Tag: resorts

  • Ski Resorts

    What is a Pollutant? 

    Any material, substance, liquid, product, etc… which is introduced into an environment for other than its intended use / purpose. Fresh water, cheese, and milk have all been classified as pollutants by Insurance Carriers under various circumstances. 

    Ski Resort owners should be aware that pollutants (such as mold / Legionella) are excluded from coverage on most General Liability policies. And General Liability policies that do provide pollution coverage, typically do so on a limited basis, with inadequate limits and/or strict discovery and reporting requirements for there to be coverage.  If you experience a pollution loss, will your insurance provide adequate coverage? 

    Environmental Exposures Impacting Ski Resorts

    May include, but are not limited to:  Storm water runoff,  Natural Resource Damages;  Wastewater treatment plants/pumping stations exposures from nuisance odor claims, raw sewage rupture, chlorine gas emissions;  Unknowingly using contaminated water for snowmaking,  Sick building syndrome;  Asbestos;  Lead;  Mold / Legionella;  Environmental cleanup and liabilities that result after a fire is extinguished;  Historic site conditions (i.e. old underground tanks, surface impoundments, lagoons, clarifiers, unknown/old landfills);  Sewer lines;  Maintenance/Service garages;  Aboveground and/or underground storage tanks;  Leaks from elevator hydraulic fluid storage tanks; Inadequate or no secondary containment for above ground storage tanks;  Equipment and Parts washer solvents;  Storage and use of pesticides and herbicides;  Air emissions from refrigeration equipment;  Petroleum waste products;  Vehicle and equipment storage/parking over unsealed surfaces;  Transfer and recycling facilities;  Incinerators (i.e. airborne particulates, heavy metals (airborne and in residual ash), airborne volatile organic compounds);  Spills/releases during loading/unloading process;  Waste handling and disposal operations;  No auditing of waste handling and disposal companies;  Possible adverse reactions and interactions of chemical compounds that accidentally commingle during a fire;  Leaking fluids and fuels from maintenance and grooming equipment;  Contamination from neighboring properties migrating onto your property…. 

    Environmental Claim Scenarios

    1. A ski resort unknowingly used contaminated water for its snow making resulting in hundreds of thousands of gallons of contaminated water being spread across the lower part of the mountain.  Old mining tailings from a closed down mine in the area was the source of the contamination and had been contaminating the water for some time. The resulting claim was for over $500,000 for the cleanup and remediation of the contaminated soil and mine area.
    2. A chlorine release from a wastewater treatment plant resulted in toxic air emissions. Area residents and businesses were evacuated, and several people were hospitalized for inhalation of fumes.  Bodily injury claims amounted to $70,000 and business interruption claims totaled $120,000.
    3. Maintenance workers at a resort were unloading 400-gallon totes of muriatic acid, which is used as a pool chemical.  One of the totes was dropped, releasing 150 gallons of the acid which ran into a nearby storm sewer.  The acid caused aquatic life to die and other natural resource damages.  Remediation costs and natural resource damages exceeded $400,000.
    4. While remodeling rooms at a hotel resort, contractors discovered mold within the building’s walls and ceilings. After further investigation, mold was also found throughout the property. Cost to remediate the mold and lost rental revenues during remediation cost the resort over $600,000. 
    5. During the night, a fire broke out and the fire department’s high-pressure hoses forced melting plastics, metals, insulation, roofing, drywall, chemicals, and other materials to build up inside the building’s foundation, creating a toxic “sludge”. Some of the toxic “sludge” escaped the building and migrated into the surrounding soils and a nearby stream. The property owner was responsible for clean-up costs and natural resource damages, which totaled over $2,000,000.  NOTE: fire departments are immune to pollution claims arising from their work while putting out fires.
    6. An electrical contractor was hired to upgrade a buildings electrical system.  During trenching operations, a backhoe hit a natural gas pipeline causing an explosion. Third parties filed bodily injury claims against the contractor, as well as the resort whose club house was destroyed in the explosion. Claims exceeded $4.5 million. 
    7. A maintenance garage used solvents for parts washing performed the work over a drain leading to an on-site septic system. Over time, the septic system leach field migrated into the surrounding soils and groundwater. At the time of the septic system closure and conversion to a public sewer system, the contamination was discovered. Site remediation involved soil removal and installation of a groundwater recovery system. The costs exceeded $720,000. 
    8. The facilities department for a ski resort hired a licensed hazardous waste transporter to deliver and pick-up three barrels of spent solvents, used for cleaning their boiler, to a treatment plant. While loading on the ski resort grounds, one barrel fell and spilled its contents, which seeped into the ground.  After a period, neighbors notified the state health department that their well water smelled odd.  Health officials determined that chemicals from the accident had seeped into their wells. The ski resort paid $1.2 million in damages and clean-up costs.
    9. A fiber optics company was hired to install a network of data and voice cables. The job included directional drilling under several roads. While drilling, the contractor hit a fuel line and did not report it.  After about 2 years, residents in the area smelled gas in their well water. During investigation, the damaged fuel line was discovered and determined as the source of contamination. Since the fiber optics company was no longer in business, the ski resort was held liable for damages and clean-up costs in excess of $2.7 million.

