I guarantee its the same couple hundred adjusters signed up over and over again by different companies. And qualified for Citizen's work doesn't mean they have more than six months actual adjusting experience, if that. Remember that someone who worked the hurricanes in 2004 and 2005 for three months each, and nothing since, are likely to claim they have been adjusters for four years. As for me, last year I saw the Citizen's schedule and said to myself, "This reeks. This is the worst fee schedule I may have ever seen." But I started down the process road in the event I may have to accept that work. I also had it in the back of my head that I would take almost any other work first. After the tests and the drug test and the confidentiality statement and the ethics course, and when a new demand surfaced each week to be "Citizen's Certified", I just said, "No more." The liklihood is that Citizen's will only need people in the event of a hurricane. Furthermore, they won't need that many unless there are multiple hurricanes. In 2004 I got 75 calls from different vendors to come on down and work the hurricanes. Then I stopped counting. If I had not been gainfully employed already, I could have taken only one anyway. If I have 75 options, do you think I will work for a Citizen's fee schedule? Not on your sweet bippie. Honestly, though, the fee schedule may have been too high for the folks they would have had to settle for if there had been any actual work last year. Time to go round up the Applebee's parking lot guy. Citizen's needs him bad. |