
Industry News

How Rising Pure Premium Rates Will Impact the Tree Care Industry
Author, Rory Anderson, Account Executive, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.
In California, each workers’ compensation insurance company has its own set of base rates for each class of business. In order to come up with their base rate for each class code, the insurance carrier applies their Loss Cost Multiplier (LCM) to the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau’s (WCIRB) pure premium rates.
Author, Rory Anderson, Account Executive, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.
In California, each workers’ compensation insurance company has its own set of base rates for each class of business. In order to come up with their base rate for each class code, the insurance carrier applies their Loss Cost Multiplier (LCM) to the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau’s (WCIRB) pure premium rates.
Pure premium rates are determined by the WCIRB and include the loss cost of claims for that particular class of business. Those costs include:
The cost of the claim itself (i.e., indemnity, medical and expense payments)
Loss adjustment expenses
Future loss adjustment expenses (e.g., fees for expert witnesses and salary/overhead for outside legal counsel)
A pure premium rate reflects the amount of losses that an insurance carrier can expect to pay out in claims for that class of business. Every 6 months, the WCIRB submits pure premium rates to the California Department of Insurance for approval. These pure premium rates are based on loss and payroll data submitted to the WCIRB by all the insurance companies in California.
A carrier’s LCM will include those additional expenses separate of the pure premium rate considerations. These would include a carrier’s:
General overhead expenses (e.g., rent, payroll, employee benefits, etc.)
Sales and Marketing
Taxes, licenses and fees
Profit
The 2021 pure premium rate in the tree care industry (class code 0106) has increased to $10.50 per $100 in payroll, which is roughly a 3.5% increase from last year’s $10.15. This means that the overall workers’ compensation claim activity in the tree care industry is up about 3.5%, and the WCIRB is recommending that workers’ compensation insurance carriers increase their base rates to address this change.
As a tree care professional, what can your company do to prepare for this change and mitigate the impact to your business? Reviewing your claims experience, benchmarking your company with the tree care industry, looking for root causes of the claims, and then implementing best practices safety trainings will go a long way in providing you a path to insulate you from future changes like these.
As part of our proprietary TreeOne™ program, we have created a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) dashboard for the tree care industry that puts this information at your fingertips. To see how you compare with your peers, request the KPI Dashboard for your company.
For more information on rising pure premium rates, contact me at (619) 486-6437 or randerson@ranchomesa.com.
Profitable Bids Should Include Often Overlooked Insurance Costs
Author, Casey Craig, Account Executive, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.
We will take a look at factors that go into your bid and ways to ensure you are hitting your target profit margin. There are many factors that go into creating a profitable bid on a construction project. They include…
Author, Casey Craig, Account Executive, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.
We will take a look at factors that go into your bid and ways to ensure you are hitting your target profit margin.
There are many factors that go into creating a profitable bid on a construction project. They include:
The scope of the work
The location of the project
Material costs
Labor costs
For most construction companies, their estimators are well versed in all of the areas mentioned earlier and yet despite their best efforts, an unforeseen circumstance may occur and drive up the cost of a project, resulting in reduced profitability or a loss on the project.
One area that is often overlooked, but controllable, is the impact insurance has on the profitability of the project. The question to ask is how prepared are you and your staff to address the following questions:
Do you have the required insurance, coverages, limits, and terms in place to meet the contractual requirements of the project? If not, what will be the cost to add those requirements?
Will the project overlap your insurance renewal? If so, what changes in your Experience Modification Rate (EMR) can you anticipate and what will be the dollar impact?
What changes in your General Liability and Excess Insurance rates can you expect?
Working with your insurance advisor on the above is a necessary step is helping to create a better opportunity for profitable jobs. At Rancho Mesa, we follow strict Best Practices and have prescheduled meetings with our insureds throughout the policy term, but additionally conduct a focused pre-renewal meeting 120 days prior to policy expiration.
Those meetings allow us to:
Keep our clients aware of changes in the insurance marketplace that may impact their business.
Project their EMR for the coming year and discuss how this might influence your bidding process.
Review industry workers’ compensation trends in both Pure Premium Rates and Expected Loss Rates and their impact on workers compensation costs.
So, work with your insurance advisor and uncover those overlooked insurance costs to minimize risk and maximize profitability. To understand these factors in more detail or to look at our new KPI Dashboard that puts this information at your fingertips you can reach me at 619-486-6900 or ccraig@ranchomesa.com.