Mitigating Inland Marine Losses

Author, Casey Craig, Account Executive, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

Inland marine insurance can sometimes be a forgotten line item in some construction companies’ insurance portfolio. This insurance covers your materials, equipment and tools once they are in the field or in transit. Sometimes insured’s feel they have coverage through their property insurance but once the equipment, materials or tools leave your premises, inland marine is the line of insurance that covers you.

Historically, inland marine coverage had fewer losses than other lines of coverage and this type of insurance had not seen a change in premium. However, this has changed in recent years with bolder criminals stealing larger equipment and materials from jobsites, breaking into work trucks to take higher valued tools and vandalism. What are some ways you can cut down on cost and help insulate yourself from losses?

By utilizing new technology to track where you are storing your materials and equipment overnight and investing in security measures, you can help prevent claims and reduce premiums. With theft on the rise, it is a good time to make sure you are storing your materials and equipment in the best way possible. Placing air tags or similar GPS tools on larger equipment is extremely helpful in recovering stolen items and tracking where they are being stored. If leaving equipment at jobsites, removing batteries is also helpful but if possible, try to not leave equipment at the jobsite. Train your employees to properly secure and store equipment if they are taking it home in their work truck. Most theft or vandalism are crimes that are a result of convenience or opportunistic. The harder it is to commit crime because of preventative measures, the less likely the crime will happen.

Ensure you have proper limits for your equipment and materials with your carrier. In reviewing and insuring your tools and equipment, it is important to understanding what is considered miscellaneous tools. Typically, this might be tools with a value less than $2,500, thus necessitating the need to “schedule” equipment above that value. Often times, we see insureds who have aggregate miscellaneous tools limits much higher than needed and then also including those tools or equipment on the scheduled equipment list.

When insuring the materials that will be used on a job, it is important to distinguish between a transit, jobsite and temporary location limits. These limits should be specific to your actual needs and not necessarily always the same values, that is another common mistake we see in auditing insurance portfolios. These vital discussions can help you save on premiums and ensure you are properly insulated from exposures.

While inland marine insurance isn’t typically one of your largest expenses in your insurance portfolio, it is something you need to monitor so costs do not creep up over time from frequency of losses. With rising costs in both auto and property insurance, it is becoming more important to make sure you are insulating your company from risk as much as possible to keep your controllable exposures down.

Discussing your inland marine coverage with your insurance broker regularly can help keep premiums and losses down. If you have questions relating to inland marine or any other of your insurance coverage, please reach out to me at ccraig@ranchomesa.com or (619)438-6900.