Commercial Applicator Auto Liability Insurance

Many applicators will transport their own chemicals to the job sites. What is not commonly known is the auto policy is designed to cover the cost to clean-up a pollution event “provided the pollution is material pertinent to the operation of the vehicle”.  In other words, oil and gas/diesel. The coverage to cleanup a chemical spill is usually found in the general liability – some companies provide the coverage as part of the package,  some charge for the coverage and some carriers do not offer any type of transit (cleanup spill) coverage. The applicator should make sure there is coverage available (or at least the option to decline) to cover the cost to cleanup an accidental spill due to vehicle overturn or collision.

Jeanette Heinrichs
Commercial Insurance
jheinric@vanbeurden.com
Kingsburg • (559) 634-7113
Subscribe to Jeanette's RSS Feed

Contact Jeanette

California Commercial Applicator Insurance

For the Commercial Applicator, unlike any other profession, the Calif. Dept. of Pesticide Regulation not only mandates insurance limits in order to obtain & maintain the applicator’s license, they also define the coverage required. The three points of coverage are:

1. Covers crop or landscape or property damage as a result of a drift from the area of treatment.

2. Covers crop or landscape or property damage that may result from the handling of a pesticide or equipment failure during the pesticide application.

3. Covers bodily injury to persons not involved with the pesticide application when the pesticide is directly or indirectly applied on them and results in an illness, or injury.

Drift, Equipment failure and Bodily Injury are self explanatory. Where the coverage challenge exists is in the definition of “Handling”. “The term “Handle” is defined by the State of California Dept of Pesticide Regulation as: mixing, loading, transferring, applying (including chemigation), or assisting with the application of pesticides, maintaining, servicing, repairing, cleaning, handling equipment used in these activities that may contain residues, working with opened (including emptied but not rinsed) containers of pesticides, adjusting, repairing, or removing treatment site coverings, incorporating (mechanical or watered-in) pesticides into the soil, entering a treated area during any application or before the inhalation exposure level listed on pesticide product labeling has been reached or greenhouse ventilation criteria have been met.”

This wording requires the applicator to be responsible for damages to the surrounding area and to the crop the applicator is working with. Between the pollution exclusion and the “care custody & control” exclusion, the standard general liability policy excludes the required coverage.

In order to obtain the correct coverage, the applicator must purchase a policy specifically designed to cover the exposures outlined by Calif. DPR.  This type of policy is a specialty and not provided by most insurance carriers.

If you have questions about the required coverage or related issues – please contact me at: Direct Line (559) 634-7113 or email: jheinric@vanbeurden.com

Jeanette Heinrichs, CPIW, Vice President, Van Beurden Ins. Services, Inc.

Jeanette Heinrichs
Commercial Insurance
jheinric@vanbeurden.com
Kingsburg • (559) 634-7113
Subscribe to Jeanette's RSS Feed

Contact Jeanette

Hello from Jeanette in Kingsburg!

Hello world!

My first job was in the insurance business. I’ve been a service rep, a claims manager, an agency office manager and now I am an experienced agribusiness specialist for commercial applicators, landscapers and farmers.

Happy New Year 2010, and thanks for reading my first blog post. We plan to update these soon.

Jeanette Heinrichs
Commercial Insurance
jheinric@vanbeurden.com
Kingsburg • (559) 634-7113
Subscribe to Jeanette's RSS Feed

Contact Jeanette

Van Beurden Insurance celebrates 75 years.