The One-Bite Rule
In most jurisdictions, the law recognizes that the owner of a dog should not be held responsible if their dog unexpectedly bites someone. The first bite is free. After that, it is foreseeable, and the dog owner has a responsibility to contain the animal for the safety of the general public.
Not surprisingly, insurance takes the same position. Insurance, after all, is there to protect you from unexpected losses and occurrences. They’ll pay for the unexpected event–but not for the foregone conclusion. There is no advantage in it: insurance being loathe to pay out in the first place; and it doesn’t serve public policy to encourage risky behaviors.
Which brings us to Texas, specifically, and FEMA generally. Despite their anti-socialist political rhetoric, Texas is more than willing to seek, and accept disaster relief for their recent cold-snap debacle. I tend to want to help folks out when disaster strikes, and many of the people of Texas are struggling, largely without fault on their own part. After all, part of the purpose of the social safety net is too help in emergencies, even if the emergency was foreseeable. But we might want to look a little harder at the underlying circumstances, and adopt an insurance viewpoint–the one bite rule…or else our policies risk making the foreseeable inevitable.
Texas, as a state, and as an energy provider, was well aware of the risks posed by winter weather. A number of reports had pointed out its vulnerability–the cause of which was not winter weather, but by the fact that the Texas Grid failed to provide safety measures for perfectly predictable cold weather. After all, Iowa does it–and they were hit by the same storm. In fact, all of the northern states have safety redundancies built into their systems to address both excessive hot, and cold weather. Texas doesn’t. In fact, Texas opted out of the national grid decades ago, specifically to avoid the kind of regulations required in other areas. Texas decided to go it alone. You know, it’s that Texas rugged individualism–that spirit of personal responsibility. Yeah, right.
Whose hand is out now?
I am not suggesting that we do not help the true victims of this emergency. But I think we need to look hard at the next emergency.
When disasters hit–hurricanes, earthquakes, wildfires, droughts, floods, etc., it is only humane to provide emergency relief. But we have done more, using federal tax dollars to rebuild in the wake of catastrophes. We need to be smarter about that, especially since we’ve done so little to forestall the impending impacts of climate change. I’m not the first to advocate the one-bite rule, but too frequently, it’s advocated in harsh Biblical terms, instead of connecting the dots of common sense.
We can, and do, investigate the causes of natural disasters, and what could have been done for prevention or mitigation. Sometimes, we’re even smart enough to require changes to building codes or zoning, to prevent recurrences. Not always.
By providing rebuilding relief, in areas plagued by fire, flood or hurricanes, without restrictions, we may ensure repeat failures. So it isn’t unreasonable to require that such relief come with commons sense conditions. Perhaps rebuilding should require fireproof construction methods–or braced construction designed to withstand earthquakes. We shouldn’t provide flood relief to areas that we know will flood again. There are some risks that are so likely that areas should be abandoned to further development. That doesn’t mean we don’t help at all–it just means that the help is conditioned on higher standards, and/or relocation. And we really need to look at this, now–before the worst of climate change hits our coffers.
FEMA relief affects all of the other market driven systems. If FEMA restricts future bail-outs in a given area regarding a particular risk, insurance companies will back away from that market. After all, insurance isn’t in the business of saving us from known hazards. If insurance backs away–the banks will follow. Developers won’t be able to get financing for building where the risks are too high. One wonders if the ultimate beneficiaries of generous FEMA policies haven’t been unscrupulous developers and financiers. It’s time to make policy make sense.
There’s one more step to minimizing losses in the future. Let’s revisit that heralded concept of personal responsibility. And by this, I don’t mean that disaster losses should fall on the shoulders of the innocent. I mean that those who don’t prepare for foreseeable risks should bear the costs of that failure. Hello Texas! Your energy companies should be responsible for ALL of the repair costs to homeowners, cities, counties and utilities for their dereliction of duty regarding winterizing their facilities. After all, there have been several reports on ERCOT’s risks regarding cold weather operations–each report following smaller disasters. We’re not talking impossibility here–northern states do it. What we need is responsible stewardship. We cannot allow irresponsible, for-profit operators to ride on the backs of taxpayers with disaster bail-outs, when the disaster could have been avoided by common sense responsible operations.
If it can work for dogs, it can work on a larger scale.
I say Rick Perry – former Secretary of Energy – should be called upon to bail em out. Else let the whole damn lot secede, again!
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Cheers to Texan exceptionalism.
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Sadly, that happens all the time. Fema and private insurance pays out for damage in flood plains, coastal areas, etc, over and over again. In my area, we have extensive development in an area that is a known flood plain. Plus, the flood plains change as the Army Corp of Engineers keeps redirecting the natural flow of rivers, which forces the rising waters to go into areas that used to be considered safe from them. It’s a mess for sure!
