Daphne, ALA.— The busy 2011 storm season has impacted the United States with powerful tornadoes, tropical storms, a hurricane and record-breaking floods. Through them all, Integrity Adjusters has continued to grow in strength and size.

Part of that growth includes staff additions such as Dave LeClerc.

LeClerc has joined Integrity Adjusters and Integrity Catastrophe Services as Claims Audit Manager. His responsibilities ensure that Integrity’s products and services meet client specific instructions and meet or exceed industry standards.

LeClerc has extensive experience in the insurance claims industry. His previous positions include Claims Examiner, Regional Manager, Home Office Claims Manager, Regional Director and Auditor at Assurant, Inc., where he worked for 28 years.  He holds an AIC certificate and all lines licenses in several states. 

LeClerc shares Integrity’s mission “to pursue excellence in all we do, setting the highest standards at providing flexible claims capacity to property and casualty insurers.”

“As I grow with this company, I would expect to share my 35 years of claims experience with my fellow employees. I take pride in my teamwork attitude, and my faith in Christ,” said LeClerc.

Integrity Adjusters is a national provider of damage appraisal, claims examining, and inspection services for the residential and commercial property and casualty insurance industry.

For more information about Integrity Adjusters, visit www.integrityadjusters.com or call 866.433.1877.

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A blinding dust storm rolled across the Arizona desert Tuesday, causing three pileups involving dozens of vehicles on a major interstate. One man was killed and at least 15 other people were injured, authorities said.

The first two crashes occurred just after noon as a dust storm suddenly covered Interstate 10 near Picacho, about midway between Phoenix and Tucson. Those collisions involved 16 vehicles and led to the fatality.

News footage showed dust roiling over dozens of cars, tractor-trailers and ambulances pulled over or strewn about the highway. Authorities were unable to transport injured motorists by helicopter because of the heavy dust.

“It looked like a war zone,” Patrick Calhoun, one of the first rescuers to responder to the scene, told The Associated Press. “This has been one of the worst pileups we’ve had on the I-10.”

Calhoun, with the Avra Valley Fire District, said the man who died was in the passenger seat of a car driven by a woman who appeared to be his wife. Their car had slammed into the back of a semi and was lodged underneath it, killing the man almost instantly and leaving the woman critically injured in a semiconscious state of shock.

Calhoun said it took 45 minutes to hook up winches to the vehicle, pull it out and then cut the woman out of the car to take her to a hospital.

A second vehicle also was lodged under a semi, Calhoun said, and two people were extricated in a similar manner before being taken to a hospital.

Darryl Webb / AP: Arizona Department of Public Safety Officers and other emergency personnel make their way around a 16-car crash on Interstate 10 between Tucson and Phoenix Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011.

“Deputies reported zero visibility when they arrived at the scene. There’s still almost no visibility. The storm is just hovering around out there,” he added.

Katie Maass, a spokeswoman at University Medical Center in Tucson, said the hospital was treating 12 patients involved in the collisions. Three were listed as critical and the other nine were in serious condition.

Authorities closed the interstate for most of the afternoon. They reopened the eastbound lanes around 5:45 p.m., and Graves said just before 10 p.m. that officials had reopened all westbound lanes but one.

Wind gusts
Dust storms are common across Arizona during dry and windy conditions, and walls of dust more than a mile high can blanket an area in a matter of seconds, sometimes reducing visibility to zero.

Winds from the southwest were gusting at up to 40 mph throughout Arizona on Tuesday, said Jessica Nolte, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Phoenix.

“These winds have accumulated so much that when they move through the region they start to pick up the dry top soil,” she said. “It can be a very rapid development.”

The Phoenix area was enveloped in a beige haze for much of the day, obscuring the view of the mountains that surround the metropolitan area.

The winds should taper off Tuesday evening and into Wednesday, Nolte said. Another weather system was expected to move into Arizona on Thursday, and Nolte said it could generate gusts as strong as Tuesday’s.

The storms routinely plague the area near Picacho Peak, a state park in southern Arizona, said National Weather Service meteorologist Craig Shoemaker, who estimated sustained winds in the storm at 20 to 30 miles per hour, gusting up to 50 mph.

