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MULTIFAMILY DISASTER SURVIVAL GUIDE
Ready
or Not
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • October 2008
A multifamily operator’s guide
to disaster preparedness.
BY BENDIX ANDERSON
A tornado barrels through a downtown city
block, slicing off the roof and smashing
holes in a century-old apartment building.
A six-alarm fire leaps from apartment to
apartment, gutting much of the building
wing where it started and leaving two people dead. A
22-story crane loses stability and smashes down onto a
half-finished apartment building, killing seven people
and forcing the evacuation of hundreds.
These nightmare scenarios are not
imaginary: They’ve all happened to
apartment owners and developers
throughout the United States within
the last two years.
Owners and managers who have
experienced such catastrophes say
that even though it’s impossible to
prevent such unexpected events,
owners who have a plan in place
when the fire alarm gets triggered or
the flood breaches the levee are much
more likely to recover quickly from
disasters, minimize financial losses,
and retain resident good will.
“A disaster presents a real
opportunity to shine and win the
hearts of your customers,” said R. Lee
Harris, president of Cohen-Esrey Real
Estate Services, an Overland Park,
Kan.-based multifamily owner and
operator. “There’s not a lot of rocket
science here, and empathy for the
folks is at the very, very top of the list.
Any sort of event like this is very
traumatic for the customer, so it’s our
job first and foremost to minimize the
trauma and upset.”
“What’s so important here,” added
Harris, “is that you have a plan.”
The vast majority of multifamily
professionals practice what Harris
preaches. An industry survey from the
National Multi Housing Council
(NMHC) found that 73 percent of
multifamily companies have a disaster
or emergency preparedness plan in
place, according to Jeanne McGlynn-
Delgado, the NMHC’s vice president
of risk management and property
operations policy.
Having a solid insurance plan
helps in recovery efforts, and the
NMHC’s annual Apartment Cost of
Risk Survey shows that now’s a good
time for those in the multifamily
industry to beef up their insurance
coverage, as the insurance industry’s
surplus capital grew 14.1 percent in 2006, making for a soft pricing market
that is likely to continue through 2008
and into 2009.
Savvy operators have already taken
advantage of the market softness to
renegotiate prices. AvalonBay
Communities, for instance, has asked
its insurance carriers to rebid their
policies twice in the last three years
and has achieved a 25 percent savings
as a result, according to Chief
Financial Officer Tom Sargeant.
How a single insurer,
low deductibles help
Dominium Development &
Acquisition has also realized some
savings on its insurance premiums
over the past couple of years and
has taken an even more aggressive
approach to risk management by
shifting some of the financial risk
to itself, accepting higher deductibles,
and even self-insuring to some extent,
explained Chief Financial Officer
Tom McAllister.
From an overall risk management
perspective, such steps make sense,
but when it comes to the hands-on
work required to deal with the
aftermath of a major disaster, good
relationships are key, say multifamily
operators—and that includes
relationships with insurance
companies.
Aderhold Properties’ relationship
with its insurer, Fireman’s Fund,
facilitated a speedy recovery effort
after Aderhold’s Fulton Cotton Mill
Lofts in Atlanta were hit by a tornado
in March.
“This particular carrier made sure
we were advanced extraordinary
funds so we didn’t have to use any of
our own money” to renovate and
rebuild, said Tom Aderhold, president
of Atlanta-based Aderhold Properties.
“Having one carrier for three policies
on our site is the best thing we could
have possibly done.”
Financial recovery was also aided
by the fact that the company’s
deductibles were low—$2,500 per
incident per policy. And because of a
policy put in place 18 months earlier,
about 60 percent of the residents had
renters’ insurance, vastly reducing
post-disaster claims and ill will on the
part of tenants. Those insurance
carriers actually showed up in the
wake of the tornado, set up a table,
and were able to write checks to
renters on the spot, said Aderhold.
“It’s amazing how when the
resident gets a new couch after their
old one was ruined by water, they’re
not so unhappy anymore,” said Dirk
Wakeham, president and CEO of
LeasingDesk, the renters’ insurance
broker that Aderhold Properties used.
