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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!darwin.sura.net!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!cbfsb!cbnewsc!cbnews!cbnewsl!stank
- From: stank@cbnewsl.cb.att.com (Stan Krieger)
- Subject: Re: Terrible Experience With Alamo
- Organization: Summit NJ
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Thu, 13 Aug 1992 16:36:32 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Aug13.163632.16347@cbnewsl.cb.att.com>
- References: <1992Aug13.155738.26119@cs.wm.edu>
- Lines: 43
-
- Weizhen Mao writes:
- >
- > When I rented a car at Alamo a few months ago,
- >the person there pushed me very hard to buy
- >insurance even though I used my visa gold card,
- >which as I understood, covered that. The sales-
- >man said that the card only has the so-called
- >secondary coverage, which only takes care of
- >the car I hit, not the car I rent, or something
- >like that. Is that true?
-
- The disclaimer brochure that I read from Alamo last month includes
- a statement about Alamo personell won't be able to interpret or
- determine what insurance coverage you have. So, whatever the
- sales-droid says is false.
-
- Now, assuming your gold visa has rental car insurance, it's probably
- true that it's secondary coverage. But what that means is that you
- must first make any claims through your own insurance carrier and
- through the insurance carrier of the other vehicle involved in the
- accident (assuming you weren't at fault). Then the gold visa pays
- whatever accident damage loss is left.
-
- The gold visa has nothing to do with liability (that is, the amount
- of personal injury or property damage you do to someone else when
- you're at fault). Alamo, which is probably self-insured, probably
- provides the state-mandated minimum insurance, they're willing to
- sell you more (this is separate from the CDW), and your car insurance
- company then covers you.
-
- Finally, one of the scare tactics that car rental places use with
- secondary coverage is that if you have an accident and have to first
- make a claim through your own insurance company, your rates will go
- up. But, hey, don't we take that risk every day when we drive our
- own car? What's the difference with a rental car? I'm driving a car,
- and if I have an at-fault accident, my insurance rates go up for
- three years.
-
- --
- Stan Krieger All opinions, advice, or suggestions, even
- AT&T UNIX System Laboratories if related to my employment, are my own.
- Summit, NJ
- smk@usl.com
-