Because...
states like washington, newjersey, neyork, pensilvania, virginia, offers uninsured motorist
Uninsured motorist coverage provides coverage for bodily injury, and in some states property damage incurred by an uninsured driver or a driver with insufficient liability limits.
If it is the uninsured driver's fault in the accident, you can still file a lawsuit against the uninsured driver but you'll only be able to recover from their personal assets, which in many states won't be much because many states allow you to shield many personal assets from this sort of recovery. You will also be filing a claim against your own Uninsured Motorist (UM) coverage on your insurance policy.
In nearly all states, each of those is a separate crime. 1) Driving uninsured. 2) Leaving the scene of an accident.
Joe Biden's 2000 legislation, known as the "Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act," aimed to improve health care access for children in families with incomes too high to qualify for Medicaid but too low to afford private coverage. It expanded the existing Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), providing states with increased funding to cover uninsured children. The legislation emphasized preventive care and aimed to reduce the number of uninsured children across the United States.
I'm not 100% sure about Florida specifically, but in most states Uninsured Motorist is a required coveage. Maybe you are thinking about some other coverage? Like Uninsured Motorist Property Damage? Contact the FL dept of insurance and they can tell you the required coverages and limits.
name the states under its juridiction
As of 2020, approximately 8.8% of the US population, or about 28 million people, were uninsured. This number can fluctuate due to various factors like economic conditions, healthcare policies, and access to insurance options.
What is a conventional uninsured loan?
depending on where you're from, in most states it's illegal.
As far as states go I know in Utah it is the vehicle not the driver that is insured.
Nobody that I know of tracks records for uninsured homes. The best you could do is try to find out how many homes there are and how many are insured, from there you might be able to extrapolate an estimate of uninsured homes. I would not however go with the result as a firm number of uninsured because many people use international insurers, so those policies would not necessarily be counted by our domestic insurers. They simply would not be on the rolls of domestic insurers but that does not mean they are uninsured.