Orange County NC Website
7 <br />1 Commissioner Rich asked if this will bring the 10 class rating down. <br />2 Bill Waddell said anything beyond a 6 mile radius is a 10 rating. He said any properties <br />3 between a 5 and 6 mile radius have a 9E rating. He said this is what most areas have been <br />4 rated in the past. <br />5 Commissioner Rich asked if this rating still correlates to a high insurance rate. <br />6 Bill Waddell said yes. He said most of the fire departments in the County who have had <br />7 inspections have brought down their ratings to a 7, and even a 6 in some cases. He said this <br />8 cuts the insurance by at least 40 percent. He said the more homes within 5 miles, the less the <br />9 insurance will be for those homeowners. <br />10 Commissioner Rich asked what a normal rating would be. <br />11 Bill Waddell said 3. He said from an insurance standpoint, a 3 is the same as a 5 for <br />12 homeowners. <br />13 Jason Shepherd said the best a homeowner can receive on insurance is a class 6 <br />14 rating. He said ratings below this only benefit industrial type businesses. <br />15 Jeff Cabe said insurance considers any property located more than 5 miles from a <br />16 certified fire station to be a high risk. He said companies will give a break in insurance to <br />17 properties that are within 5 miles of a station. He said fire departments go through a rigorous <br />18 test that assigns them a risk classification that also affects the rate. <br />19 Commissioner Rich asked about the difference in rate for a class 9 and a class 10. <br />20 Jeff Cabe said most agencies won't write a 10. He said his house went down 40 <br />21 percent on homeowners insurance when it went from a 9 to a 6. He said the shifts taking place <br />22 do not affect the fire department rating, but they are intended to help reduce homeowner rates. <br />23 Commissioner Rich asked if the station switches cost the fire department anything. <br />24 Jeff Cabe said according to the County Attorney there has to be monetary <br />25 compensation. He said the stations are meeting the letter of the law in this area. <br />26 Phillip Nasseri, White Cross Fire Chief, said there are several homes that are outside of <br />27 6 miles and several hundred that are between 5 and 6 miles in the eastern district. He said the <br />28 second station will be complete on Neville Road by the end of the month, and it will give 237 <br />29 homes up to a 40 percent reduction in rates. He said there are 32 addresses on the western <br />30 side that are rural farmland, and he is working with Orange Grove to cover these, which should <br />31 give them at least a 9E rating or better. He said everyone is already going to these parcels, but <br />32 the hope is that these shifts will give homeowners a better rate. <br />33 Bill Waddell said they are working with White Cross on these issues. He said there is <br />34 one road with a few homes that will be beyond 6 miles from either station. <br />35 Jeff Cabe said they have pockets like this as well, and the roadway infrastructure <br />36 contributes heavily to this issue. <br />37 Commissioner Rich asked if homeowners who sell these homes have to tell new buyers <br />38 about the rating or fire situation. <br />39 Jeff Cabe said the information is public record, but he doubts many people know to ask <br />40 about it. <br />41 Tony Blake said re- drawing the lines is part of the equation, but the other part is making <br />42 sure that EMS dispatches the primary department first. He asked if this information has been <br />43 updated. <br />44 Jeff Cabe said no lines are being moved, so nothing changes on the run cards. <br />45 Tony Blake said it seemed to him that the primary station had to be dispatched first in <br />46 order to receive the classifications. <br />47 Commissioner McKee said these are items that can be discussed in more detail at their <br />48 Fire Chief's Council meeting. <br />