The pitfall of being self-insured

300rag

It's Not Going to Shift Itself
Joined
Dec 4, 2010
Messages
14,182
Reaction score
24,199
Location
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Ft.Myers, FL

200405151410-01-southwest-florida-international-airport-car-fire-exlarge-169.jpg

The fire overtook a grassy area by Southwest Florida International Airport on Friday.
(CNN)A fire that spread through a grassy area of Southwest Florida International Airport has destroyed thousands of rental cars, fire department officials said.

The blaze began Friday, spanned 15 acres and originally involved only 20 cars in the grassy rental car overflow area at the airport in Fort Myers, fire department officials said.
But by the time it was extinguished, the flames had destroyed more than 3,500 rental cars, a Lee County Port Authority spokesperson told CNN affiliate WINK.
Melinda Avni, Mitigation Specialist for Florida Forestry Service of Caloosahatchee, said authorities were called to put out the fire around 5 p.m. Friday, when there were about 20 vehicles involved.
"By the time we had units on the scene, we had 100 cars (on fire). We lost count after the hundreds," she said.

200405151637-02-southwest-florida-international-airport-car-fire-exlarge-169.jpg

The fire sent plumes of smoke into the air near the airport.

Black clouds of smoke could be seen for miles around Fort Myers, a city of about 82,000 people in southwest Florida. Ground and aerial support was provided by Florida Forestry Service and multiple fire departments, Avni said.
At least 80 airdrops were made by the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office's aviation unit, it said in a Facebook post.

The forestry service deemed the blaze contained by 10:30 a.m. Saturday, nearly 18 hours after it began, Avni said.
The brush surrounding the overflow area caught fire and help its quick spread, but no structures at the airport were affected, Avni said. No injuries were reported and the cause of the fire is under investigation, she said.
FAA spokeswoman Arlene Salac said the fire had no impact on air traffic or operations at the airport.
In a Facebook post, the airport thanked all the agencies who responded to the blaze.
"We appreciate their courage and willingness to help our Aircraft Rescue & Fire Fighting department. Together they were able to keep all our passengers and airport visitors safe," the airport said.
 
I wonder if at any point an effort was made to move cars and create a fire-break. Admittedly, that could have been impossible because who could figure out what keys? (but not if they keep them in box on the car?) My guess would be the "safey uber alles" mentality probably prevented that effort.
 
IF some or many of those cars were what we used to term "program cars" with the OEM suppliers, then there might be an additional dynamic to the "self-insured" situation.

A good thing is that each of the cars would be easy to document as to "in-service date" and "accumulated mileage", with "condition" being a given. Which would relate to the vehicles' value.

Obviously, if people aren't flying, they're not needing rental vehicles. Which is probably why they were parked on grass rather than a hard surface.

CBODY67
 
My shop deals with Enterprise truck rental servicing, my local Enterprise guys are up to their ears in unused rental cars right now, in fact the car rental branch here is shut down, as are the other companies. The cars are stacked like cordwood everywhere they can be.
 
Which is probably why they were parked on grass rather than a hard surface.

No here in water stricken Florida, every paved over square foot has to have... ah I'm searching for words & phrase.. a water mitigation?. Such as drainage to a built retention pond (mosquito breeding pit) so the water will not run off and into the stream/creek/river/ocean but sit and seep back down into the 'Aquifer'. Back in the 90's the brain-e-acts in the State House were thinking of putting a water tax based on property owners bare ground vs covered ground. That did not go over well, so now we have 'Retention Ponds". (bizzzzzz, slap)
 
Back
Top