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Developing A Strong Subcontract Agreement with Tree Care Partners

Author, Drew Garcia, Vice President of the Landscape Group, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

Having strong service partners that support your customers outside of your core operations is an important part of business. Many commercial landscape businesses have regional relationships with professional tree care companies to support the needs of their customers.

Author, Drew Garcia, Vice President of the Landscape Group, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

Having strong service partners that support your customers outside of your core operations is an important part of business. Many commercial landscape businesses have regional relationships with professional tree care companies to support the needs of their customers.

Here are some of the key components when setting up your overall subcontract program, specific to the tree care industry.

Written Subcontract Agreement

Work with your attorney to draft a master subcontract agreement or project/job specific subcontract agreement since the type of indemnity agreements can change from state to state.

Among other things this agreement should clearly define indemnity and provide insurance requirements.

Insurance Requirements

Limits
Collaborate with your insurance advisor to specify the types of coverages and policy limits you will require in the subcontract agreement. 

Arborist Errors & Omissions Coverage
The tree care company should carry some type of Arborist E&O endorsement or have a separate policy providing coverage for Arborist E&O.

Depending on the scope of work, if the tree care company is providing written arborist reports or providing professional consulting services, require them to carry professional liability coverage.

Additional Insured
Ask the tree care company to name you as an additional insured for both ongoing and completed operations coverage, including primary/non-contributory and waiver of subrogation on their general liability policy in your favor.

Certificates of Insurance
Collect certificates of insurance and automate the process of requesting an updated certificate as the policy period nears expiration.

Transferring risk where possible is critical for landscape contractors. Using these initial steps as you build out a best practice subcontract agreement can insulate your company from the ever growing exposures that exist as you engage with partner trades.

To discuss your company’s management of risk, contact me, Drew Garcia, at (619) 937-0200 or drewgarcia@ranchomesa.com.

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Construction, Landscape, Ask the Expert Alyssa Burley Construction, Landscape, Ask the Expert Alyssa Burley

Three Reasons to Read Subcontractor Warranty Endorsements

Author, Sam Clayton, Vice President, Construction Group, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

Contractors General Liability Policies provide coverage for bodily injury and property damage for which the Named Insured is legally liable.  This legal liability can result from the company’s direct operations or from other subcontractors hired by the Named Insured.

Author, Sam Clayton, Vice President, Construction Group, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

Man reading a contract with pen in hand.

Contractors General Liability Policies provide coverage for bodily injury and property damage for which the named insured is legally liable. This legal liability can result from the company’s direct operations or from other subcontractors hired by the named insured.

Many general liability carriers will include some form of subcontractor warranty endorsement which establishes minimum requirements for subcontractors relative to insurance and other risk management benchmarks. At a minimum, these forms require written indemnification in favor of the named insured, certificates of insurance with additional insured wording, and specific insurance limits required by subcontractors.

These endorsements can vary widely from carrier to carrier; so, contractors may be faced with serious consequences in the event that requirements are not met. Below are three types of penalties policyholders may encounter:

  1. Coverage is DENIED relative to any loss resulting from the work of the subcontractors.
  2. Coverage is not altered, but a higher deductible or retained limit applies to any loss resulting from the work of the subcontractor. For example, should you fail to comply with the warranty, the deductible on the policy is amended from $5K to $25K.
  3. Coverage is not altered, but failure to comply will result in an additional premium charged at the final audit.

It is critical to have a strong contractual written transfer program in place with proper certificates of insurance from your subcontractors, regardless of the contract amount. Lean on your broker to interpret these endorsements and help negotiate the most favorable terms as you head into your renewal. Understanding these nuances can be the difference between a covered loss and an unexpected large capital expense.

For more information about subcontractor warranty endorsements, contact Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc. at (619) 937-0164.

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