Revised forms, endorsements, and rating information
will be released this week for the Difference in Conditions (DIC)
section of the AAIS Inland Marine Guide. This release is
the latest in a year-long series of updates providing new and revised
forms and/or rating information for the following Guide classes,
in addition to DIC:
Later in June, AAIS is scheduled to release revised
Transit forms and rating, a revised Renovation and Rehabilitation
Builders' Risk form, and a new Mobile Equipment coverage form and
rating. Also this year, AAIS developed and filed, where required, a
virus or bacteria exclusion under all applicable Guide classes.
DIC coverage, which can be written as a stand-alone
policy or in conjunction with a commercial property policy, generally
provides property and income insurance for perils, such as flood and
earthquake, that are commonly excluded under a standard property policy.
It has traditionally been written as a nonfiled class of inland marine
insurance.
While DIC policies commonly exclude coverage for
named perils insured under property policies (fire, wind, etc.), the
revised AAIS DIC section introduces two new forms that allow Guide
users to write DIC property or income coverage on an excess basis over
underlying property and/or income forms. Those new forms allow
carriers to participate in providing "layers" of coverage for a property
account.
For information on affiliating with AAIS for use of
the Inland Marine Guide, contact Rick Maka, director of
marketing, at rickm@AAISonline.com,
or by calling 800-564-AAIS.
AAIS is initiating a countrywide filing of
two new endorsements that would add equipment breakdown coverage for a
dwelling insured under a policy based on the AAIS Farmowners Program.
The endorsements are being filed with a proposed effective date of Oct.
1, 2007.
In 2004, AAIS introduced the industry's first standardized endorsements
for adding
equipment breakdown coverage for farm property such as boilers,
motors, and generators.
The latest filing will provide options for writing equipment breakdown
coverage on household equipment, such as
furnaces, hot water
heaters, heating/air conditioning systems, and similar types of
property. Similar
endorsements were filed earlier this year under the AAIS Homeowners
Program, but the farm options also include coverage for property that
may service both the dwelling and a farm operation, such as well pumps
and outdoor electrical wiring.
AAIS's equipment breakdown coverage options were developed in
conjunction with The Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection & Insurance Co.,
one of the nation's leading equipment breakdown reinsurers. The options
can be used with any equipment breakdown reinsurer, however.
AAIS is initiating a countrywide filing of
Businessowners (BOP) manual supplements that include new terrorism loss
costs and rating factors.
The new rating information, which has a proposed
effective date of Oct. 1, 2007, will address losses arising from both
"certified" and "non-certified" acts of terrorism, as well as terrorism
losses that occur after termination of the federal terrorism reinsurance
program.
The new loss costs apply to property loss, including
business interruption, and are based on modeled data developed by one of
the nation's leading catastrophe modeling firms. Within several states,
those loss costs will vary according to newly defined terrorism rating
territories delineated by ZIP Codes.
Earlier this year, AAIS filed model-based terrorism loss costs with ZIP
Code-based territories under its Commercial Properties Program.
In addition, AAIS is filing revised rating factors to be used in
calculating the liability component of BOP premium for terrorism
coverage. Procedures for developing the property and liability
components, which are combined to determine the total BOP terrorism
premium, are provided in the manual supplements.
The Utah Insurance Department has issued
proposed rules for implementing its directive, reported in a
previous Advisory, that all filings be submitted electronically as of
July 1, 2007. Insurers are invited to comment on the proposal.
As of July 1,
insurers can choose between two electronic services for submitting
filings in Utah:
-
The System for
Electronic Rate and Form Filing (SERFF), developed under the
auspices of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners; and
-
A system
developed by Sircon Corporation, Okemos, Mich., and associated with
a group called the State Insurance Regulators Consortium (SIRC).
AAIS is a licensed
third-party provider of SERFF filings, and can submit custom filings of
company forms and manuals, whether or not they are based on AAIS
programs. For information, contact
compliance@AAISonline.com.
AAIS invites property/casualty professionals to
submit their observations and concerns regarding emerging exposures
through our new AAISalert web page.
The AAISalert online submission form asks users to describe
new exposures they are concerned about, indicate how they address the
exposure or plan to address it, and how it is likely to affect AAIS
programs. One need not be a
member of AAIS to participate.
Ideas generated through AAISalert may be
incorporated into AAIS's program revisions, and may also become topics
for meetings and publications
For more information, contact Joseph Harrington,
AAIS director of corporate communications, at joeh@AAISonline.com.