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Sharply rising insurance costs cast a long shadow over residential homes

Posted: 13 March 2003 | Subscribe Online


Hundreds more children's care homes could be threatened with closure as the cost of insurance premiums for employer liability continues to rise, the National Association of Independent Resources for Children conference was told.

The warning follows news that the number of insurers prepared to underwrite care homes against incidents in the workplace has fallen dramatically. This, combined with a rise in claims and sums awarded, has seen care home premiums rise by up to 700 per cent.

Liberal Democrat social care spokesperson Paul Burstow told the conference last week that the lack of consistency in premiums was forcing some providers out of the market.
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"There is a shortage of coverage. The number of syndicates at Lloyd's underwriting this insurance has gone down from 12 to three in the past year.

"Owners are being told just a few days before their policy expires that premiums are going up or that the insurer is no longer going to insure in this type of business area," he said.

Burstow said the market was "letting down" too many providers and called for an individual home's premiums to be calculated on their own claims record and ability to manage risk rather than looking at the sector as a whole, as is currently the case.

"We should be saying this is not the way to be working this. It should reflect your business's ability to manage risk and, if you do well, you should pay less."
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He also criticised the Health and Safety Executive for reducing its "proactive" role in checking providers had insurance cover.

"It has reduced by a third the number of inspections it carries out, but at the same time dramatically increased the number of investigations it does," he said.

He called for the HSE to change its practice and, in areas of greatest need, to cap insurance costs.

Last July, Nairc held an emergency meeting after being inundated with calls from homes which had been refused insurance. The association later secured a deal with the Macclesfield-based insurance broker Bollington Group (news, page 12, 8 August 2002).


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