The incident command system command function may be conducted in one of two ways
Dependent on the fault factor and without knowing all of the circumstances I can safely say two deductibles would be paid.
University textbooks and tuition are tax deductible with your education expenses. You may receive additional one since you are a full time student.
This would be a type 5 incident. The incident can be handled with one or two single resources with up to six personnel.
This would be a type 5 incident. The incident can be handled with one or two single resources with up to six personnel.
This would be a type 5 incident. The incident can be handled with one or two single resources with up to six personnel.
This would be a type 5 incident. The incident can be handled with one or two single resources with up to six personnel.
This would be a type 5 incident. The incident can be handled with one or two single resources with up to six personnel.
In the Incident Command System, a Unified Command is an authority structure in which the role of incident commander is shared by two or more individuals, each already having authority in a different responding agency. Unified command is one way to carry out command in which responding agencies and/or jurisdictions with responsibility for the incident share incident management.
If the damage was done at the same time, it's one occurrence of Vandalism, covered under the Comprehensive portion of your policy and one deductible applies. If the damage was done at different times, two deductibles.
A typical team would consist of a minimum of eight well-equipped and trained members. Of these, two individuals perform incident operations and rescue, two others serve as operations backup, two are the Decontamination Team, and there is one safety and one operations officer. The minimum number of personnel needed to manage a specific hazardous materials incident safely depends on how much hazardous material is involved, what kind of hazardous material is involved, and where the incident is in regard to populations, waterways, and transportation corridors.
Car #1 is covered by it's collission coverage, less deductible. Car #2 is covered by the property damage liability portion of the coverage on car #1, and there is almost never a deductible on that coverage. This is considered one (1) accident, not two (2).