Streamline Coverage through a Controlled Insurance Program

By Colleen Aegerter | November 18, 2013

Construction sites can be a flurry of activity. In addition to focusing on quality construction and completing projects on time, site owners must be sure risk management measures are sufficient. A Controlled Insurance Program (CIP) can be tailored to meet the complex needs of a site, ensuring adequate coverage is provided for all involved parties.

Traditionally, owners and contractors depended on contractual risk transfer to pass risk to appropriate contractors or subcontractors. However, contractual risk transfer is growing less reliable. Some state statutes limit the transfer of liability from one party to another. There are more than 400 different additional insured endorsements used by various carriers that can limit coverage provided. These factors make it difficult to determine if a contractor or subcontractor has adequate coverage.

Some subcontractors may think their blanket additional insured endorsement automatically provides the additional insured wording required in their contract for both premises and completed operations coverage for all upstream parties. Their certificate of insurance may indicate the subcontractor meets the requirements in the contract, but the policy may not provide coverage. The additional insured endorsement may only provide ongoing operations coverage for the immediate upper-tiered subcontractor who holds their contract. Upstream owners and contractors and completed operations coverage may not be provided.

The Insurance Services Office Inc. (ISO) updated the commercial general liability policy form and endorsements effective April 2013. The updates are meant to clarify the original intent of policy language as a result of courts misconstruing the intent regarding additional insureds as well as policy terms, conditions and limits subject to a third-party contract. Some carriers are adopting the new ISO additional insured endorsements, while others continue to use older versions or their own manuscripted additional insured endorsements. To further complicate matters, some of the new ISO wording creates new challenges.

Clearly, insuring a construction project site is very complex. How can a general contractor or owner be sure they are protected from potential pitfalls?

A Controlled Insurance Program (CIP), also known as Contractor-Controlled Insurance Program (CCIP), Owner-Controlled Insurance Program (OCIP) or Wrap-Up, assures adequate coverage is being provided for a construction site. The sponsor of the CIP can be the construction manager, general contractor or owner.

Under a CIP, all enrolled contractors or subcontractors at the project site receive general liability, excess and, in many cases, workers’ compensation coverage. These coverages can be tailored to meet the needs of a specific site or project. A CIP can cover a single site, typically a large project or multiple sites. Alternatively, a rolling CIP is based on a projection of expected work to be completed over a period of time, typically three years with an extension to complete projects started during those three years. A minimum project size for enrollment into a rolling CIP is required by carriers, usually between $10 million and $25 million. The total of all projects must exceed $100 million.

Some of the many advantages of using a CIP are:

  • The sponsor and all enrolled contractors/subcontractors are named insureds, not additional insureds.
  • Extended completed operations coverage is provided for 10 years or through the state’s statute of repose, whichever is less.
  • The policy limits for a project, including all enrolled contractors/subcontractors, are determined by the sponsor, ensuring all tiers have adequate coverage.
  • When subcontractors bring their own insurance to the project site, their limits may be impaired by losses at other project sites. The CIP provides unimpaired limits for each project site.
  • There are no subcontractor hidden policy exclusions that may not appear on a subcontractor’s certificate of insurance.
  • The sponsor controls contract language that requires direct contracts to pass down to all tiers of subcontractors.
  • The sponsor controls the implemented safety program for the entire project.
  • All enrolled contractor/subcontractor claims are paid by one carrier. This avoids disputes between carriers that could damage relationships with a subcontractor and/or slow the timeline.
  • Cross litigation is reduced by having all claims paid by the same carrier.
  • When the workers’ compensation coverage is provided in the CIP, action over claims are reduced.

With the current challenges of contractual risk transfer, CIPs are a practical way to ensure all subcontractors have the proper coverage to protect a worksite.

Topics Contractors Construction

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