Levittown Public Adjuster

Levittown Public Adjuster
Levittown Public Adjuster
 Levittown Public Adjuster 

5 – 20 % Contingency Fees

(215) 364-4546

SAVE MONEY CALL NOW!!!

No Settlement | No Fee | No Obligations

 Public Adjuster Levittown Serving Levittown PA Residents and Businesses Since 1992

Levittown Public Adjuster

Levittown, PA can look to their Levittown Public Adjuster who is offering fees as low as 5%-20%.

Levittown, Bucks County property owners can count on their Levittown Public Adjuster when fire, water, wind, and hail damage occurs. In addition, we have been handling insurance claim dispute resolution services since 1992.

With an A+BBB rating and a Angies List member in good standing. You can call your Levittown Public Adjuster for a Free Policy or Claim Review with No Obligations at all…(215) 364.4546

We are your Levittown Public Adjuster and our mission is to make sure that all Levittown Bucks County homeowners, business property owners, condominium unit owners and renters receive enough money to rebuild any and all property damage that may have occurred in Levittown Bucks County, PA. We provide the highest level of professional service as your Levittown Public Adjuster.

Our Bucks County Levittown Public Adjuster claims staff will work to protect home owners and business owners manage their claims, and fully document their property losses in order to maximize their financial interest in all insurance claim returns.

Our goal is to reduce the emotional and financial stress placed upon you per the insurance policy contract as the result of a direct physical loss. We know the insurance claim process since 1992.

Levittown Public Adjuster Insurance Claim Settlement Services

Bucks County Levittown Public Adjuster is dedicated to addressing all of your property damage insurance claim needs as your Levittown Public Adjuster. Each property loss or insurance claim is unique and Advocate Public Adjustment, LLC will work diligently to determine the extent of your loss.

Free Policy Review or claim review…no obligation

Let us review your insurance policy for free. Or if you already filed a claim then allow us to review the insurance company offer seeing if it is equitable and fair. If not, then we can intervene as your Levittown Public Adjuster in Bucks County, PA. Many times, individuals or business owners do not carry appropriate insurance coverage. As your Levittown Public Adjuster Advocate Public Adjustment will inform you if you are or if you are not properly insured to value properly.

Levittown Public Adjuster Insurance Claim Management

Levittown Public Adjuster takes charge quickly and ensures policy holders by offering claim guidance and relief of stress during your time of need.

Our experienced professional claim staff will manage every aspect of your property damage insurance claim. Levittown Public Adjuster will be available anytime to give you the peace of mind that you deserve. There is no claim too large or too small. We are only a phone call away. (215) 364-4546

Since 1992 we have been negotiating property damage insurance claim settlements for Levittown, PA residents and business owners. Whether it’s fire damage, smoke damage, water damage, lightning strike, wind damage or any other catastrophic damage such as hurricane damage, flood damage, tornado damage, or severe winter storms, we have the knowledge, insurance claim negotiation skills and experience to negotiate an equitable settlement that will allow you to rebuild your property.

Advocate Public Adjustment, LLC will immediately protect your property from further damage and provide emergency services in order to begin the restoration process. We will arrange for temporary housing solutions and secure emergency living funds to replace clothing and or any other need that has developed as a result of your loss. We are your Public Adjuster and that is Advocate Public Adjuster, LLC.

Levittown Public Adjuster Insurance Claim Settlement

Advocate Public Adjustment will review the final settlement options with you in regards to your home, business and  personal property. We will make sure that you receive everything you need to maximum your insurance claim as your Levittown Public Adjuster.

We will prepare settlement documents for payment including business interruption, extra expense and business income claims (if applicable).

There are absolutely NO fees paid to Advocate Public Adjustment for our services by you, the insured.

No out of pocket cost for our intervention protecting your assets as we handle every detail for a FANTASTIC Contingency Fee starting as low  5% – 20% Maximum.

 

Advocate Public Adjustment is Your Public Adjuster 

Call Now

(215) 364-4546

Bucks County, PA property owners living in Levittown, PA can look to their Public Adjuster when a loss occurs. We offer fees as low as 5%-20% for most claim scenarios. Call or inquire for further information, after all it is your money and property we are speaking about.