Renters’ insurance “really is a good
neighbor policy that owners have,” he
added. “Residents appreciate knowing
that they can be protected from living
next to people they didn’t choose to
live next door to.”
Building good will
Another key component in building
good will with tenants, according to
multifamily operators, is simply to
show up right after the disaster hits. Walk the property, make sure first
responders have all the information
they need, check in with residents to
ensure they’re all accounted for, and
try to take care of any concerns that
they may have.
And keep showing up. Aderhold
and his team had meetings every
morning for 10 days with all
personnel—the architect, engineer,
and contractor, plus city inspectors,
firefighters, police officers—to plan
the cleanup and recovery. The
persistence and thoroughness paid
off: The company was able to get half
its residents back into their homes
within seven days.
Dan Wayne, a principal with
Argentx Management Services, an
operator of 1,800 units in California,
Nevada, and Colorado, rushed to one
of his properties in Long Beach, Calif.,
as soon as he found out it was on fire.
After the blaze was extinguished, he
offered to help tenants carry out their
belongings from cordoned-off
apartments. “What made a difference is I was out there at the property every
single day,” he said. “I talked to my
tenants, I held their hands; I wanted
them to know we cared.”
Having a regular presence on-site
can also help keep looters and vandals
at bay. Quick thinking by on-site staff
doesn’t hurt, either.
Mobile, Ala.-based The Mitchell Co.
operates properties up and down the
Gulf Coast that were affected by
Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and its
front-line workers organized
themselves to protect the apartment
communities after the storm charged
through. “Our maintenance men
blocked the driveways and organized
themselves into armed patrols,” said
Chuck Stephan, vice
president and
partner.
Keeping contractors
on standby
Lining up contractors
ahead of time can
significantly speed
the disaster recovery
process, according to
experts. The Mitchell
Co. is itself a general
contractor as well
as a multifamily
manager and owner,
but it still needed
help in the wake of
Hurricane Katrina.
One of the first
things Stephan did
was to call everyone
he knew in Texas and
have them send crews
of workers over.
“They were experienced
roofers and
sheetrock hangers
and so on,” he said—
just the people
needed to repair
damaged buildings
and the sort of workers
who were in
acutely short supply
in the aftermath of
the storm.
Then Stephan
gathered as many
materials as he could,
since he knew that
suppliers of homerepair
items would
quickly sell out of key
equipment. “The day
after the hurricane, we bought every shingle in Gulfport
and Biloxi,” he said, and then he put
anyone who could swing a hammer
to work re-roofing buildings.
Multifamily operators may need
to clear out debris before beginning
repairs, and that’s a big expense they
should be prepared for, said Stephan.
“The cost of hauling off these
wrecked buildings is enormous,” he
said. Plus, managers should make
sure the cost of temporary repairs,
such as covering a blown-off roof
with protective sheeting until a new
roof can be hammered in place, is
included in their policies, he added.
Other items owners and managers
should check for in their insurance
policies: Is the loss of rents covered?
For how long? Are losses caused by
the actions of a municipal government
part of the coverage? How
much windstorm coverage do you
have? What are your deductibles?
“Always read your exclusions,”
counseled Stephan. “There’s an old
saying in the insurance business:
The fine print taketh away what the
bold type giveth.”
On top of scrutinizing their insurance
policies, multifamily executives
should also make sure they have a
coherent communications policy in
the aftermath of a disaster. Appoint
one person to deal with the media,
said Harris of Cohen-Esrey. If you
have employees giving out competing
versions of the same story, “it’s a disaster
on top of a disaster,” he said.
The main things you want to
communicate: that you’re on top of
the situation, your recovery plan is
proceeding smoothly, and that residents,
who are your biggest concern,
are being taken care of. “This can be
a big win for you and for the rest of
the residents who observe the way
you handle it,” said Harris.
There may have been no way to
prevent the catastrophe that befell
your property, but if you help your
residents recover from the nightmare
in a way they can feel good about,
you’ll have bought yourself
unbeatable brand loyalty.
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