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Report: #1448167

Complaint Review: EkoMovers - Cincinnati OH

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  • Reported By: Richard — Greenville PA United States
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  • EkoMovers 260 Northland Blvd. Cincinnati, OH United States

EkoMovers Eko Movers -- Carelessness leaves me stuck with repair and replacement bills. Cincinnati OH

*Consumer Comment: Here is Some Better Advice

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I read all the reviews before booking and I assume you will do the same and weigh the risks. My advice is to cover yourself and take all the insurance you can. You are a transaction and your personal belongings mean nothing to them or the insurance company.

I have never hired anyone for a long distance move so I would say I had a great experience until the actual moving day.

The truck showed up several hours late so everything was rushed. The truck size was underestimated so based on the weight of my items, so late on a Sunday afternoon and ¾ loaded I’m told that I need a second truck (at an additional cost) and they would have to wait because only one crew member was licensed to drive. It was agreed that they would load everything and balance everything out when the second truck arrived.

Because I had pets to contend with and several hours of driving ahead of me I locked up and left them with a handful of small items to go on the truck including an antique chair. They obviously closed the doors and left the remaining items in the yard as soon as I left because my neighbors held the items (including the antique chair) for me (I had to fly back and rent a one-way car).

The delivery seemed to go well and I didn’t detect anything until I began to unpack. Boxes of antique china had been dropped and contents broken. Antique mirror broken. Hardware to furniture taken apart all lost. Scratches in furniture. An antique cabinet leg had been broken, wrapped in packing tape and a board shoved under to hold it up – didn’t notice until weeks later when the painters tried to move it.

So after I tallied all the damage and got repair estimates EkoMovers wash their hands of it and defer to the insurance company who denied my appeal three times. They only offered me $60 because the insurance was solely based on weight (I was asking under $2k in compensation). The one china piece alone will be over $300 to replace.

Realistically, I expected there to be some damage. What bothers me the most is the lack of care the movers showed to my possessions. Leaving items and not telling me. Damaging items and not telling me. Loosing hardware that I might need to reassemble the furniture they took apart. Hope your move goes better.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 06/20/2018 04:31 AM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/ekomovers/cincinnati-oh-45246/ekomovers-eko-movers-carelessness-leaves-me-stuck-with-repair-and-replacement-bills-c-1448167. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

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#1 Consumer Comment

Here is Some Better Advice

AUTHOR: Jim - (United States)

POSTED: Wednesday, June 20, 2018

You provided a host of bad advice for anyone reading your review, so let's really correct this for others:

I read all the reviews before booking and I assume you will do the same and weigh the risks. My advice is to cover yourself and take all the insurance you can. You are a transaction and your personal belongings mean nothing to them or the insurance company.  Reading online reviews is a meaningless exercise primarily because many movers you will read on the internet eiither provide their own glowing reviews or changed the name of their business so you may never find the review of a specific mover you are looking for.  You went ahead and read all the reviews and at the end of the day, you still ended up choosing someone unqualified to perform your move.  What you should have done is find out how an interstate move works given the fact you've never done one in your life.  Some of the documents you legally should have received prior to your move would have helped you, and most importantly, speak to professionals who do this for a living.  You did none of those.

The latter part of your comment exemplifies that you still don't understand what you just went through.  Movers cannot sell you insurance as a matter of law in every state.  What they are allowed to sell you is valuation.  The reason I know you went with a scam mover is that scam movers only pay $0.60 per pound when a claim is filed, and you have no legal recourse to get more than that.  A professional mover - like the ones you would find locally in your phone book or maybe see in your city - sell you what the industry calls Full Replacement Valuation or FRV.  A scam mover will never sell you FRV.

I have never hired anyone for a long distance move so I would say I had a great experience until the actual moving day.  Of course, because a scam mover simply butters you up before the hell that's going to come your way.  Moving is an incredibly stressful time prior to the move because you're supposed to be preparing for the move prior to it actually happening.

 he delivery seemed to go well and I didn’t detect anything until I began to unpack. Boxes of antique china had been dropped and contents broken. Antique mirror broken. Hardware to furniture taken apart all lost. Scratches in furniture. An antique cabinet leg had been broken, wrapped in packing tape and a board shoved under to hold it up – didn’t notice until weeks later when the painters tried to move it.  If I had to guess, you packed a number of items in boxes yourself.  By doing so, the mover is contractually not obligated to pay you one dime for any damage to your china or your mirror because they didn't pack anything.  Your contract states very clearly that any box packed by owner (or PBO) is not covered for valuation.  I always tell people if they plan on packing everything for a move, then they may as well do the move themselves.  Damaged furniture is paid at $0.60 per pound and scratches are a part of a move.

 

So after I tallied all the damage and got repair estimates EkoMovers wash their hands of it and defer to the insurance company who denied my appeal three times. They only offered me $60 because the insurance was solely based on weight (I was asking under $2k in compensation). The one china piece alone will be over $300 to replace.  Contractually, they only have to pay you $0.60 per pound, so if you received $60, then they evaluated the damage at 100lbs. and none of the china is covered because you packed the contents in the boxes and per the contract you are responsible for the damage.  The adjuster is not going to consider your request for less than $2K because you signed a contract agreeing to $0.60 per pound.  So yes, your appeal would have been denied as many times as you wish to appeal.  Even if you were to take the mover to small claims court for the difference, even the judge would have denied your case.  The contract is pretty clear.

 

In short, you went into this move without knowing a single thing about what was going to happen.  There are moving sites on the internet that could have helped you prepare.  Instead you went into this move with expensive china and antique furniture and decided to hire a mover based on price?

 

Moving is not an inexpensive venture.  Choosing a mover based on price is going to be far more expensive for you in the long run than if you had simply hired a professional mover (United, Atlas, North American, Bekins, Mayflower, and a few others are good examples) to pack, load, and deliver your goods.  It would have been more expensive up front, but look at what this move really cost you?  Best of luck to you.

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