I can still recall the angry words of someone from the CollapseNet community when I predicted that Christchurch would never be rebuiltщ in any meaningful way.
The complete collapse of the economy did not eventuate in the way forseen, but neither has there been a meaningful rebuild.
Christchurch may see a convention centre and a new stadium but people's lives still remain broken, 4 years on
Quake repairs still two years off
Four
years have passed since earthquakes started upending lives in
Canterbury, but hundreds of homeowners can only now begin negotiating
repairs to their homes.
16
February, 2015
An
earthquake-damaged home in the Christchurch suburb of Sumner Photo: RNZ
/ Diego Opatowski
Their
claims have been deemed "over cap" by the Earthquake
Commission
because they will cost more than $100,000 and must be
dealt with by their private insurer.
For
some that could mean another two years before their houses are
repaired.
Pip
Coory's Springston home was badly damaged in the September 2010
earthquake.
EQC
assessors said it could be repaired for $30,000.
Almost
four years later, the Earthquake Commission finally accepted Ms
Coory's view that it was over cap and transferred her to her private
insurer, which is now looking at a repair bill of over $1 million.
She
said trying to convince the commission the damage was over cap was a
full time job.
"I
have written so many reports, so many letters, made so many phone
calls," she said.
"I've
spent so many hours on hold waiting to get through to someone in EQC
only to hear the same story again. It was horrible, absolutely
hideous, draining effort that should not have been required or
necessary."
Pip
Coory is not alone. In the last year 1963 homes were finally
transferred by the Earthquake Commission to private insurers. And
rather than dropping off, the numbers have been increasing, with 744
of those claims being transferred in the final quarter of last year.
Leanne
Curtis from earthquake lobby group Cancern said it was unacceptable
that people had had to wait so long for action.
"What
we are looking at are families who have sat on a waiting list for
four years, some nearly four and half years, sat there with EQC and
made no progress. And only now they are going to start talking about
what is going to happen with their insurer?"
She
said that showed something was terribly broken with the way EQC had
made decisions.
Assessment quality blamed
Insurance
Council chief executive Tim Grafton said the problem came down to the
poor standard of initial assessments of houses.
He
said major work that put repair bills over $100,000 was only sighted
at the point when people came on board to carry out the work.
Insurance
Council chief executive Tim Grafton Photo: RNZ
/ Jonathan Mitchell
"There's
quite a few of those that have come through, and I think in many
instances it just comes down to the quality of the assessment and
paperwork in the very early stages."
He
said the insurance industry needed to know how many more homes would
be transferred to its books to know what its liability was.
Earthquake
Commission chief executive Ian Simpson said 93 percent of the home
repairs in Canterbury had now been completed, and those remaining
were often on hold due to homeowners not being ready, or the cases
had been particularly complicated.
He
said during the course of the earthquakes, the Earthquake Commission
carried out about 400,000 assessments.
"Given
that number there are going to be errors, and overs and unders,"
said Mr Simpson.
He
said the number of claims that went over cap in 2014 represented
about one percent of the commission's total claims portfolio.
Mr
Simpson said the commission had made a commitment that by the end of
April, the 3300 homes still waiting for work to start would either
have their repairs underway, completed, or the owners would know for
certain that they were being handed over to their private insurer.
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