    Benefits of Environmental Liability Insurance

    Unlike most liability exposures impacting Ski Resorts, pollution losses are not a frequency risk, but rather a severity risk. Because all Ski Resorts have notable environmental exposures, consideration needs to be given to the economies of scale afforded with environmental liability insurance as part of your risk transfer strategy, versus self-insurance.

    Furthermore, most commercial insureds only consider the remediation costs associated with a pollution event. However, often the clean-up costs are far less than other costs that often arise from the loss.

    Overlooked Benefits of Environmental Liability Insurance:

    1. Defense Costs:  Environmental liabilities are relatively new and very litigious.  Even if you do nothing wrong you can still get named in a suit and must expense defense costs i.e. legal fees, environmental investigations, etc.  
    2. Claim Management:  All policies come with specialists to assist you in handling a claim.  Who oversees communications, public relations, emergency response, government compliance, financial management, third party claims for bodily injury, property damage, natural resource damages….?
    3. Third Party Liability:  Most the time the cost to clean up the environmental problem/s is far less than the associated claims that come in from third parties for bodily injury, property damage and business interruption.  You need to look at your client’s and neighbors that can be impacted if you or a sub-contractor/vendor cause an environmental loss.        

    Environmental Liability Insurance Coverages

    ENVIRONMENTAL IMPAIRMENT LIABILITY (EIL) 

    EIL is for ski resorts susceptible to economic loss caused by pollution that actually or allegedly originated from their operations.  Sometimes referred to as pollution legal liability this coverage is for those who own, operate, lease, or have any other insurable interest in real property and the operations. Coverage can be written in a variety of ways addressing unknown preexisting conditions or new conditions.  Coverage can include third party bodily injury and property damage along with business interruption and extra expense, on and off site clean up costs, legal defense expenses, non-owned disposal sites, transportation and more. EIL can be offered on multi year terms.  Sewer lines and pump/lift stations can be covered by EIL.  Most EIL policies cover above ground storage tanks.

    PROPERTY TRANSFER COVERAGE 

    When buying, selling or condemning property their can be unknown preexisting environmental conditions. Since a Phase I or Phase II survey cannot guarantee uncovering all potential environmental liabilities, insurance companies have created property transfer insurance. This coverage protects the new owner or any party with an insurable interest, against unknown environmental conditions that may be discovered during the policy period, that were not caused by the new owner.  This coverage not only helps to keep the property at its maximum value, it will assist the purchaser in being able to secure the necessary financing to complete their transaction. 

    TRANSPORTATION POLLUTION LIABILITY

    Generally, business auto or truckers’ policies will exclude pollution losses arising from spills or other releases of their cargo. Transportation pollution liability affords coverage during the loading, unloading and transportation, for a spill, release or sudden upset and over turn of transported cargo.  Note:  An MCS-90 endorsement is not pollution coverage.  

    UNDERGROUND AND ABOVE GROUND STORAGE TANKS 

    Financial responsibility requirements ensure that owners and operators of underground storage tank systems have the ability to financially handle a release from an underground storage tank. The responsibility encompasses the ability to pay funds for corrective action and third party bodily injury and property damage from non-sudden and sudden and accidental releases from a regulated underground system. 

    Note:  For Ski Resorts, you have potential indirect environmental exposures from the vendors you hire to perform services.  Should your vendors cause an environmental problem or exacerbate an existing environmental issue their general liability insurance policy generally will have either an absolute or total pollution exclusion.  In order to be protected you should make sure your vendors have the proper environment insurance coverage before they do any work on your behalf.

    CONTRACTORS POLLUTION LIABILITY 

    Ski Resorts have potential indirect environmental exposures from the service vendors & contractors they hire to perform work on their behalf.  CPL insurance protects Ski resorts should their vendors cause or exacerbate an environmental condition. 

