MOST WASH. RESIDENTS LACK HOME INVENTORY SUMMARY:
The aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita revealed horrible stories of property loss. However, according to a recent PEMCO Insurance poll, most Washingtonians have not taken a simple step that could prevent similar losses from happening: creating a home inventory.
“We might not have hurricanes in Washington, but we certainly have earthquakes and other unforeseen disasters,” said Jon Osterberg, PEMCO spokesman. “A personal video or photo inventory is a quick, easy way to protect your valuables, and provide your family with peace of mind in times of crisis.”
According to the poll, only four in 10 Washington homeowners take inventory of their possessions, and of those 75 percent update them regularly.
“After a major loss such as a fire, insurance companies want an inventory of lost items,” Osterberg said. “Without an inventory, chances are homeowners miss many things when creating a list from memory.”
Osterberg said even the most attentive homeowners forget what they own. “Take this simple test–identify a dresser drawer or kitchen cabinet, and create a list of what you think is in there. Then, open the drawer or cabinet and compare.”
“The fastest way to create an inventory is by using a still camera or a video camera,” Osterberg said. “A regularly updated set of pictures or a tape will make it very easy for you to recall your belongings.”
A personal video inventory can provide homeowners with a concrete inventory of all their items. Other benefits include: having photographic evidence of not just all belongings, but the home itself; being able to determine and verify missing items after a theft; recording serial numbers of electronics for warranty purposes; helping police and investigators track missing items and locate perpetrators; helping contractors and landlords repair structural damage; and verifying the contents of a home for applicable taxes.
PEMCO recommends the following steps to complete a home inventory:
1. Start your video by introducing yourself. Give the date, your address, and a brief history of your home including when it was built, when you purchased the property and any renovations or additions.
2. Shoot video in a standard sequence beginning with the doorway and continuing around the room to encompass all of the furniture and decorations on the wall, as well as any molding, paneling or floor coverings.
3. Next, do closeups of individual pieces–furniture, artwork, china and so on, in appropriate detail. As you do, name the item and describe it briefly. Give valuable pieces a monetary value, if known. Proceed in a logical room-by-room sequence.
4. Stop the camera and reposition items to show makers’ names orlabels, marks on the bottom, repairs, restorations or blemishes. Forsets of china, silver or glassware, arrange a place setting or display showing one of each item. Narrate onto the tape the number of complete sets in a collection.
5. Open every drawer, cabinet, closet and storage area and photograph the contents.
6. Photograph the serial number of every device (computer, TV, VCR, etc.) that has a serial number. If the number is too small to photograph, write the number down in large letters and then photograph that.
Osterberg said an inventory is only beneficial if it’s accessible. “Homeowners should not keep their inventory lists, tapes or pictures in the home,” he said. “They need to put them in a safe deposit box or with a friend or relative out of the area.”
Anyone wanting to compare their own answers with respondents to the PEMCO Northwest Insurance Poll can do so by visiting www.pemco.com.