RMIIA
RMIIA
  •  icon
  •  icon
  •  icon
  •  icon
  •  icon
  •  icon
  •  icon
Connect with RMIIA
For the latest insurance &
safety headlines, follow RMIIA!
RMIIA on Facebook RMIIA on YouTube
RMIIA News Briefs
As Old Man Winter Makes His First Major Appearance in Colorado—Drivers and Homeowners Need to Gear Up on Their Insurance Know How! With a week that started with 80 degree temperatures Coloradans may be a bit rusty on how to handle winter weather conditions, so an insurance reminder can take the shock value out of what is expected to be the state's first major snow storm of the winter season. More...
"Puffer Week" Enforcement
January 15-21, 2012
Colorado Auto Theft Investigators (CATI) and Coloradans Against Auto Theft (CAAT) are teaming up the week of January 15-21 to raise public awareness of "puffers"—a term coined by car thieves to describe a vehicle left running unattended. More...
The one-year anniversary of Boulder County's Fourmile Canyon Fire is marked by devastating wildfires consuming hundreds of homes in Texas. Both are tragic reminders to homeowners to check on insurance coverages and take steps to protect your property. Click here for RMIIA's Wildfire & Insurance Guides.
Terrorism & Insurance
The devastating 9/11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon and Pennsylvania is one of the most costly insured catastrophe in U.S. history, closely matching the amount of damage caused by Hurricane Andrew, according to the Insurance Information Institute (III). It caused $18.8 billion in property losses ($22.8 billion in 2009 dollars).

Property insurance policies typically cover damage from fire, explosion, smoke, or other property or liability loss that occurs. Insurance policies do exclude war, but that is generally defined as a declared war between nations.  In the aftermath of 9/11, the availability and cost of terrorism coverage has been dramatically impacted.  The Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA), passed by Congress in November 2002 and renewed in 2005, provides a federal backstop for future terrorist acts, making it easier for insurers to calculate their maximum losses for such a catastrophe, and thus price the coverage.

Also impacted are commercial airline policies, personal life insurance policies, workers compensation claims and, to some limited extent, personal auto and homeowners insurance policies. Determinations of insured losses take into account the destruction of the World Trade Center towers; business and personal property of tenants and their employees; workers compensation for injured workers; claims for lost business income; and the cost of establishing alternative, temporary operations at off-site locations.

The United States government is self-insured, so physical loss to government buildings, such as the Pentagon, is not a private, commercial insurance issue. Insured commercial businesses within the Pentagon could suffer an insured loss. Life insurance policies will also be impacted.

Most Costly U.S. Terrorist Attacks

Event

Cost when occurred

In 2009 Dollars

September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks

$18.8 Billion

$22.8 Billion

February 26, 1993 World Trade Center Bombing

$510 Million

$757 Million

April 19, 1995 Oklahoma City Bombing

$125 Million

$176 Million

Also visit:

For more information please visit Insurance Information Institute (III) or the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI).