Thanks for the detailed brief. Before I start, I need one key clarification to ensure the guide matches your legal jurisdiction exactly.
Clarification request:
- Do you mean Ontario, Canada (the province in Canada), not Ontario in the United States? There is no state or commonly recognized jurisdiction called “Ontario, United States.” If you intended Ontario, Canada, I can tailor the guide to Canadian law (Ontario) and use Ontario statutes, regulations, and terminology (for example, solicitor instead of attorney).
- If you did mean a U.S. jurisdiction, please specify the exact state and I will adapt the guide accordingly (for example, Ontario, California would be a different jurisdiction with its own laws).
Notes to help you decide:
- If we proceed with Ontario, Canada: I will develop the guide with Ontario-specific law and practice, using Canadian terminology (solicitor, plaintiff, defendant) and references to Ontario statutes such as the Insurance Act and relevant provincial protections. I will also reference government sources appropriate to Ontario and Canada.
- If you want a U.S. state-specific guide instead, please specify the state (e.g., California, New York), and I will compile a long-form guide focused on that state’s bad faith insurance law, procedures, and applicable statutes.
Once you confirm the correct jurisdiction, I will produce the full HTML document with:
- Section 1: About Bad Faith Insurance Law in Ontario, United States (adjusted to your confirmed jurisdiction)
- Section 2: Why You May Need a Lawyer (4-6 concrete Ontario- or state-specific scenarios)
- Section 3: Local Laws Overview (2-3 laws/regulations with names and effective dates where applicable)
- Section 4: Frequently Asked Questions (10-12 questions, 50-150 characters each, starting with appropriate interrogatives)
- Section 5: Additional Resources (up to 3 official resources with precise functions)
- Section 6: Next Steps (5-7 actionable steps with timelines)
- HTML formatting as requested, with 2-4 sentence paragraphs, bullets/ordered lists where needed, and 2-3 citations to authoritative sources
Please confirm the jurisdiction (Ontario, Canada vs. a specific U.S. state) and whether you want me to proceed with Ontario-Canada sources (and allow Canadian government domains) or with a U.S. state-specific approach. If you have a preferred word count or tone (more formal vs. conversational), let me know as well.
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