Workers
Compensation Coverages
Workers Compensation
Insurance
This coverage agreement obligates the insurer to pay all compensation
and other benefits required of the insured by the workers compensation
law or occupational disease law of any state listed in the policy.
The coverage applies to bodily injury by accident and by disease.
Coverage (A) shows no dollar limit for the benefits provided since
any applicable limits would be those established within the law.
Benefits under coverage (A) are paid to the employee without regard
to fault.
Employers Liability
This coverage protects employers for their legal liability for bodily
injury by accident or disease to an employee arising out of and
in the course of the employee's employment when not covered under
the workers compensation law. Before benefits are paid under this
coverage, the employee must prove the employer is liable for the
injury.
Bodily Injury By Accident
This amount is the most an insurer will pay under coverage (B) for
all claims arising from any one accident, regardless of how many
employees are involved in the accident. The standard limit is $100,000
for any one accident, which can be increased.
Bodily Injury By Disease (Policy Limit)
This is the aggregate limit the insurer will pay under coverage
(B) for all claims sustaining bodily injury by disease during the
policy period. The standard policy limit is $500,000, which can
be increased.
Bodily Injury By Disease (Each Employee)
This amount is the most an insurer will pay under coverage (B) for
damages due to bodily injury by disease to any one employee. The
standard limit of liability for each employee is $100,000, which
can be increased.
Other States Insurance
This provides workers compensation coverages if the insured expands
operations into other states not declared at the time the policy
is issued or renewed. If the insured elects this coverage and operations
begin in a state listed under other states, the insurer provides
the same coverage as if the state was declared in the policy at
the time of policy issuance
.
Voluntary Compensation Endorsement
Workers compensation laws of most states exempt some types of employment
from workers compensation benefits. This endorsement amends the
standard policy to provide coverage for employees with exempted
occupations from the workers compensation act. When the endorsement
is added it does not make employees subject to the workers compensation
law, but it obligates the insurance company to pay on behalf of
the insured, an amount equal to the compensation benefits that would
be payable to those employees if they were subject to the workers
compensation law of that state.
United States Longshore & Harbor Workers Endorsement (USL&HW)
This is a federal act which is similar to the state workers compensation
act. The federal act was designed to provide workers compensation
benefits to employees who work in maritime employment upon the navigable
waters of the United States and who are usually considered outside
the scope of state workers compensation laws. When the USL & HWA
endorsement is added to the standard policy it applies to work done
in the states scheduled on the policy and extends the definition
of the workers compensation law to include the USL & HWCA.
Executive Officers, Partners Exclusion Endorsement
In some states, workers compensation law allows an insured to include
or exclude Executive Officers and Partners, or both, from coverage.
Adding this endorsement can designate the individuals not covered
under the policy.
Experience Modification
This is a factor that deals with the rating of the policy. The Experience
Modification figure is based on the insured's loss experience. The
factor is used to increase or decrease the manual rates of insurance.
Monopolistic States
There are six states that require all workers compensation insurance
to be placed with their state fund. No private insurer is allowed
to write Workers Compensation Coverage in the six states. The states
are Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Washington, Wyoming and West Virginia.
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