Auto insurance coverage includes everything in your policy, which depends on the type of policy. All information pertinent to your insurance policy is located on the declarations page, the front page of your policy. That page contains the exact name of your insurance company, your policy number, and the amount of your coverage and deductible. The minimum coverage you must get based on your state's financial responsibility law is called basic coverage. In Texas, minimum liability limits are $30, 000 for each injured person, up to a total of $60, 000 per accident, and $25, 000 for property damage per accident. This basic coverage is called 30/60/25 coverage. When you purchase insurance, you'll get your insurance card, usually containing insurance company name, policy number, insured's name, vehicle year, make, model and VIN number, liability coverage, what to do in the event of an accident and the claims phone number to call in the event of an accident. Show this card if you're asked to by a police officer, have an accident, register your car or renew its registration, get or renew your driver's license, and have your car inspected There are several types of auto insurance.
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Gulf Coast about once every five years. The return rate for snowfall at sea level in central and southern California is probably more like once every 20 years, and that span appears to be getting larger (see below). The synoptic (large-scale) situation usually in place when snow does fall at sea level in California is a powerful upper-level low sliding down the U. West Coast and retrograding just far enough offshore to enhance the flow of moisture from the Pacific inland and atop the low-level cold air. Figures 1 and 2 show an example of these surface and upper-level features in early February 1989. This storm resulted in the heaviest sea-level snow event in modern California history, with the coastal town of Klamath (18 miles south of Crescent City) picking up an astonishing 19. 5" of snow on February 3-4, with a maximum depth of 8". Figures 1 and 2. Surface (left) and upper-level (right) weather maps valid at 12Z (7 am EST) February 4, 1989. The upper-level map shows the height (in decameters) of the 500-millibar pressure surface.