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What Road Warriors Need to Know About Car Insurance

If you are “road warrior” with a job/occupation which requires you to drive many days of the week on interstate highways, so that you rack up fairly significant mileage in a given year,…

If you are “road warrior” with a job/occupation which  requires you to drive many days of the week on interstate highways, so that you  rack up fairly significant mileage in a given year, you need to pay special  attention to your car insurance coverages. The simple fact is that if you are  putting 20 or 30,000 miles on your car in a year, you have a significantly  increased chance of being in a car accident and suffering serious personal  injuries or even accidental death. Persons who are involved in sales jobs, such  as traveling sales agents, persons who served to deliver goods or services such  as courier services, van or truck services, and any person who drives their own  car and receives a car allowance from their employer should read this article.  The occupations and jobs we are talking about are: traveling sales  agents/representatives, real estate agents, pharmaceutical/ drug  representatives, general sales agents (who call on customers using their own car  especially), couriers, and any commercial delivery  services.

Lots of Mileage Can Mean Lots  More Accidents (Statistically)

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If you have ever obtained car insurance or renewed car  insurance, you know that there are questions on your application about how many  miles you typically drive in a week, month or year. The simple fact is, the more  that you drive, the more likely the statistics are that you may suffer personal  injury or accidentally even be killed in a car accident, and it may be one that  is not your fault. For example, I recently talked to a sales agent for one of  the yellow pages companies that calls on our law firm. It was interesting to me  that she had suffered two car accidents in the last several years, neither that  were her fault and her most recent injury lawsuit was still in court-with her NC  injury attorney. I asked her how much she drove in a typical year and she said  about 30,000 miles. This is a fairly significant amount of car mileage in one  year and just think about how statistically she is more likely to be the victim  of a serious personal injury or wrongful death because of all the miles she puts  on her car driving highways and interstates, such as I-64, I-95, or the other  interstates in North Carolina (NC) and Virginia (VA) as she calls on customers  in both states. She routinely  drives between Norfolk, Virginia Beach, the Outer Banks, down to Greenville, and  west over to Roanoke Rapids-tons of driving.

What Occupations Have the  Highest Crash Rates?

According to Insurance.com’s 2006 Occupation Report,  scientists, pilots/navigators and actors/performers/artists pay the lowest  insurance rates of all the occupations  reported. Whereas, attorneys/lawyers/judges, executives  and business owners pay the highest insurance rates of the occupations reported.  The group of  attorneys/lawyers/judges, executives and  business owners typically have more stressful jobs and tend to spend   more time on the highways and interstates as well as more  time on their cell phones, which comes at a higher risk for the car insurance  companies. On the other hand,  scientists, pilots/navigators and  actors/performers/artists are less risky to insure because   their driving habits, as a whole, are reflective of  skills arising from their occupations.

A good example is the detail-oriented and  meticulous nature inherit with scientists—which statistically results in safer  driving and therefore lower insurance rates.   Surprisingly, doctors and lawyers have the highest rates  of car crashes of any occupation, and the reason may be that they are just plain  tired. For doctors the accident  rate is 109 accidents per 1,000 drivers, and for lawyers it is 106 accidents per  1,000 drivers, the Journal News reports. Robert Sinclair, spokesman for AAA New  York, told the Journal News that the reason for the high rate of accidents may  simply be fatigue. "These are professions that put in lots and lots of hours,"  he said. "Often fatigued driving can be a greater impingement on skills and  abilities than alcohol."

It’s the Car Policy Uninsured  Motorist Coverage You Need To Attend To

It’s  the UM coverage you need to pay attention to in my view as an experienced injury  attorney who has seen too many catastrophic injuries or deaths with resulting  inadequate insurance available.   I can tell you how  many families have suffered serious injuries, and we must report that the  uninsured car insurance is really not nearly enough to compensate my  client. If you thought that this  uninsured car/motorist insurance stuff was to pay the uninsured drivers out  there you are not clued in. Read  on…

As I have outlined in a number of prior articles and reports, uninsured motorist coverage is  probably the most important coverage you have on your car insurance because it will protect you if the  other driver has no car insurance or inadequate car accident insurance.  Accordingly, the uninsured motoris (car) coverage should be no less than  $300,000 per person/$500,000 per accident. This essentially means that you will  have no less than $300,000 worth of  insurance to protect you in the case of serious or catastrophic injuries that  you suffer in an accident that was not your fault-and even if the other car  driver has no insurance. For example, if a drunk driver or hit and run driver  (disappears) with no car insurance causes your serious personal injuries, it is  your car’s uninsured motorist protection insurance coverage that will offer  protection to you. Under what seems very strange to people that do not  understand the system, your own car insurance company essentially becomes adversarial to you and must hire an  attorney to represent the uninsured or underinsured driver of the other car that  causes such an accident.

Our law firm has written a free  report on the issue of barely and uninsured car drivers and how to protect  yourself.   If you are in a job/occupation where you have a car allowance but you  own your car, you should pay careful attention and be sure that your liability  insurance coverages are at least $300,000 per person, $500,000 per accident.  Most importantly, you must have adequate on insured/underinsured motorist  coverage equal to your liability car insurance—liability coverage protects you  if the car accident is your fault, while uninsured coverage protects you or a  family member when it’s the other driver’s  fault.   Accordingly, the take-away from this article is that you  should have $300,000 per person or better yet $500,000 per person of uninsured  car/motorist coverage on your car insurance policy if you are this type of  driver who must log significant miles on the car because of your  job.

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper, Lewis & Appleton personal injury law firm (VA-NC law offices ) edits the injury law blogs Virginia Beach Injuryboard, Norfolk Injuryboard, and Northeast North Carolina Injuryboard as a pro bono service to consumers.

Richard Shapiro

Richard Shapiro

Richard N. Shapiro (Rick) is a personal injury trial attorney, American inventor, and international award-winning fiction author. One of his co-authored legal treatises was published in the American Jurisprudence “Trials” Law Encyclopedia.

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