texas to inform residents of the importance of being insured.

This year’s message is ‘Don’t Just Think about Preparing, Be Prepared.’

“You never know for sure if a storm will come here. We’re halfway through a 30 year cycle of storms and dodged several bullets this year,” Erickson said. “What we don’t want is people in denial or being complacent.”

It’s not if, it’s when, he added.

“We’re starting to see tropical storms form into hurricanes much sooner and that can leave coastal homeowners little time to evacuate if necessary,” Erickson said. “In this height of the hurricane season, everyone along the Texas coast should be closely monitoring what’s happening in the Gulf.”

Erickson, along with Mark Hanna of the Insurance Council of Texas, kicked off the week long educational trek Monday that will make 32 stops in 10 cities along the Gulf Coast, starting in Beaumont and ending in Brownsville.

This is the third year in a row where representatives from the Insurance Council of Texas have toured the Texas coast in educating consumers on the various coverages that offer protection against hurricanes.

“We’re trying to reach everybody along the Texas coast so they will know what resources they have to protect themselves and their property in the event of a storm,” Hanna said. “We want to pass along to residents what we learned form the aftermath of Hurricanes Rita and Dolly.”

Hanna said agents discovered after Dolly hit earlier this summer that homeowners had purchased the bare minimum of home insurance coverage — a move that left many without the coverage they needed.

Hanna said insurance protection will help homeowners “sleep better at night” and “the base minimum policy may not help you sleep at night.”



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