Up to $80K in flood damage, insurance won't cover Lewisporte man - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:01 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Up to $80K in flood damage, insurance won't cover Lewisporte man

A Lewisporte man whose basement ended up underwater during heavy rains this week says his insurance company won't cover the damage but a neighbour with similiar problems is luckier.

Neighbour says her policy is picking up the tab and she's grateful

Insured or not? A tale of two Lewisporte homes

8 years ago
Duration 2:15
A Lewisporte man whose basement ended up underwater during heavy rains this week says his insurance company won't cover the damage but a neighbour with similiar problems is luckier.

A Lewisporte man whose basement ended up underwater during heavy rains this week says his insurance company won't cover the damage.

By Friday, Trent Nicholas hada dumpster full of broken gyproc and wood parked outside his home. Friends hadhelped move firewood from the soggy basement to his garden and vacuumed up the water.

But his furnace is ruined, and he estimatedit will cost up to$80,000 to repair the damage to his home.

"I was supposed to have insurance," Nicholastold CBC News. "Because it did comethrough my toilets and through my sump pumps and flooded this area, but because it came over the ground after, they said they wouldn't cover it because it's over the ground flooding."

Triffie Burt managed to save her grandmother's chair and a bookcase, but says all her other possessions were ruined. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

Flooding was so bad in Lewisporte as the tail end of Hurricane Matthew hammered central Newfoundland, the town declared a state of emergency. Many homes are damaged.

One street away, Nicholas's neighbour Triffie Burt hada lawn full of rolled up carpet, and wet furniture. But when it comes to insurance coverage, she's lucky.

"Ours, we hadsewer. If there's a good thing ofhaving sewer backup, we had it," said Burt.

"I did manage to get my grandmother's rocking chair out, and mybookcase my husband built for me, but pretty much everything else is gone."

A loss worth about $25,000, she said.

Burt is grateful for the Red Cross, which has helped with food, clothing and a flood recovery kit with brooms, bags andcleaning supplies.

"It made me feel really good to know that there's help out there for anyone who would need it."

With files from Chris Ensing