VIA: Weather on MSNBC

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Typhoon Roke hit Japan near Hamamatsu at 14:00 JST Wednesday as a Category 1 typhoon with 80 mph winds. Roke brought sustained winds of 62 mph, gusting to 83 mph to the Tokyo airport at 5:25 pm local time, and a wind gust of 89 mph was reported at Shizuhama Airbase. Roke has dumped heavy rains of 155 mm (6.20″) at Hamamatsu and 125 mm (4.86″) at Tokyo. Damage due to flooding from Roke’s heavy rains will likely be the main problem from Roke, as the soils over much of Japan are saturated from the passage of Tropical Storm Talas during the first week of September. Talas was a very slow moving storm, and brought extreme rainfall amounts of over six feet to some portions of Japan. Roke brought winds less than 25 mph to the damaged Fukishima-Dai-Iche nuclear plant northeast of Tokyo, and heavy rains of 189 mm (7.50″) to Hirono, located 8 miles south of the plant.


Figure 1. Radar image of Typhoon Roke as it made landfall at 14:00 JST on September 21, 2011. The typhoon brought a large area of rainfall of 50 mm/hr (2″/hr) to Japan. Image credit: Japan Meteorological Agency.


Figure 2. MODIS image of Typhoon Roke taken at 3:55 UTC on Wednesday, September 21, 2011. At the time, Roke was a Category 1 storm with 80 mph winds. Image credit: NASA.

Tropical Storm Ophelia forms in the Atlantic
Tropical Storm Ophelia formed last night in the Central Atlantic from the tropical wave (Invest 98L) we’ve been tracking this week. Satellite imagery shows that Ophelia is suffering the classic symptoms of high wind shear, with the low level center of circulation exposed to view, and the storm’s heavy thunderstorms pushed to the northeast side of the center of circulation. An analysis of wind shear from the University of Wisconsin CIMMS group shows a high 20 – 30 knots of wind shear due to strong upper level west-southwesterly winds affecting Ophelia. We don’t have any ship, buoy, or hurricane hunter observations of Ophelia’s winds, but an ASCAT pass from 7:27 pm EDT last night found top winds of 45 mph in the northeast quadrant of the storm. Ophelia will be passing south of buoy 41041 late tonight. Water vapor satellite images show dry air to the the west of Ophelia, and the strong upper level west-southwesterly winds bringing high wind shear to the storm are also injecting dry air into the storm’s core, interfering with development.


Figure 3. Morning satellite image of Ophelia showing the low-level center exposed to view, with all the storm’s heavy thunderstorms pushed to the northeast side.

Forecast for Ophelia
The latest SHIPS model forecast predicts that Ophelia will experience moderate to high wind shear of 10 – 25 knots over the next five days, and will move into a region with drier air. The combination of shear and dry air should keep Ophelia from strengthening, and could dissipate the storm, as predicted by the ECMWF and HWRF models. The Northern Lesser Antilles could see some wind gusts of 30 – 40 mph and heavy rain squalls from Ophelia on Saturday and Sunday, but right now it looks unlikely that the islands would see sustained tropical storm force winds of 39+ mph, since they are likely to be on Ophelia’s weaker (dry) side. At longer ranges, Bermuda will have to keep an eye on Ophelia, since a large cut-off low pressure system over the Eastern U.S. should turn Ophelia to the northwest and then north early next week. Ophelia may eventually be a threat to Canada, but it is too early to assess the odds of this happening.

Ophelia is the 15th named storm this year, putting 2011 in 10th place for the most number of named storms in a year. Ophelia’s formation date of September 21 puts 2011 in 4th place for earliest date of arrival of the season’s 15th storm. Only 2005, 1936, and 1933 had an earlier 15th storm. With only three of this year’s fifteen storms reaching hurricane strength, though, this year has been near average for destructive potential. Atlantic hurricane records go back to 1851.

VIA: Weather Underground, Dr. Jeff Masters’ WunderBlog

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Tropical Storm Lee spent the Labor Day weekend making residents in the South miserable with unrelenting rains before heading today into an already saturated Northeast region trying to recover from Hurricane Irene.

Lee became the 12th named storm of the Atlantic Hurricane season on Friday afternoon, generating heavy rains in Louisiana all day Saturday before moving out late Sunday.