  • Hotels & Resorts

    What is a Pollutant? 

    Any material, substance, liquid, product, etc… which is introduced into an environment for other than its intended use / purpose. In other words, something that ends up where it doesn’t belong. Fresh water, cheese, and milk have all been classified as pollutants by Insurance Carriers under various circumstances. 

    Most commercial insureds assume that claims arising from their operations are covered by the general liability policy. However, claims resulting from a “pollution incident” are excluded from most general liability policies, which leaves commercial insureds with gaps in coverage. What pollutants are impacting your business?

    Environmental Exposures Impacting Hotels & Resorts 

    May include, but are not limited to:  Storm water runoff;  Natural resource damages;  Pollution from neighboring properties migrating onto yours;  Vapor intrusion;  Meth labs;  Pollution cleanup and third party liabilities that occur after a fire;  Wastewater treatment plants/pumping stations, exposures from nuisance odor;  Raw sewage backup or rupture;  Sick building syndrome;  Asbestos;  Lead;  Mold / Legionella;  Historic site conditions;  Chemicals stored and used for pool and spa facilities; Aboveground and/or underground storage tanks;  Leaks from elevator hydraulic fluid storage tanks; Storage and use of pesticides (Glyphosate) and herbicides; Spills/releases during loading/unloading operations from trucks or other delivery devices;  Waste handling and disposal operations;  No auditing of waste handling and disposal companies;  Possible adverse reactions and interactions of chemical compounds that accidentally commingle during a fire; Maintenance/Service garages;  Generators for backup power;  Language barriers with employees;  Easements that cross the property which may leak or spill hazardous materials;  Impacting underground utilities during construction;  Release of pollutants during a convention or special event;  Janitorial cleaning compounds;  No emergency and spill control plans; Brownfields….

    Environmental Claim Scenarios

    1. A chlorine release from a wastewater treatment plant at a resort resulted in toxic air emissions. Resort guests, area residents and businesses were evacuated, and several people were hospitalized for inhalation of fumes. Bodily injury claims amounted to $70,000 and business interruption claims totaled $120,000. 
    2. Several hotel guest complained of air in the hotel that was making them nauseous.  Hotel security discovered a meth lab operating in one of the hotel rooms.  Emergency responders were called in to properly handle and dispose of hazardous materials.  Clean up costs, remodeling, third party bodily injury claims exceeded $100,000- and first-party business income was in excess of $60,000.
    3. A new hotel had construction halted after the discovery of an abandoned unknown surface lagoon used by a past property owner as part of their manufacturing operations.  As a result of haphazard business practices by the former owner, there were a wide array of waste materials disposed at the site. An investigation revealed that the waste materials covered about two acres.  The cost to remediate the site exceeded $2 million. 
    4. Maintenance workers were unloading a tote holding 400 gallons of muriatic acid which is used as a pool chemical.  The tote was dropped releasing 150 gallons of the acid which ran into a nearby storm sewer.  The acid caused an aquatic life die and other natural resource damages.  Remediation costs and natural resource damages exceeded $400,000.
    5. A major fire breakout and the fire department’s high-pressure hoses forced melting plastics, metals, insulation, roofing, drywall, chemicals, and other materials to build up inside the building’s foundation, creating a toxic “sludge”. Some of the “sludge” escaped the building and migrated onto to neighboring properties. The hotel owner was responsible for clean-up, 3rd party property damage & business interruption, and natural resource damages, which totaled over $3,500,000.  NOTE: fire departments are immune to pollution claims arising from their work while putting out fires.  
    6. During a medical convention, one of the vendors with a booth that supplied medical gasses had a faulty valve release anesthesia.  Attendees had to be evacuated and the convention shut down while emergency responders cleared the air.  Several people needed medical attention.  Cost for emergency responders, bodily injury claims and business interruption for the convention exceeded $125,000.  
    7. A dairy farm had a pipe break on their manure lagoon releasing in excess of 250,000 gallons of raw manure into a nearby stream.  The stream went through a resort where it then emptied into the ocean.  The smell from the manure in the stream caused the hotel to relocate guests.  Business income for the hotel was in excess of $2,500,000.  
    8. Legionella was discovered in the water supply of a resort.  The resort hotel had to be vacated while their water system went through treatment for the Legionella.  In addition to the remediation costs, several guests sued the resort claiming bodily injury from exposure to Legionella.  
    9. The concrete secondary containment of a 10,000-gallon diesel aboveground storage tank was cracked. A release from the tank spilled 8,000 gallons into the containment. The diesel seeped into the underlying soils and required costly excavation and removal. The total cost for investigation, removal and disposal exceeded $320,000. 
    10. A maintenance employee could speak English but they could not read English.  The employee accidentally mixed a hazardous chemical with a cleaning solvent which created a hazardous vapor cloud.  The building had to be evacuated and several people were treated for inhalation of the toxic fumes.  Remediation and bodily injury claims exceeded $1,000,000.   
    11. The presence of Legionella was detected in the hot water system of a resort.  The state health department got involved and a consultant was hired to investigate and remediate the property.  A claim was made immediately for the remediation and what could have been an extensive and lengthy remediation process was completed efficiently – significantly reducing the length of business interruption for the resort owners. 

