Rising water from neglected pipes, hurricanes,
serious rain storms, and alike can cause water damage, which may not covered under your homeowners policy.
Not exact matches
Weathering the
Storm: With California stuck in extreme drought and last year's barley crop damaged by heavy
rain, climate change is posing
serious problems for the brewing industry.
The I'm - not - calling - it - a-friggin-Frankenstorm (aka Hurricane Sandy) is by all accounts, from the near hysteric mainstream media to the more sober yet appropriately
serious, concerned (and usually more accurate than everyone else) folks at Weather Underground, a big deal, with potential devastating
rain, wind, and high
storm surges made worse by the coincidence with the full moon.
From the beginning, there were
serious concerns within the scientific community (both research and operational) about the viability of passive microwave measurements of ocean surface vector winds, especially in
storms and in other areas of
rain and large amounts of cloud liquid water.
From hurricanes with strong winds to bad
storms with heavy
rains, unexpected weather can cause
serious property damage and financial harm.
This includes damage caused by poor weather (such as
storm, hail, wind,
rain or sleet), damage caused by others (such as water damage, fires, theft, vandalism or electrical damage), damage caused by natural disasters (such as hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes and landslides) and
serious injury or accidents.