The storm’s effects were felt as far east as the Florida panhandle and west into Texas where that drought-stricken state received no rain relief for a series of brush fires ravaging the state.

Lee had the cruel effect of intensifying the fires there with winds fanning the flames and making the situation even more difficult for firefighters.

Tropical storm Lee dumped more than a foot of rain across Louisiana, Mississippi and part of Alabama, and flooding was reported throughout the region. Rain totals were as high as 20 inches in some places.

The National Weather Service (NWS) says that at its height, as the storm reached the Louisiana coast on Saturday afternoon, winds did not exceed 60 mph and quickly dropped after making land fall.

The last public advisory was issued by the NWS on Sunday night as the storm broke apart and the remnants moved into the Northeast. Flash flood warnings are in effect.

However, the storm did spawn some tornadoes that produced isolated pockets of damage in Louisiana and elsewhere.

The storm also shut down some oil production in the Gulf of Mexico with 232 platforms and 24 rigs evacuated, says the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.

The three major modeling firms—AMS, RMS and Eqecat—issued no loss estimates on the storm since it is considered a flood event.

A model of Tropical Lee's possible path as of September 2. (Weather Underground)

Meanwhile, Hurricane Katia continues to strengthen in the Atlantic. The Category 3 storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale now has sustained winds of 120 mph, says the National Hurricane Center. The 11 a.m. public advisory forecasts the storm to make a northeast turn between the United States and Bermuda and head further out into the Atlantic. The storm is expected to produce large swells along the East Coast and bring tropical storm-force winds to Bermuda.

The NWS says another low pressure system is forming off the coast of Africa and has a 70 percent chance of becoming a tropical cyclone during the next 48 hours.

The NWS has predicted a total of 12-18 named storms in the Atlantic this year, with 6-10 of them becoming hurricanes.

BY Mark E. Ruquet, PropertyCasualty360.com

VIA: Property Casualty 360

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Top East Coast Earthquake Insurers

A 5.9 magnitude earthquake struck central Virginia this afternoon with reports the quake was felt as far north as Canada.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the quake was centered four miles south-southeast from Lousia, Va., and 83 miles southwest from Washington, D.C.

The USGS says the earthquake occurred at 1.51 p.m.

Early reports say tremors were felt throughout the East Coast, as far north as New England and into parts of Canada.

Tremors were felt for a number of seconds in the editorial offices of National Underwriter located in Hoboken, N.J. Affiliate offices of the parent company, Summit Business Media, in Washington, D.C. and Philadelphia were evacuated.

In the New York area, there were no reports of damage, but some offices were evacuated and the Holland Tunnel was closed temporarily. Newark-Liberty Airport and J.F.K. Airport were also closed temporarily, according to news reports.  

The Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that police in Richmond, Va., have received calls about possible property damage.

A public employee in Mineral, Va., which is located about four miles from the earthquake’s center, says there was some building damage to municipal offices there.

There are reports that the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., sustained damage to its spires. On its website, the National Cathedral is saying it is closed for the afternoon to inspect for damage.

The USGS says this is the largest earthquake in Virginia in over a century. It reported a 2.8 magnitude aftershock at 2:46 p.m.

By Mark E. Ruquet, PropertyCasualty360.com

VIA: Property Casualty 360

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Here are details concerning a quake felt moments ago in Virginia:

  • This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.
Magnitude 5.8 (Preliminary magnitude — update expected within 15 minutes)
Date-Time
  • Tuesday, August 23, 2011 at 17:51:03 UTC
  • Tuesday, August 23, 2011 at 01:51:03 PM at epicenter
Location 37.875°N, 77.908°W
Depth 6 km (3.7 miles) set by location program
Region VIRGINIA
Distances
  • 15 km (9 miles) S (179°) from Mineral, VA
  • 18 km (12 miles) SSE (154°) from Louisa, VA
  • 26 km (16 miles) ENE (58°) from Columbia, VA
  • 54 km (34 miles) NW (314°) from Richmond, VA
  • 139 km (87 miles) SW (214°) from Washington, DC
Location Uncertainty Error estimate not available
Parameters NST= 17, Nph= 17, Dmin=59.5 km, Rmss=0.33 sec, Gp=173°,
M-type=”moment” magnitude from initial P wave (tsuboi method) (Mi/Mwp), Version=1
Source
Event ID at00lqe6x3
  • Did you feel it? Report shaking and damage at your location. You can also view a map displaying accumulated data from your report and others.