    Benefits of Environmental Liability Insurance

    Unlike most liability exposures impacting Hotels & Resorts, pollution losses are not a frequency risk, but rather a severity risk. Since every Hotel & Resort has numerous environmental liabilities, consideration needs to be given to the economies of scale afforded with environmental liability insurance as part of your risk transfer strategy, versus self-insurance.

    Furthermore, most commercial insureds only consider the remediation costs associated with a pollution event. However, often the clean-up costs are far less than other costs that can arise from the loss.

    Overlooked benefits of Environmental Liability Insurance:

    1. Defense Costs:  Environmental liabilities are relatively new and very litigious.  Even if you do nothing wrong you can still get named in a suit and must expense defense costs i.e. legal fees, environmental investigations, etc.  
    2. Claim Management:  All policies come with specialists to assist you in handling a claim.  Who oversees communications, public relations, emergency response, government compliance, financial management, third party claims for bodily injury, property damage, natural resource damages….?
    3. Third Party Liability:  The majority of the time the cost to clean up the environmental problem/s is far less than the associated claims that come in from third parties for bodily injury, property damage and business interruption.  You need to look at your client’s and neighbors that can be impacted if you or a sub-contractor/vendor cause an environmental loss.        

    Environmental Liability Insurance Products 

    Environmental Impairment Liability (EIL) 

    EIL is for Hotels & Resorts susceptible to economic loss caused by pollution that actually or allegedly originated from their operations.  Sometimes referred to as pollution legal liability this coverage is for those who own, operate, lease, or have any other insurable interest in real property and the operations. Coverage can be written in a variety of ways addressing unknown preexisting conditions or new conditions.  Coverage can include third party bodily injury and property damage along with business interruption and extra expense, on and off site cleanup costs, legal defense expenses, non-owned disposal sites, transportation and more. EIL can be offered on multi year terms.  Sewer lines and pump/lift stations can be covered by EIL.  Most EIL policies cover above ground storage tanks.

    Property Transfer Coverage

    When buying or selling property there can be unknown preexisting environmental conditions. Since a Phase I or Phase II survey cannot guarantee uncovering all potential environmental liabilities, insurance companies have created property transfer insurance. This coverage protects the new owner or any party with an insurable interest, against unknown environmental conditions that may be discovered during the policy period, that were not caused by the new owner.  This coverage not only helps to keep the property at its maximum value, it will assist the purchaser in being able to secure the necessary financing to complete their transaction. 

    Transportation Pollution Liability

    Generally, business auto or trucker’s policies will exclude pollution losses arising from spills or other releases of their cargo. Transportation pollution liability affords coverage during the loading, unloading and transportation, for a spill, release or sudden upset and overturn of transported cargo.  Note:  An MCS-90 endorsement is not pollution coverage.  

    Underground and Aboveground Storage Tanks

    Financial responsibility requirements ensure that owners and operators of underground storage tank systems have the ability to financially handle a release from an underground storage tank. The responsibility encompasses the ability to pay funds for corrective action and third party bodily injury and property damage from non-sudden and sudden and accidental releases from a regulated underground system.  

    Contractors Pollution Liability (CPL)

    Hotels and Resorts have potential indirect environmental exposures from the service vendors & contractors they hire to perform work on their behalf.  CPL insurance protects Hotels and Resorts should their vendors cause or exacerbate an environmental condition. 

  • Golf & Ski Resorts

    What is a Pollutant? 

    Any material, substance, liquid, product, etc… which is introduced into an environment for other than its intended use / purpose. Fresh water, cheese, and milk have all been classified as pollutants by Insurance Carriers under various circumstances. 

