Alpha Consumer

California Fires Create Money Disasters, Too

By Kimberly Palmer

Posted: September 4, 2009

The fires that forced many California residents to evacuate from their homes earlier this week also posed a personal finance challenge: How do you prepare yourself, financially, to leave your home for an indefinite period of time? What documents should you bring with you? What should you leave behind?

Most of us would probably reach for our wallets, passports, and perhaps a file of key documents, such as marriage certificates and Social Security cards. But what about wills, insurance papers, bank account details, and other paperwork? The National Endowment for Financial Education suggests packing up legal certificates, wills, powers of attorney, insurance policies, Social Security cards, checkbooks, and bank account information. NEFE chief executive Ted Beck, who experienced the 1991 fire evacuation of Oakland, also recommends calling your insurance company to let them know what is going on as soon as you reach a safe area. In some cases, they will pay for the costs of staying away from home. Otherwise, he says, the Red Cross can help direct you to nearby crisis shelters. 

NEFE also recommends making sure you have enough cash. In some emergencies, banks and ATMs aren't open for business—one reason to keep a few hundred dollars on hand in case you need it. NEFE also offers these reminders:

Have you survived a disaster that impacted you financially? If so, what advice would you add to this list?

It's hard for most of us to even imagine

having to vacate on short notice with the distinct possibility (or certainty) that everything left behind is going to burn up.

Muser of NM @ Sep 04, 2009 14:08:57 PM

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Alpha Consumer

Alpha Consumer

Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about how to save money, avoid scams, manage debt, and be a savvy shopper. Send your personal finance questions to her for expert money advice.


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