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understanding insurance company accounts

February 26th, 2008 admin Leave a comment Go to comments

understanding insurance company accounts
Verizon screwed you too?

Is it me or do not you think that Verizon will not solve any of the issues of customer service that creates mega? I left my old V710 months ago. Verizon pulled me to the insurance company, which did not accept the claim. They sent me in circles with the local Verizon, who knew they could not do anything. I had a surplus, thanks to a refund I received from them. They charged me late fees after remove the credit and said he sent a check for my balance. No check ever arrived. Now, a payment is made through its automated phone system payment. The system reports that it could not accept the payment because the system was down. Verizon was called and received a payment to a operateor live. Both charges were applied (the account was double peak), and after an hour of going in circles with their customer service impotent and incapable, I hung with the clear understanding that he could go f * myself. Write: uzrfrendle@yahoo.com

You have more of a question of fact. First, the V710. The phone has a 1 year manufacturer's warranty defects. If it has been more than one year from purchase, the warranty has expired. The insurance can deny your claim if you have activated the phone (found on your account), then the phone are no longer offered. The reason for rejection was placed on a computer used in the account and the insurance only covers the new equipment. If the phone was not eligible for insurance, then a refund may be issued for the month paid in the form of a credit to the account or a refund check, but not in the system. The payment to the time spend for maintenance. You may have tried to pay during this brief window. Call back to customer service and explain a double payment for the same amount. What is needed now is the refund of these transactions. If removing one of the payments made a significant balance in arrears (over 30 days), return may be rejected because it covers your account charged.

HSA – The Health Savings Account Explained

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