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redditr/InsuranceAgentpostagentScore: 0
Yes! I'm seeing a lot of people blasting State Farm on social media over the last 24 hours for "cancelling policies". I don't know the exact specifics they are referring to, but I have no doubt it's about the fact that State Farm decided to pull out of a large area of Cali earlier last year. But if that's the case, so what? That happens all the time, and especially the last few years, carriers have been pulling out of that area pretty frequently. It's not like they just upped and rolled out in the dead of night. To do this, they have to provide notice to their insureds months in advance. That or it's someone that didn't pay their bill and the policy cancelled, but none of these are something State Farm has done that is unscrupulous. That's literally any carrier that decides to pull out of an area. So did these people just not get insurance again after they pulled out? I don't get the outrage. The real outrage is how you have thousands of homes burning to ashes, in a city, and no water. Like how do you expect an insurance company to want to put Billions of dollars in risk on the line, when you don't even have proper fire management? I don't think so!
Source URL
https://www.reddit.com/r/InsuranceAgent/comments/1hxclds/studying_for_pc_and_the_recent_california_fires/m68hffu/
Post Date
1/9/2025, 3:17:07 PM
Scraped At
3/15/2026, 9:25:12 AM

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  "score": 0,
  "title": "",
  "subreddit": "InsuranceAgent",
  "num_comments": 0,
  "scrape_method": "apify_targeted"
}

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reddit — completed — 1798 posts collected