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Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

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Page 1: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Insurance & Bonding for ContractorsFebruary 2, 2009

Presented by: David HaleHale & Associates, Inc.Fairbanks, Alaska

Page 2: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Business Structure When selecting your business structure – you should

consult with your accountant or CPA to determine best choice for your business.

You entity type will determine the signatures required for your bonding agreement with a surety company.

For example; Corporation: all officers & spouses must sign as

indemnitiors LLC – all members & spouses sign Sole-proprietor – owner & spouse sign

Page 3: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

General Liability Provides coverage for Bodily Injury & Property

Damage claims made against you – that you are legally liable for. Will provide defense coverage, usually outside the limit of liability

Is rated on the type of work you are performing and usually based on payroll. Some classifications based on gross sales. Policy is auditable. Rates are charged per $1,000. of payroll (or gross sales)

Review for exclusions. Most exclude Professional Liability, Pollution Liability, Employment Practices, Asbestos, Care, custody, control exclusion (property that you own, rent or occupy) and other specified exclusions – Most of these exclusions can be covered under separate policies or endorsement by request.

Page 4: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Workers Compensation 1 Required for a firm who employees any

workers. Also required on corporate officers that have not filed with the State of Alaska for an Executive officer Waiver.

Rates based on type of work performed. Construction workers that do several type of work can split their payroll between class codes if payroll records documenting work performed in each class are maintained.

“Scopes” are utilized by agent to determine proper classification

Rates are charged per $100. of payroll

Page 5: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Workers Compensation 2 Experience Modifications available after 2 years of policy

history Based on individual company loss history Rates are developed by Insurance Rating organization,

using loss history per classification annually Rates recommended to State of Alaska and reviewed by

Division of Insurance, usually approved by November for the January 1 rating period

Workers Compensation rates have been decreasing for past few years

Projected overall rate decrease for 2009 – about 4% Policies are auditable, either monthly, quarterly or

annually

)

Page 6: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Commercial Auto Liability Coverage for business use of vehicles Can obtain liability, physical damage,

uninsured/underinsured motorists. Many contracts require you obtain hired & non-owned auto coverage.

Rated on use of vehicle, vehicle weight and radius of operations

Some insurance carriers surcharge for drivers (age, MV Record)

Page 7: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Inland Marine Coverage Can cover scheduled equipment owned by

contractor Unscheduled equipment & employee tools

(higher rate may apply) May add coverage for equipment rented

from others at a limit specified, rated on cost of rented equipment (auditable)

In order to cover equipment rented from others, need to have Inland Marine coverage in place

Page 8: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Builders Risk/Installation floater Can purchase policy per project basis or annual policy

for all projects Is a property type coverage for the

building/work/materials at site while under construction and until project is accepted by owner

Some policy enhancements include:_____________________________________________________________________________

Watch for wording in contract to allow occupancy of building before final completion, make sure your policy will allow for this

Page 9: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Employment Practices,Professional,Pollution Coverage's Employment practices liability-provides

coverage for wrongful termination, harassment

Professional Liability – may be required on design/build projects where architects/engineers employed

Pollution Liability – provides coverage for either specific site or pollution that occurs due to your business operations

Most of these coverage's are purchased on separate policy through specialty markets

Page 10: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Contracts Review & Certificates of Insurance Review project insurance specifications prior to

bidding work to include any additional cost in bid Identify Gaps between contract specifications and the

coverage's in place. Some contract contain obsolete language that is difficult to comply with or place excessive burden on the subcontractor. (see attached example “Insurance Specification Review”)

In some cases additional coverage's/policies are required to comply with the contract

Contact the owner/general in writing to discuss the issues in the contract that you want to revise, most contracts are not executed without some changes.

Page 11: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Contract Review & Certificates of Insurance Some insurance carriers provide “Blanket” Additional

Insured and “Blanket” Waiver of Subrogation coverage and there is usually a charge built into the policy for this. Some insurance carriers will only offer by individual endorsement, and there is a charge, between $50. $250. depending on carrier

Designated Project Limits- endorsement that sets aside the limits of coverage for the specific project

Is Builders Risk coverage required? Review specs on required coverage prior to bidding.

Watch contract requirements that ask for specific limits or coverage's to apply for a 2 – 5 year period beyond contract completion – difficult to build in a cost for this so should be negotiated

Page 12: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Bonding Surety Bonding for Contractors provide:

Monetary compensation to the Obligee(usually owner or General Contractor) for breach of contract

Assurance that the contractor will perform the work, pay the subcontractors, labor and material suppliers

Page 13: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Bonding Levels ($250,000 and under per project)

For projects under $250,000. and less than $500,000 aggregate bonded work there are programs available that do not require CPA financial information. Good credit standing is a requirement to qualify for these programs

Application forms fairly simple, between 1 – 3 pages, depending on project details.

Bid bonds & Final Bonds provided in this program

Page 14: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Business Plan Contractors Questionnaire Bank Authorization Letter; or Bank Letter of Credit Resume of each owner, partner or officer Schedule of work on hand Financial Statements-review in house

statements with agent to determine need for CPA prepared statements..

Reference letters on completed projects

Bond Underwriting Requirements

Page 15: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Bond Underwriting RequirementsFinancial Statements Current Business Financial Year End Business Financial Statement – 3

years (CPA Financials are usually required unless bonding requested under the $250,000. range)

Personal Financial statement for each owner

Last Fiscal Year-end Statement for any other business in which an owner has 20% or more ownership interest

Page 16: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Bonding Basics Capacity – Does the applicant have the skill

and ability to perform the obligation? Capital-Does the financial condition of the

applicant justify approval of this particular bond?

Character- Does the applicant’s record show him/her to be of good character and likely to perform the obligation he or she assumes?

The bond underwriter may request to contact owners, general contractors or suppliers for references

Page 17: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska
Page 18: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Bond Underwriting Process Information compiled and submitted to several

markets, if available (depending on type of work performed)

Underwriter reviews financial and other information submitted and may request additional information

Underwriter will usually approve a line of bonding to start with and adjust the line as jobs are completed

Before bonds are issued, an Indemnity Agreement is signed by all owners & spouses; An Indemnity agreement is an agreement to repay the bonding company for any bond losses

Page 19: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Strengthening the Bond Case Additional capitalization by owners Subordinated debt; loans to the company by owners

or others with a written agreement to repay the loan after surety obligations have been completed

Re-financing assets. Contractor may convert assets into capital if necessary

Collateral- should be used on a very limited basis as it may tie up necessary funds for the contractor

Additional Indemnity; a backer with financial strength willing to sign as an indemnitor

Bonded Subcontractors may increase bonding ability on a particular project

Page 20: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Bid Bonds Bid Bond should be requested as soon as a

contractor thinks they may want to bid a project

Job size can be estimated and adjusted Provide a copy of the bond forms required,

insurance and bonding specifications to the agent for review with Bid bond request

Provide Bid results to your agent

Page 21: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Performance Bonds

If you are low bidder, provide a copy of Notice of Award and Contract document to agent along with Bond forms required

Cost is usually between 1.5% to 3.5% of contract for Performance bonding

Page 22: Insurance & Bonding for Contractors February 2, 2009 Presented by: David Hale Hale & Associates, Inc. Fairbanks, Alaska

Outlook on Surety Bondingand Summary - Questions