Rick Kinney

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Levittown is a census-designated place (CDP) and planned community in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, United States, within the Philadelphia metropolitan area. The population was 52,983 at the 2010 census. It is 40 feet (12 m) above sea level. Though not a municipality, it is sometimes recognized as the largest suburb of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania (while Upper Darby Township, Lower Merion Township, Bensalem Township, Abington Township and Bristol Township are municipalities larger in size in the three surrounding Pennsylvania counties). Starting with land purchased in 1951, it was planned and built by Levitt & Sons. The brothers William Levitt and architect Alfred Levitt designed its six typical houses.

The majority of the land on which it is built was purchased in 1951. Levitt and Sons only built six models of houses in Levittown, all single-family dwellings with lawns: the Levittowner, the Rancher, the Jubilee, the Pennsylvanian, the Colonial and the Country Clubber, with only modest exterior variations within each model. The homes were moderately priced and required only a low down payment. Construction of Levittown began in February 1952, soon after completion of Levittown, New York, located on Long Island. Levittown, Pennsylvania was the second “Levittown” built by William J. Levitt, who is often credited as the creator of the modern American suburb. To speed up construction, Levitt & Sons perfected a 26-step rationalized building method that was essentially an assembly line type of home building. The house remained stationary, while the construction workers moved from house to house. Each worker had one task such as pouring slabs, framing, installing electric sockets or installing washing machines. This highly regimented process enabled Levitt’s workers to produce a finished house every 16 minutes. Construction of the homes commenced in 1952 and when completed in 1958, 17,311 homes were built.

Residents (who are sometimes called Levittowners) were first expected to comply with a lengthy list of rules and regulations regarding the upkeep of their homes and use of their property. Two of these “rules” included a prohibition on hanging laundry out to dry on Sunday and not allowing homeowners to fence off their yards. These proved unenforceable over time, particularly when backyard pools became financially accessible to the working class and privacy concerns drove many to fence off their yards. In the years since Levitt & Sons ended construction, three- and four-story “garden apartments” and a number of non-Levitt owner-occupied houses have been built in Levittown.

Levitt & Sons would not sell homes to African Americans. Levitt did not consider himself to be a racist, considering housing and racial relations entirely separate matters. However, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) conditioned essential financing for this and similar projects on the restriction of home sales to those of “the Caucasian race”, as stipulated in housing rent and sales agreements and deed covenants. This did not prevent Bea and Lew Wechsler, a Jewish couple from the Bronx, from connecting an African-American family to a neighbor who desired to sell his home. Levittown’s first black couple, William and Daisy Myers, bought a home in the Dogwood Hollow section in 1957. Their move to Levittown was marked with racist harassment and mob violence, which required intervention by state authorities. This led to an injunction and criminal charges against the harassers while the Meyers’s and their supporters refused to surrender and received national acclaim for their efforts. For instance, Daisy Myers has been hailed as “The Rosa Parks of the North” who helped expose the northern states’ problems with racial inequality of that time. Daisy Myers later wrote a book about her family’s experiences. She died Dec. 5, 2011, in York, Pa. The NAACP and the ACLU opposed Levitt’s racist policies, and the Federal Housing Administration threatened to refuse mortgages on his next Levittown. Levitt still refused to sell to blacks, and developed plans for yet another whites-only Levittown—this one to be in Willingboro Township, N.J.—while fighting legal challenges in New Jersey courts. Ultimately the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear his case.

The community’s otherwise placid exterior was again disturbed during the so-called suburban gas riots of June 1979 in the wake of the Camp David Peace Accords, which resulted in a second embargo by Arab oil-producing nations. The unrest occurred June 24–25, 1979, as lines swelled and tempers flared in the heart of Levittown at an intersection known as Five Points, a location surrounded by six service stations, two of which were severely damaged by vandalism in the riots. The two days of riots made national headlines and were mentioned (although not directly by name) in the draft of an address to the nation that was to have been delivered by President Jimmy Carter on July 5, 1979.

A baseball team from Levittown won the Little League World Series in 1960. Levittown American beat an opponent from Fort Worth, Texas, to win the honor.