VIA: USGS

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BY Alan Scher Zagier (AP)

JOPLIN, Mo.–Empty concrete pads where houses once stood. Untouched playgrounds still riddled with broken glass. A once-bustling retail district, eerily quiet on a weekend night.

Two months after a huge tornado split Joplin in half, the recovery here has barely begun, and the city remains focused on cleaning up massive mounds of debris. But local leaders say Joplin and the neighboring village of Duquesne already face another question: How much to rebuild and how much to reinvent?

“Ninety-nine percent of the time, what we really want to do is return to business as usual, go back to exactly what was there at the earliest possible time, get everyone back in their homes,” said Bob Berkebile, a Kansas City architect and disaster recovery specialist who has been working informally as a consultant in Joplin. “But I have never seen a community where they couldn’t have made a decision to build back something different.”

In Joplin, city officials, neighborhoods and families are beginning to confront decisions that involve trade-offs of cost, speed, quality and uncertainty: whether to strengthen building codes to produce better houses, but also some delay; to plot out more parks and amenities that would raise the quality of life, but require detailed planning; to require new storm safety features that would balance peace of mind against more expense for those of modest incomes.

Some choices are being made in an atmosphere still charged with crisis.

Since the storm, “People were buying homes sight unseen,” said real estate agent Allen Hall. “There was a time for a couple of weeks where people would come in and say, `I don’t care about the price, I need this home.’”

Jeff Goldhammer, a local nonprofit manager whose home was destroyed, is living 25 miles away in Neosho for several more weeks until the house he purchased is available. With a vacant lot on his hands but a glut of similar lots available, he’s listening to the public conversation and wondering what to do.

“You had homes worth triple digits destroyed, and then you had homes for people with low to moderate incomes destroyed,” he said. “These groups of people have different situations, different desires.”

Following the experience of other storm-damaged cities is difficult because of the scope of the damage in Joplin.

More than 7,000 homes were destroyed in the city of 50,000. The May 22 tornado killed 159 people, displaced 5,000 workers, smashed 10 public school buildings and ruined 18,000 cars. The funnel left a trail of damage nearly 14 miles after touching down.

Berkebile, whose work as a “green” designer has taken him to Haiti and other disaster zones, and Bill White, a state lawmaker who survived the tornado by huddling in a restaurant’s walk-in freezer, are among those pondering how Joplin could change for the better. They say they draw inspiration from the tornado-ravaged Kansas town of Greensburg, which rebuilt with an environmentally friendly approach that has earned international acclaim. New homes used recycled materials, energy-saving lights and rainwater collection systems.

But Greensburg, which was struck in 2007, was a town of only 1,400. So far, specific proposals for Joplin are in short supply.

Still, there are signs of recovery across the damage zone. Roughly 70 percent of the nearly 2 million cubic yards of loose debris has been trucked to landfills. Home Depot and other major retailers along the flattened Rangeline Road corridor have built temporary tents to serve customers or entirely new stores.

Many residents still are negotiating with insurance companies or awaiting federal disaster assistance. A 60-day city moratorium on new construction, enacted in mid-June, generated protests that it would keep those ready to rebuild now from returning to Joplin. The city announced Friday that it would start issuing building permits for a larger swath of the stricken area and already has issued nearly 1,700 residential building permits to repair tornado damage.

The short-term delay is designed to keep the focus on debris removal. City leaders want to get as much cleared as possible by Aug. 7, when the federal government’s share of the cost will decline from 90 percent to 75 percent. That could mean an estimated $3 million a day.

While focused on that deadline, city officials acknowledge a need to take a step back to envision a 21st century redesign for a city best known as a 20th century pit stop along Route 66 or for the Depression-era exploits of outlaws Bonnie and Clyde.

White, who also is an attorney as well as a former nuclear engineer, convened a conference earlier this month at Missouri Southern State University called “Rebuild Joplin Strong.” Berkebile was the keynote speaker.

The goal was to bring together residents with builders and architects who specialize in construction techniques such as insulated concrete walls – techniques that White said are not just safer but also are better for the environment and that lower utility costs.

“A lot of safe building techniques are also energy efficient,” he said.

Greensburg, 300 miles to the west, added several public storm shelters, a move Joplin is considering. A former Joplin fire chief highlighted the lack of such shelters in a 2006 report that never was acted upon.

Joplin’s elected leaders say they’re unlikely to require storm shelters in new homes or businesses, wary of placing added expenses on an economically vulnerable population. They also are likely to suggest only modest improvements to building codes, primarily the use of metal reinforcing straps known as hurricane clips on roof rafters and anchor bolts to provide more stability during high winds.

Not all residents are thinking about the rebuilding choices. Virginia Bennett, 86, who is awaiting government assistance for damaged roof posts on her home, is planning move in with a grown daughter in Winnipeg, Canada, as soon as she can.

“I don’t ever want to be in or near a tornado again,” she said. “Because you have absolutely no control.”

VIA: The Seattle Times

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Integrity Adjusters will be exhibitors at the 15th Annual America’s Claims Event, in New Orleans, La., June 15-17. Visit us at Booth #308 in the ACE exhibit hall at the Hilton New Orleans Riverside hotel.

The 15th Annual America’s Claims Event is the only industry event where senior managers involved with claims operations can get the insight they need to implement effective strategies and tactics for their claims handling process, according to the ACE website. More than 400 senior and executive level decision-makers from mid-size to large Fortune 500 companies attend the event to engage in idea-exchange, learn from the experts, and get access to proven solutions to confront their operational challenges.

Integrity Adjusters is a national provider of claims administration services for the residential and commercial property and casualty insurance industry.

For more information about America’s Claims Event, visit www.americasclaimsevent.com.

For more information about Integrity Adjusters today, please call 866-433-2877 or use the contact form here. Or, visit Chip Builta, Integrity’s Director of Marketing & Client Services, at Booth #308 at the ACE expo.

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During a Heat Emergency

What you should do if the weather is extremely hot:

  • Stay indoors as much as possible and limit exposure to the sun.
  • Stay on the lowest floor out of the sunshine if air conditioning is not available.
  • Consider spending the warmest part of the day in public buildings such as libraries, schools, movie theaters, shopping malls, and other community facilities. Circulating air can cool the body by increasing the perspiration rate of evaporation.
  • Eat well-balanced, light, and regular meals. Avoid using salt tablets unless directed to do so by a physician.
  • Drink plenty of water. Persons who have epilepsy or heart, kidney, or liver disease; are on fluid-restricted diets; or have a problem with fluid retention should consult a doctor before increasing liquid intake.
  • Limit intake of alcoholic beverages.
  • Dress in loose-fitting, lightweight, and light-colored clothes that cover as much skin as possible.
  • Protect face and head by wearing a wide-brimmed hat.
  • Check on family, friends, and neighbors who do not have air conditioning and who spend much of their time alone.
  • Never leave children or pets alone in closed vehicles.
  • Avoid strenuous work during the warmest part of the day. Use a buddy system when working in extreme heat, and take frequent breaks.

Additional Information

An emergency water shortage can be caused by prolonged drought, poor water supply management, or contamination of a surface water supply source or aquifer.

Drought can affect vast territorial regions and large population numbers. Drought also creates environmental conditions that increase the risk of other hazards such as fire, flash flood, and possible landslides and debris flow.

Conserving water means more water available for critical needs for everyone. Appendix A contains detailed suggestions for conserving water both indoors and outdoors. Make these practices a part of your daily life and help preserve this essential resource.

VIA: FEMA: During a Heat Emergency.

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Integrity Adjusters, LLC will be making a donation on behalf of its employees to the relief efforts in the Alabama region affected by the tornados of April 27, 2011. 

Severe Weather Expert Dr. Greg Forbes estimates 216 tornadoes ripped through the southern states between April 27 and April 28. Eleven violent EF4 and EF5 tornadoes were reported.

All adjusters and staff members who would like to make additional contributions to the relief fund may do so by contacting Terry Russell or Michael Reeves at 251-432-2877 or terry.russell@integrityadjusters.com; michael.reeves@integrityadjusters.com

A home in Tuscaloosa is damaged by a tornado on April 27, 2011

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