Printable
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Vol. 13 No.
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| Insuring
your businessare you prepared for the unexpected?
There are two
risk exposures that few business owners can afford to overlook:
property loss and liability loss. Property insurance generally
covers your building, contents, and equipment in the event
that physical property needs to be repaired or replaced due
to perils such as fire, theft, wind, or certain types of water
damage. Liability insurance helps protect you and your company
from liability arising from day-to-day business operations.
You should consider obtaining sufficient coverage for product
liability and premises liability to help protect your business
in the event someone is injured while using your products
or visiting your facility. In addition, business owners in
search of the most complete protection must also prepare for
the possibilities of business interruption, disability, and
the loss of key employees.
In
assessing the risk exposures particular to your business,
you should consider what can go wrong and how such events
might affect the running of your business. Once you have established
your potential vulnerabilities, consider which forms of insurance
coverage best meet your needs.
Business Owners
Policy: While property insurance and liability insurance
can be secured separately, a business owners policy bundles
both property and liability coverage in one package. This
combined policy typically covers business property that is
exposed to risks such as fire, smoke, hail, wind, theft, vandalism,
and some forms of water damage (for instance, from leaking
roofs or broken pipes). Insurable property includes, but is
not limited to: buildings, office furniture and equipment,
machinery, inventory, and signs. In addition, coverage may
also include protection against business interruption.
Business Interruption
Insurance: While few business owners would dare think
of leaving their buildings and contents uninsured, or their
businesses unprotected from liability, many neglect to insure
the purpose of their businessesthe earnings. Business
interruption insurance helps maintain a regular flow of earnings
after the business has been wholly or partially disabled by
a disaster. In other words, coverage is designed to do for
the business what the business would have done for itself
had no loss occurred, including paying for the lost net profits
of the business, plus any continuing expenses that may occur
during "down time" caused by a peril covered by
the policy.
Business Overhead
Expense Insurance: While preparing for business interruption
is important, so is preparing for the possibility that an
accident or illness could interrupt your ability to conduct
business. Could your firm survive if you were forced to stop
working? Business overhead expense insurance can help sustain
your business during a disability by paying expenses such
as: salaries and benefits; rent, lease, or mortgage payments;
property taxes; equipment costs; certain insurance premiums;
maintenance costs; and utility bills. In general, benefits
are: paid monthly after a predetermined waiting period; limited
to a maximum amount; and restricted to a specified length
of time (often from one to two years). Business overhead expense
insurance does not, however, replace the need for your own
personal disability income insurance, which protects your
income, and may replace 45% to 75% of your pre-disability
earnings. (For more information, please see related article
on page 3.)
Key Employee
Insurance: In addition to considering the potential for
your own health crisis, have you thought about the consequences
of suddenly losing a key employee to disability or death?
Along with losing a valued member of your management team,
you would also be losing the person’s skill, "know-how"
and, perhaps, the important business relationships he or she
had cultivated over the years. Key person insurance covers,
or "indemnifies," a company against the loss of
a valued team member’s skill and experience. The proceeds
help provide funds to recruit, hire, and train a replacement;
replace lost profits; and reassure lenders that funds will
be available to help repay business loans.
Because businesses
vary in nature, grow, and change, there is no standard insurance
policy available to cover all contingencies. For a review
of your coverage needs and your policy options please give
us a call. We can help you ensure the future of your business.
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| Occupational
safety and repetitive stress If
you spend time each day at a computer keyboard, you are probably
familiar with one form of repetitive stresscarpal tunnel
syndromethat can result in pain and/or numbness in the
wrist and fingers.
Repetitive stress
injuries (also called cumulative trauma disordersCTDs)
can result from repeating movements many times or working
in a prolonged awkward or cramped position, and can affect
the hands, wrists, arms, back, neck, and shoulders.
CTD
injuries are not new. In the 1800s, it was not uncommon for
telegraph operators to suffer from "telegrapher’s
finger," and workers in many other occupations (including
meat processors, roofers, auto workers, textile workers, assemblers,
and cashiers) have long been affected by repetitive motion
stress.
Ironically, since
writers, reporters, and editorswho now spend much of
their time at computer keyboardshave joined the growing
number of workers experiencing one form or another of repetitive
stress, CTDs have received more attention in the media.
A
Somewhat Cloudy Issue
Nevertheless,
the widespread recognition of repetitive stress injuries has
not brought complete clarity to the problem. If, as some suggest,
CTDs develop over a period of time possibly going back many
years, how much of CTDs is related to the aging process or
to stress outside rather than inside the workplace?
(Insurers are particularly interested in these questions,
because the answers will determine which insurance
mechanismprimary health, disability, or workers compensationwill
be most affected.)
Regardless of
where such injuries occur, and to what extent they are caused
or aggravated by the workplace, employers are facing increased
pressure from OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration)
to become proactive in the area of workplace injury
prevention. The business community is justifiably concerned
about how potential costs to control CTDs will, in fact, pay
off in terms of higher employee productivity, fewer CTD claims,
and lower insurance costs.
Redesigning
the Workplace
In the face of
these pressures and rising disability claims related to CTDs,
many companies are looking to consulting firms specializing
in ergonomics to help prevent CTDs and control risk exposure.
Ergonomics, also
known as human factors engineering, is the study of how people
interact with machines and their working environment. It examines
the nature of the job and the body movements necessary to
perform that job. The goal of studying these people-machine
relationships is to maximize worker performance, comfort,
and safety.