Of the five public pools built by Levitt & Sons and operated by the Levittown Public Recreation Association (LPRA), four were closed in 2002 with the exception of one located in the Pinewood section. LPRA Headquarters (and other landmarks) of this prototypical post-war suburb of sometimes mythic importance have been the focus of historic preservation efforts. Since 2002, studies have been underway to establish the Levittown Historic District.

Since its inception in 1988, the Bucks County St. Patrick’s Day Parade has been held in Levittown. Every year, the parade steps off from St Joseph the Worker Church, and proceeds two miles (3 km) on New Falls Road to Conwell-Egan Catholic High School. St Joseph the Worker Church has since been torn down.

The shopping center began a slow decline in the mid-1970s from which it never recovered with the building of the Oxford Valley Mall. The mall, located just north of Levittown, in Langhorne in Middletown Township, drew shoppers away from the older Levittown facility, given Oxford Valley’s much larger size and enclosed shopping environment. In 2002, the redeveloped site of the Shop-a-rama was reopened as the Levittown Town Center. The completed facility contains 468,675 square feet (43,541.3 m2) of retail space. Map of the municipalities, school districts and original sections of Levittown. The thick gray lines are municipal borders.

Levittown’s 41 neighborhoods (locally called “sections”) are found in parts of four separate municipalities:

  • Bristol Township (including the sections of Plumbridge, Mill Creek Falls, Indian Creek, Goldenridge, Blue Ridge, Whitewood, Orangewood, Yellowood, Violetwood, Red Cedar Hill, Apple Tree Hill, Holly Hill, Crabtree Hollow, Oaktree Hollow, Greenbrook, Farmbrook, Dogwood Hollow, Junewood, Magnolia Hill, and most of Kenwood and Stonybrook, and a small part of Birch Valley)
  • Falls Township (including the sections of Vermilion Hill, Thornridge, Elderberry Pond, Will O Wood, North Park and portions of Pinewood, Lakeside and most of Birch Valley and 1 house in Magnolia Hill)
  • Middletown Township (including the sections of Deep Dale East, Deep Dale West, Highland Park, Twin Oaks, Forsythia Gate, Snowball Gate, Red Rose Gate, Upper Orchard, Lower Orchard, Juniper Hill, Cobalt Ridge and Quincy Hollow)
  • Borough of Tullytown (including small portions of Stonybrook, Kenwood, Pinewood and Lakeside). These neighborhoods’ populations are counted by the U.S. Census Bureau as residing within Tullytown only, not the Levittown CDP.

The names of the streets within each section uniformly begin with the same letter that begins the name of the section in question except for the section of Green Lynne, which was not constructed by Bill Levitt. This plan offers a good clue as to where any particular street might be located. “X” and “Z” are not used for section or street names. As there are more than 24 section names, “road” is used for street names in sections to the west of Edgely Road, “lane” is used in those section to the east. Sections are surrounded by a “drive” with the same name as the section. For example, the Pinewood section is circled by Pinewood Drive, while Snowball Gate is surrounded by Snowball Drive. Some sections have their drive broken into multiple parts, with similar names. Forsythia Gate has Forsythia Drive North and Forsythia Drive South.

Almost all other roads or lanes in the sections connect on one or both ends to the drive of that section. In some sections, such as Goldenridge, the shape of the section prevents the drive from surrounding the section, or allowing all roads in the section from connecting to the drive. The drives of adjacent sections, are frequently connected with small connector streets. In addition, small connector streets are used to connect the section drive with a nearby main thoroughfare. The names of these small connectors typically start with one of the letters from the adjacent sections, and tend to have a name reminiscent of their purpose or their location. Some examples: Learning Lane connects Lakeside and Pinewood, and borders an elementary school. Short Lane connects Stoneybrook and Farmbrook. Not all small connector streets are named.

Red Rose Gate, Forsythia Gate, and Snowball Gate are collectively known as “The Gates.” (These were the only sections without sidewalks so as to lend a more “executive” appearance to the neighborhoods.) Lakeside sits next to Levittown Lake. Thornridge has its upper half that sits on a ridge, that was found to have Thorn Bushes. Vermilion Hill is named after the color that the trees on its prominent hill turned in the Fall. Magnolia Hill is on a prominent hill. Mill Creek Falls is found next to a creek by the same name.