Why You Need a Document Emergency Plan
Picture this: Your family has just evacuated ahead of a wildfire, and you're safely settled at a friend's house two towns over. The fire was contained before reaching your neighborhood, but three days later, a burst pipe floods your home office. When you file your insurance claim, the adjuster asks for proof of ownership for your electronics, photographs of your valuables, and copies of your previous policy documents. Your heart sinks as you realize everything is either smoke-damaged or waterlogged in that filing cabinet you've been meaning to organize for years.
This scenario plays out more often than you'd think. When disaster strikes, the documents you need most become the hardest to access. Missing documentation is one of the primary reasons disaster assistance applications get delayed or denied . Without proper identification, proof of residence, and financial records, you can't prove who you are, what you owned, or where you lived. The insurance claims process that should take weeks can stretch into months when you're scrambling to reconstruct lost paperwork.
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