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Interestingly, Texas suffered the same problem in 2011. Did they learn? No. Should they be punished? Yes.
Texas is a for-profit state and its citizens are responsible for their own stupidity. I mean, who tells people without electricity to boil water to stay safe? Do most people rely on electricity for heating and cooking? Perhaps the federal government should impose a tax on them, much as rural fire departments may require an annual fee for the upkeep of the local FD. That might larn them a thing or two.
Oh! wait! taxing a sovereign citizen state? What am I thinking?
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Yes, they’ve had several close calls–enough to warrant the studies showing how vulnerable they are to cold-based catastrophe. We’ll see if this debacle solves the problem, but somehow, I doubt it.
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It won’t.
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I feel for the people who’ve no water or hydro, heat….while Cruz is basking in the sun in Cancun. Quite the disconnect there….
On the flip side: we get forest fires, we have a pump and fire hose and a massive built water body to pump from. We get damn cold, -45 is not unusual, we have firewood, propane heaters, heat tape, can boil water on the wood stove. We get lots of snow- and power outages, we have tin roofs for it to slide off of, a generator that will run the well pump and supply power to most of the farm. We also can get damn hot here – we have shade for the livestock, barrels of water stored should our well pump quit working.
Extra fuel stored in case the grid gets taken out by a forest fire.
Enough food to eat for a year – damn if I’m going to let availability at the grocery store dictate whether or not I’m going to eat.
I have trouble comprehending a mindset that refuses to be prepared for any eventuality. I don’t count on anybody to save my sorry arse from anything and use up resources needed for people who actually need help. The elderly. The disabled. The hospitalized.
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Well, I share your country mentality. I probably couldn’t go a year, but we have systems and back-ups. We would certainly never go cold (with at least two year’s wood at the ready, and a forest full for the taking. The generator would address light and water. But I have lived urban, and it is a different, far more dependent lifestyle. Even then–we kept stores in the pantry, in case of earthquake. Like you, we are prepared for all manner of weather–and for the fact that we cannot rely on power. But I cannot be too angry at the innocent victims here, because they are essentially victims of greed. Their utility knew the risk–but didn’t share that with those relying on them.
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Oh for certain greed has played a large part of the situation down there – seems a
common theme when there’s a disaster. Much finger pointing and passing the buck and ass covering while people suffer – which is very wrong.
I did live urban for several years some time ago – a fire took out the entire hydro grid for miles and miles. It was an interesting window into the mindset of people faced with an emergency – they were losing their minds. Raging at ATM’s because they couldn’t get any cash out, freaking out because without electricity you can’t pump fuel. There were near riots at the liquor stores because their debit machines were down 🤦♀️.
Funny story – my ex – actually left work, drove down to a coffee shop and paid cash for six large coffees (all they had) and delivered them to my house thinking I might not want to wait out the crisis without coffee. I was sitting on my porch with my one burner camp stove making some in my tin percolator 😂. ‘A’ for effort though on his part!
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In the Loma Prieta earthquake, I was in downtown San Francisco. As soon as it became clear that the Bridge was out (to get home to Oakland) I walked into a bakery and bought everything they had–and pints and pints of orange juice. During the long night of waiting for them to get the ferries up and running, I was able to hand out goodies to people who were really in need. It made the event almost festive.
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Years ago, I put together Proposition 99 in California, the Initiative that increased the tobacco tax by $.25 on cigarettes and added a comprable tax to other tobacco products. The tobacco industry screamed that we were putting an unfair tax on smokers. My response had been to put together the figures that showed how much tobacco use cost the general public in taxes and increased insurance. Non-smokers, in that sense, subsidizing tobacco use. So, I am in agreement with you, AV.
I think people should be free to practice their own folly, as long as it doesn’t harm others and as long as they pay any costs associated with their behavior.
I like the idea of forcing the industry to help pay the cost of the damage they have created, and to make the cost high enough that it’s less expensive for them to address the problem.
Until Texas votes in new political leadership, that probably isn’t going to be done. Demographics in the state are changing, however. –Curt
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I agree on all counts.
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but it was the shutdown of the windmills that caused them to lose power….
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Oh, don’t get me started…that part really frosts me.
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pun intended, i’m sure…
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Yup.
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Now I understand why Texas is out of electricity. I like the one bite rule. Here in France there are roads on mountains being swept away every few years (the same roads I mean), sometimes taking houses with them. Then they built another road in the same place…Amelia
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Oh when will they ever learn, oh when will they, ever learn.
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