Because all those CFI’s got nothing else to do when a hurricane is approaching. Their own homes and families will take care of themselves, right? And where to go? How about far inland? I wonder if anyone relocated their airplanes for Helene up to Asheville?There are *so* many hour building CFIs and the like, especially in Florida, who'd jump at the chance to fly a plane out of harm's way for expenses only - and many insurers cover some of all of the expenses of relocating.
Of course it's not a viable option for everyone but it would cover a lot of the fleet, especially the standard Piper/Cessna etc.
Given this I don't understand why so many airplanes get left to die. Maybe it's like MountainDude said - owners who'd like to be rid of them.
Many of them - yes, exactly that. I saw a whole bunch of posts on FB from CFIs in FL and elsewhere offering to relocate aircraft free of charge for both of the recent major hurricanes.Because all those CFI’s got nothing else to do when a hurricane is approaching.
Well if you equate a bunch of posts on social media as a legitment method resulting in moved aircraft, then you would be considered cherry-picking the facts as well. Its more the exception than the norm for a number of reasons. And that comes from a few years of actually moving aircraft out of harms way on both a commercial and private level.I saw a whole bunch of posts on FB from CFIs in FL and elsewhere
You probably get your news from Facebook too.Many of them - yes, exactly that. I saw a whole bunch of posts on FB from CFIs in FL and elsewhere offering to relocate aircraft free of charge for both of the recent major hurricanes.
Just because you can cherry pick examples where it doesn't work, doesn't change the fact that in many cases it does.
You didn't address where to move the plane to. FYI, over half the aircraft destroyed in Blountstown, Florida from Michael were relocated here to avoid the storm. I guess you hadn't heard that hurricanes tend to be somewhat unpredictable.
Oh well, nothing can be done.
What a lame response.You probably get your news from Facebook too.
Yeah. Like Nashville Tennessee. Big hurricane target. They should pay.Let's be honest. The insurance companies should be including hurricane risk in their premiums for airplanes in at-risk locations. Same with houses. There's no reason "the public" needs to subsidize beachfront homeowners.
Not sure where you live or read but prices DO vary by location.Let's be honest. The insurance companies should be including hurricane risk in their premiums for airplanes in at-risk locations. Same with houses. There's no reason "the public" needs to subsidize beachfront homeowners.
It's weird that insurance companies will pay to relocate planes when it's such a bad idea.
They do. Until the commercial providers drop out and you're on the government underwritten policy (e.g. FEMA's flood insurance program), in which case I'm subsidizing folks living in luxurious beachfront property. PS, I'd like to live on the beach too, but don't think the general public should underwrite the risk...Not sure where you live or read but prices DO vary by location.
I have a feeling a large number of those aircraft are unairworthy anyway and so collecting the insurance payment was far more lucrative than trying to sell it outright or move it to safety elsewhere.
You really think with the cost of insurance these days people are paying for it in the hopes of a payout? I don’t think so.
I’m seeing the opposite. Many more people going without insurance on airworthy aircraft.
You really think with the cost of insurance these days people are paying for it on unairworthy aircraft in the hopes of a payout? I don’t think so.
Wait. So if they're not insured, what does leaving an uninsured aircraft out on the ramp accomplish?No, but when a storm is coming, they might be inclined to leave the thing out on the ramp.....
Forget it. They're on a roll. ;-)Wait. So if they're not insured, what does leaving an uninsured aircraft out on the ramp accomplish?
The good news is cat rates dropped during renewals earlier this year. We’ll have to wait until mid-2025 to see what the rate on line impact is to property for homeowners pass through, so that increase likely won’t be felt for 18-24 months. Rate on line is the cost of payouts vs premiums collected and is about 1/3d of the cat reinsurance cost. It’s been a few years since I was close to that space, but the cat charge is a fairly small portion of overall end customer premium.
The GA space is significant to us, but a blip in the larger aviation reinsurance space. That stuff usually pools into $50M excess costs/cat buckets before it’s triggered for payout so depending on a lot of factors, aviation rates in the GA space are really a giant ? on how they’ll be impacted.
Wait. So if they're not insured, what does leaving an uninsured aircraft out on the ramp accomplish?
Any chance for a translation?
Tim