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Building liability products.


Risk retention groups not only are filling a void in the medical world, they also are satisfying a need in the construction industry. For the past few years, West Coast contractors in particular have had a difficult time finding liability coverage in the standard market. And if they have managed to find a writer, they have also wound up paying much more for that coverage. The hard market in property/casualty has only made the situation worse.

Contractors hit the hardest have been builders of multiresidential units, such as townhouses and condominiums. These dwellings have become "magnets for class-action lawsuits--making them uninsurable uninsurable Health insurance A high-risk person without health care coverage through private insurance who falls outside the parameters of risks of standard health underwriting practices. See Underwriting. ," according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the California California (kăl'ĭfôr`nyə), most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and the Pacific Ocean (W).  Building Industry Association.

"The residential problem on the West Coast and other defined areas of the country is huge--it's virtually impossible to buy any kind of risk transfer on the general liability exposure because of the construction-defect issue," said Rick Shamis, managing director of Aon's property/casualty operations, central region. Smaller home-building companies have been most affected, he noted.

Carriers that were in this market providing a traditional product to residential contractors only three or four years ago now are either insolvent INSOLVENT. This word has several meanings. It signifies a person whose estate is not sufficient to pay his debts. Civ. Code of Louisiana, art. 1980.. A person is also said to be insolvent, who is under a present inability to answer, in the ordinary course of business, the responsibility , out of business or just not writing this line anymore, Shamis said.

"So you've got a shrinking number of carriers, a hard market and surplus being diverted di·vert  
v. di·vert·ed, di·vert·ing, di·verts

v.tr.
1. To turn aside from a course or direction: Traffic was diverted around the scene of the accident.

2.
 in other areas than to write residential contractors on the West Coast and other parts of the country," he said. "These are the perfect ingredients to form a risk retention group."

And that's just what Aon has done. "We take our fully integrated platform, try to leverage our retail-wholesale brokerage units as well as our reinsurance The contract made between an insurance company and a third party to protect the insurance company from losses. The contract provides for the third party to pay for the loss sustained by the insurance company when the company makes a payment on the original contract.  and underwriting Underwriting

1. The process by which investment bankers raise investment capital from investors on behalf of corporations and governments that are issuing securities (both equity and debt).

2. The process of issuing insurance policies.
 capabilities to try to bring these solutions to bear where the problems are," he said.

In another area, Aon is creating a product with a risk retention group model to make warranty insurance avail able to smaller road-building companies, he said.

"In recent years, state DOTs have cut back on their maintenance budgets, and they have diluted di·lute  
tr.v. di·lut·ed, di·lut·ing, di·lutes
1. To make thinner or less concentrated by adding a liquid such as water.

2. To lessen the force, strength, purity, or brilliance of, especially by admixture.
 themselves of manpower," Shamis said. Previously, departments of transportation would require road contractors to meet certain performance criteria over an extended period of time, and then have their own crews take over the road maintenance. Now, DOTs are starting to transfer this exposure back to the contractors, asking them to provide warranty insurance or bonds up to five and sometimes, 10 years, he said.

In order to bid on a public road contract, he added, contractors have to have a surety bond surety bond

An insurance fee required before a duplicate security is issued to replace one that has been lost. The fee is approximately 4% of the market value of the security to be replaced.
, which normally will be extended to cover the warranty period up to a year without any complications. "However, it is extremely difficult to get surety An individual who undertakes an obligation to pay a sum of money or to perform some duty or promise for another in the event that person fails to act.


surety n.
 companies to provide a five-year warranty on that bonded work," Shamis said. "So this has literally left the contractor, especially the smaller guy, out. There just isn't a product for him out there."

By and large, Aon represents larger construction companies which presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 could create their own captives offshore and provide a warranty insurance solution for those contracts requiring long-term warranties, he said. "A smaller guy can't do that, so our developmental product will be a way for a small guy to meet specifications so he qualifies to bid the job and get the work."

The major advantages of a risk retention group are rate stability and coverage availability, which are "huge" to some of these contractors, Shamis said. On the other hand, membership in a risk retention program is not without risk and, to participate, contractors must clean up their loss control, their safety, their customer care and their quality control, he said.

But this alternative-market vehicle is not a bad thing, Shamis emphasized, noting that risk retention groups give contractors a way of gaining a product for particular solutions when traditional markets fail. "They've proven they can't do it," he said.
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Title Annotation:risk retention groups
Publication:Best's Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2004
Words:630
Previous Article:On their own: risk retention groups provide coverage and stable costs for physicians and hospitals facing higher insurance premiums.
Next Article:Turn of the cycle: evidence suggests property/casualty's hard market is ending, but changes in the way the industry writes business may be of more...
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