    Golf & Ski Resort owners should be aware that pollutants (such as mold) are excluded from coverage on most General Liability policies. And General Liability policies that do provide pollution coverage, typically do so on a limited basis, with inadequate limits and/or strict discovery and reporting requirements for there to be coverage. If you experience a pollution loss, will your insurance provide adequate coverage? 

    Environmental Exposures Impacting Golf & Ski Resorts

    May include, but are not limited to: Natural Resource Damages;  PFAS Chemicals;  Over application of fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides (Glyphosate);  Stormwater Runoff;  Improper storage of batteries and raw  materials/chemicals/fuels/lubricants/anti-freeze;  Leaking underground or above ground storage tanks; Vandalism;  Equipment storage areas where oils and other contaminants percolate into the soil and ground water;  Bodily injury and property damage to neighboring properties;  Absence of comprehensive and coordinated spill control plans;  uncertainties about the historical use and conditions on the property;  Contamination from neighboring properties migrating onto yours;  Improper onsite waste storage;  No auditing of waste handling and disposal companies;  Use of fill materials which contain unknown contaminants;  Pollution cleanup and liabilities as the result of a fire;  Air emissions from onsite refrigeration systems;  Sick building syndrome;  Vapor Intrusion;  Drums / totes… stored in unsecured areas with no secondary containment;  Old septic systems;  Nuisance odors;  Spills and leaks from the storage and handling  (loading/unloading) of material containers such as drums, totes or bags from vehicles;  Corroded wastewater and storm water sewers;  Failure or overflow from on site waste water treatment facilities;  Failure of backup generator for waste water treatment facilities;  Easements/utilities that cross the property that may leak or spill hazardous materials;  Hazardous materials from adjacent roads or railways due to truck, train, barge accidents; Old, abandoned wells which are not properly closed and serve as an open conduit for soil and ground water contamination;  Improper management of protected or sensitive areas such as wetlands;  Excavation through and spreading of unknown pre-existing contaminated soil;  Impacting ground water from drilling and excavation work;  Impacting underground utility lines/services or other underground structures;  siltation of nearby streams and other bodies of water from improper erosion control management; Legionella / mold….

    Environmental Claim Scenarios

    1. Maintenance workers at a resort were unloading 400-gallon totes of muriatic acid, which is used as a pool chemical.  One of the totes was dropped, releasing 150 gallons of the acid which ran into a nearby storm sewer.  The acid caused aquatic life to die and other natural resource damages.  Remediation costs and natural resource damages exceeded $400,000.
    2. While remodeling rooms at a hotel resort, contractors discovered mold within the building’s walls and ceilings. After further investigation, mold was also found throughout the property. Cost to remediate the mold and lost rental revenues during remediation cost the resort over $600,000. 
    3. A residential community located adjacent to a golf course received its water supply from groundwater wells. Over time, the application of herbicides, pesticides, and fertilizers caused groundwater contamination. Bodily injury claims were filed by residents for perceived injuries from drinking contaminated water. Property damage claims were filed because the groundwater system was no longer a suitable drinking source. Total claims exceeded $1,500,000. 
    4. A convention taking place at a golf & ski resort was disrupted and forced to relocate because of the odor from an onsite wastewater treatment plant. A suit in the amount of $100,000 was filed against the golf resort for loss of enjoyment and for costs to relocate the convention. 
    5. During the night, a fire broke out and the fire department’s high-pressure hoses forced melting plastics, metals, insulation, roofing, drywall, chemicals, and other materials to build up inside the building’s foundation, creating a toxic “sludge”. Some of the toxic “sludge” escaped the building and migrated into the surrounding soils and a nearby stream. The property owner was responsible for clean-up costs and natural resource damages, which totaled over $2,000,000.  NOTE: fire departments are immune to pollution claims arising from their work while putting out fires.  
    6. A ski resort unknowingly used contaminated water for its snow making resulting in hundreds of thousands of gallons of contaminated water being spread across the lower part of the mountain. Old mining tailings from a closed down mine in the area was the source of the contamination and had been contaminating the water for some time. The resulting claim was for over $500,000 for the cleanup and remediation of the contaminated soil.
    7. A golf and ski resort stored gasoline in steel underground storage tanks (UST’s) for use in tractors, lawn mowers and golf carts. Tank corrosion led to a discharge of petroleum products, which contaminated the surrounding soil and groundwater. Remediation expenses incurred for the investigation and cleanup of the site amounted to $350,000. 
    8. A golf course sent its waste golf cart batteries to an off-site facility for disposal. Over a period of several years, the facility did not adhere to applicable federal and state environmental regulations, and the golf course was found jointly liable for pollution conditions caused by the battery disposal facility. The settlement for cleanup exceeded $175,000. 
    9. An electrical contractor was hired to upgrade a buildings electrical system.  During trenching operations, a backhoe hit a natural gas pipeline causing an explosion. Third parties filed bodily injury claims against the contractor, as well as the resort whose club house was destroyed in the explosion. Claims exceeded $4.5 million. 
    10. A maintenance employee of a hotel could speak English but could not read English.  The employee accidentally mixed a hazardous chemical with a cleaning solvent which created a hazardous vapor cloud.  The hotel had to be evacuated and several people were treated for inhalation of the toxic fumes.  Remediation and bodily injury claims exceeded $1,000,000.   
    11. The presence of Legionella was detected in the hot water system of a resort.  The state health department got involved and a consultant was hired to investigate and remediate the property.  A claim was made immediately for the remediation and what could have been an extensive and lengthy remediation process was completed efficiently – significantly reducing the length of business interruption for the resort owners.

