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It's past time for property insurance enhancements
“Because we’ve always done it that way” is a response you
have probably heard in the work place more times than you care to count. Most
of us, however, hope to hear something more substantial when we ask the age-old
question, “Why?”
This thought crosses my mind every time I review our MML Liability and Property
Pool coverage document and consider how we might enhance coverage for the benefit
of our members. Because we are a self-insurance pool and not an insurance company,
we have more freedom than many insurance professionals to structure coverage
in ways that traditional commercial insurers would not consider. Our method
of providing municipal property insurance is an excellent example.
Fire insurance has a long history. Its origins date back to the aftermath of
the London fire of 1666. Today, hundreds of insurers offer comprehensive property
insurance. However, despite the number of insurers offering this coverage,
there is almost no difference among them in how coverage is defined and provided.
You, the insured, declare where your property is located. The address is listed
on a policy along with the amount of insurance. If you have a loss to property
that isn’t listed on the schedule, the insurance company declines to
pay the loss.
This system works great if you have one location to insure. But how many municipalities
only own one building? How many municipalities acquire property through the
year, or enter into construction projects that increase values at existing
locations? How many municipalities have personal property — tools or
mobile equipment, i.e. that are constantly moving from one location to another?
Almost all, that’s how many.
When a system or procedure that is designed to work for one location is forced
to work for multiple locations, the chance for error increases dramatically,
as does the need for constant monitoring and endorsing of your property insurance
schedules.
There is a more efficient method of providing property insurance. And once
again, public entity insurance pools are leading the way.
The basic change we made in our Pool property form is really quite simple.
We changed the definition of “What is covered” in the policy so
that we provide coverage based on ownership, rather than a schedule of locations
and values attached to the policy. We still use property schedules for rating
purposes, and we still review our members’ property schedules with them
to ensure they are complete. But our Pool members no longer receive a declination
after a claim is filed because the property isn’t listed on a schedule
attached to their policy.
Another change we made was to delete the “100-foot limitation” in
the policy language. In a standard property insurance policy, covered property
is defined as the described premises and business personal property within
100 feet of the described premises.
But the way I see it, as a pool of municipal members, we know that 99.9 percent
of all our members’ property rarely, if ever, leaves the geographic boundaries
of the municipality. So what difference does it make to us if, say, a member’s
generator is 50 feet away from a building, or two blocks away from a building?
If the member owns the generator, isn’t that enough to ensure coverage?
I can’t imagine telling a member, “We must decline your claim for
the damaged generator because although there is no doubt you own it, you took
the generator more than 100 feet away from a building and you failed to separately
list it on your Inland Marine schedule.” Give me a break.
Another unnecessary coverage restriction is the clause that says “you,
the insured, have 30 days to report newly acquired property to us, the insurer,
or we won’t provide coverage.” I guess this makes sense — if
you’re an insurance company that doesn’t trust its insureds enough
to report new property so that you can charge an additional premium. But I
see no reason why a municipal insurance pool of several hundred members has
to be so concerned about protecting ourselves from our own members. Our relationship
is different. Our coverage provisions and definitions reflect this closer bond,
this “utmost good faith.”
Municipal insurance pools have been constrained for too long with many of the
same coverage limitations and inefficiencies as the industry whose poor track
record of service and product delivery spawned our growth. Pool administrators
and reinsurers are in a unique position to develop enhanced policy provisions
and liberalized coverage that sets the standard for our industry for the next
generation.
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