New Jersey Automotive December 2021

Page 16

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE

Insurers Have to Stop Disregarding the Rules!

by CHARLES BRYANT

In recent months, AASP/NJ’s Hotline has been ringing off the hook with members expressing their dissatisfaction with the way insurance companies are conducting business. Shops have reported they have consumer’s vehicles sitting in their shops waiting for insurance companies to inspect and work out an agreement on the cost so they can commence the repairs. The reports of the delayed inspections are not limited to the first inspection so that the repairs can commence; these delays are also related to supplement inspections mandated by insurers when additional damage is discovered after the repairs are underway – which is almost always. Many insurers are insisting that collision shops participate in a virtual inspection of damaged vehicles or are requiring the shops to take photos of the vehicle and

that.” What makes things even worse, even when certain shops give up and go along with the insurer, is when the shop gets the estimate back from the insurer based on this photo-based virtual process, it only represents a fraction of the actual cost of the repairs. Then, the shops have to spend an enormous amount of time attempting to justify the cost because this process simply cannot be properly performed based on photos, PERIOD! Vehicles are currently backed up, sitting in collision shops across the state while waiting on insurers to perform the self-imposed inspections of the damage – either because the attempt to prepare the estimate was based on photos or due to what simply appears to be a lack of employees available to perform the inspections. Many insurers have let many or most of their appraisers go

damage, prepare an estimate and then send the photos over to the insurer, along with an estimate of the damage. The insurers claim that they are implementing this new process of preparing estimates based on photos (or the virtual process) in order to expedite the repair process. In reality, the opposite is true! First of all, when the insurer insists the shop participate in the virtual process, it requires the shop to download a program on their phone and then spend work time on the phone with the insurer performing the virtual process. The insurer does not only want photos of the damage; they usually want photos of all four corners of the vehicle, photos of the license plates, the speedometer, the interior of the vehicle, the trunk and under the hood. These services should certainly qualify as administrative time that shops are entitled to be compensated for. Yet, insurers are quick to make that same old statement, “We don’t pay for

based on the false hope that they will be able to perform the vehicle damage inspections and prepare estimates virtually using photos, thereby allowing them to save millions of dollars on the salaries and related cost of the employees that would normally perform the inspections and prepare the estimates in order to negotiate with the shop. Well, it’s time for a wake-up call for the insurers! Rules currently in place are designed to govern fair claim settlement practices in the state of New Jersey and throughout the country for that matter. One of the first rules pertaining to the inspection of damaged vehicles in New Jersey is the requirement of a time limit allowed for an insurer to perform the inspection of a damaged vehicle, if the insurer intends to exercise their right to inspect the vehicle or cause it to be inspected by an independent appraiser. In other words, the inspection of damaged vehicles is optional. The insurer can choose the right to

16 | New Jersey Automotive | December 2021


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