    Overlooked Benefits of Environmental Liability Insurance

    Unlike most liability exposures impacting Golf & Ski Resorts, pollution losses are not a frequency risk, but rather a severity risk. Because all Golf & Ski Resorts have notable environmental exposures, consideration needs to be given to the economies of scale afforded with environmental liability insurance as part of your risk transfer strategy, versus self-insurance.

    Furthermore, most commercial insureds only consider the remediation costs associated with a pollution event. However, often the clean-up costs are far less than other costs that often arise from the loss.

    Overlooked Benefits of Environmental Liability Insurance:

    1. Defense Costs:  Environmental liabilities are relatively new and very litigious.  Even if you do nothing wrong you can still get named in a suit and must expense defense costs i.e. legal fees, environmental investigations, etc.  
    2. Claim Management:  All policies come with specialists to assist you in handling a claim.  Who oversees communications, public relations, emergency response, government compliance, financial management, third party claims for bodily injury, property damage, natural resource damages….?
    3. Third Party Liability:  Most the time the cost to clean up the environmental problem/s is far less than the associated claims that come in from third parties for bodily injury, property damage and business interruption.  You need to look at your client’s and neighbors that can be impacted if you or a sub-contractor/vendor cause an environmental loss.        

    Environmental Liability Insurance Coverages

    Environmental Impairment Liability (EIL) 

    EIL is for golf and Ski Resorts susceptible to economic loss caused by pollution that actually or allegedly originated from their operations.  Sometimes referred to as pollution legal liability this coverage is for those who own, operate, lease, or have any other insurable interest in real property and the operations. Coverage can be written in a variety of ways addressing unknown preexisting conditions or new conditions.  Coverage can include third party bodily injury and property damage along with business interruption and extra expense, on and off site cleanup costs, legal defense expenses, non-owned disposal sites, transportation and more. EIL can be offered on multiyear terms.  Most EIL policies cover above ground storage tanks.

    Transportation Pollution Liability (TPL)

    Generally, Commercial Auto policies will exclude pollution losses arising from spills or other releases of their cargo. Broadened Transportation Pollution Liability affords coverage during the loading, unloading and transportation, for a spill, release or sudden upset and overturn of transported cargo. 

    Property Transfer Coverage

    When buying or selling property there can be unknown preexisting environmental conditions. Since environmental due diligence (Phase I, Phase II, BEA…) cannot guarantee uncovering all potential environmental liabilities, insurance companies have created property transfer insurance. This coverage protects the new owner or any party with an insurable interest, against unknown environmental conditions that may be discovered during the policy period, that were not caused by the new owner. This coverage not only helps to keep the property at its maximum value, it will assist the purchaser in being able to secure the necessary financing to complete their transaction. 

    Contractors Pollution Liability (CPL)

    Golf & Ski Resorts have potential indirect environmental exposures from the service vendors & contractors they hire to perform work on their behalf.  CPL insurance protects real estate owners / developers should their vendors cause or exacerbate an environmental condition. 

    Underground and Above Ground Storage Tanks 

    Financial responsibility requirements ensure that owners and operators of underground storage tank systems can financially handle a release from an underground storage tank. The responsibility encompasses the ability to pay funds for corrective action and third-party bodily injury and property damage from non-sudden and sudden and accidental releases from a regulated underground system.  Several states offer tank funds.  It’s necessary to make sure if your state has a tank fund that is financially sound and the time it takes to get reimbursed.