One of the key
elements of grassroots programs in injury prevention has been
the matching of employee capabilities to the demands of the
job. Starting with a worksite analysis to identify risk factors,
both the employee and the job may be "reengineered."
Redesigning a
job may involve implementing changes to work stations, tools,
or work requirements; reshaping employees may include providing
education to increase awareness and physical fitness programs
to enhance employee health. A less stressful work posture,
more frequent rest breaks, and job rotation are the types
of changes that may be implemented to help reduce CTDs.
OSHA emphasizes
that occupational ergonomic problems are a significant safety
and health concern in the workplace. The discovery
of risks in the workplace, the ability to modify the
work environment, and the training of the workforce will all
play a role in reducing work-related injuries. If ergonomic
reengineering of the workplace is successful, it should enhance
employee productivity and help control injury-related costs.
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Did
You Know
Working
Retirement?
Retirement
brings to mind relaxing days in the park, leisurely
golf games, and spending more time with family. However,
these days, more and more workers are expecting to
have to work even after they retire. According to
the Retirement Confidence Survey, conducted by the
Employee Benefits Research Institute (EBRI, 2004),
72% of workers ages 35-44 anticipate a working retirement.
This number dropped slightly for younger and older
workers. Only 67% of those aged 25-34 and 45-54 anticipate
a working retirement.
It’s
no secret that health insurance premiums are on the
rise. But how much are they increasing? According
to the National Association for the Self-Employed
(NASE, 2004), employer-sponsored health insurance
premiums have increased by more than 10% for the 4th
consecutive year (11.2% for 2004). The NASE also notes
that The Annual Employer Health Benefits Survey
reported only 63% of businesses with less than 200
employees offered any health care coverage at all.
Identity
theft crimes are increasing daily, and research reveals
that more fraud occurs offline than online. According
to The 2005 Fraud Survey Report by the Better
Business Bureau and Javelin Strategy and Research,
only 11.6% of ID fraud where the method of theft was
known resulted from computer crimes in 2004. Proper
computer protection, including virus and firewall
protection software, can protect your business and
financial data.
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For
Your Information
Training
at Home
Keeping
pace with the changing small business market can help
you maintain your competition advantage. To help,
the Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of
Entrepreneurial Development offers online training
that you can do in the comfort of your own home or
office. Their training comes from various departments
including: Women’s Business Centers (WBCs),
SCORE (Service Corps of Retired Executives) and Business
Information Centers (BICs). For more information,
check out the SBA online at www.sba.gov.
Some government
regulations require you to post certain federal notices
for your employees. Where can you get these posters?
The Department of Labor (DOL) website, www.dol.gov,
offers printable versions of many required posters,
such as for the "Fair Labor Standards Act,"
which describes minimum wage regulations, and the
"Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)." The
DOL makes these posters available in several languages.
Whether
you are just getting your small business off the ground
or have been in business for years, there is always
room for improvement. The Small Business Administration
(SBA) offers a number of free online training courses
to help you enhance your business skills. Courses
range from how to prepare your business’s federal
income taxes to learning technology basics. For more
information on these courses and the SBA’s
many other offerings, visit them online at www.sba.gov.
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| Protect
the MVP from a disability disaster You
may be your business’s most valuable player (MVP),
and proper measures should be taken in the event you suffer
a disability. To qualify for Social Security disability benefits,
you must be severely disabled and, even then, you will have
to wait at least six months for payments to begin. Social
Security disability was not intended to be an individual’s
sole source of disability income, thus benefits are often
less than what you might need to cover your regular living
expenses.
Disability
income insurance offers protection against an accident
or health crisis that limits your ability to earn income.
Depending on your income, the maximum coverage you can buy
may replace 45% to 75% of your pre-disability earnings. The
policy’s cost generally depends on such factors as
the risk level of your occupation, your age, health, and the
scope of coverage. Consider the following policy features:
- Definition
of Disability. Carefully review the definition of disability
in your policy. Some policies cover you if you are unable
to work in the occupation in which you were employed or
for which you were trained, or if you can no longer earn
as much as you once did in that field. In contrast, other
policies cover you only if you are unable to work in any
occupation. This distinction can make a big difference if
you become disabled.
- Residual
Benefits or Partial Disability Coverage. Under certain
specified circumstances, if you become disabled and are
only able to earn a portion of your previous income,
residual benefits or partial disability coverage pays a
portion of your benefits.
- Guaranteed
Renewable. With this feature, the insurer cannot refuse
to renew your policy or change any terms, except for premium
cost, as long as you continue to pay your premiums on time.
- Guaranteed
Insurability. This provision allows you to increase
your monthly benefit, even if you experience health changes
that would otherwise prevent you from obtaining additional
disability coverage.
- Cost-of-Living
Adjustment (COLA). This feature helps protect your benefits
against the effects of inflation during a long-term disability.
Also consider
a business over-head expense (BOE) policy that can
help cover lost profits and continuing fixed costs, such as
salaries and ongoing business expenses, in the event you suffer
a disability. In general, benefits are paid monthly after
a predetermined waiting period, limited to a maximum amount,
and restricted to a specified length of time (often from one
to two years). A thorough disability plan that includes both
disability income and business overhead expense insurance
can help protect your livelihood and ensure your business
stays up and running.
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Copyright
© 2005 Liberty Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved.
The content of this newsletter
is taken from sources that are believed to be reliable. However,
this newsletter
is not intended as a substitute for legal, financial, or professional
counsel.
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