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Substance Abuse
What are other's experiences with letting their child stay in jail?
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<blockquote data-quote="Nancy" data-source="post: 582628" data-attributes="member: 59"><p>It probably does depend on the state, I thought I qualified that response but I guess I didn't. It probably also depends on the insurance company. We were told by our insurance company that if there is a young family member who is currently on your insurance and he/she is living with you, you cannot take them off your insurance because they assume the person will drive cars in your household. Only after that person is no longer living with you can you take them off your insurance. And in fact when our easy child moved into her own apartment we had to provide them her new address and a copy of the declarations page from her own insurance policy to prove she had her own. Even when we had taken difficult child's access to any of the cars away and she did not drive for over two years we had to carry her on our insurance.</p><p></p><p>Perhaps the difference was that you got your difficult child her own insurance. I'm not sure this poster wants to pay for her difficult child's own insurance. I think you may have had more of a problem if you tried to take her off yours but didn't get her own.</p><p></p><p>I guess what I'm really saying BKS is that you should check with your insurance company to see what you can and cannot do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nancy, post: 582628, member: 59"] It probably does depend on the state, I thought I qualified that response but I guess I didn't. It probably also depends on the insurance company. We were told by our insurance company that if there is a young family member who is currently on your insurance and he/she is living with you, you cannot take them off your insurance because they assume the person will drive cars in your household. Only after that person is no longer living with you can you take them off your insurance. And in fact when our easy child moved into her own apartment we had to provide them her new address and a copy of the declarations page from her own insurance policy to prove she had her own. Even when we had taken difficult child's access to any of the cars away and she did not drive for over two years we had to carry her on our insurance. Perhaps the difference was that you got your difficult child her own insurance. I'm not sure this poster wants to pay for her difficult child's own insurance. I think you may have had more of a problem if you tried to take her off yours but didn't get her own. I guess what I'm really saying BKS is that you should check with your insurance company to see what you can and cannot do. [/QUOTE]
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What are other's experiences with letting their child stay in jail?
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