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Town Looks to Lower $2 Million Insurance Costs

Implementing a transitional duty program was first step

Southampton Town’s insurance advisers said the municipality took the right step in trying to lower a nearly $2 million workers' compensation premium by implementing a return-to-work program.

But, the town could always do more.

Supervisors could better retrain employees who were out on disability, preventing further injury, or post warning signs in workplace areas where many slips and falls are reported, said Tom Terry, the commercial lines manager for the town’s insurance broker, . In May, the Southampton Town Board approved a transitional duty policy and program, which allows employees who got hurt on-the-job to be given assignments that do not exacerbate their injuries.

Now, the town is going over insurance policies and getting new quotes in anticipation of the 2012 budget. All insurances other than workers' compensation were given a renewal date of October 15, Terry said. The prices on those policies dipped 6.5 percent to $620,037 from $624,311, according to a presentation given at the town board’s work session Friday.

The town’s current workers' compensation insurance ends January 1, and the town is looking for cheaper options.

“What we’re suggesting and want to help them do, is to use that as well as other risk management techniques to try to lower the cost of the workers' comp,” Terry said.

The filed the greatest number of claims from 2005 to 2010, according to Maran’s presentation. Over a five-year period, the town incurred $4.6 million in claims costs from the department.

The followed the police, with total claims over the five-year period at $837,411, according to a copy of the PowerPoint presentation.

In addition to employee retraining and identifying and remedying dangerous workplace locations, the town can be more vigilant recording and investigating accident reports, said Vernon Falkenhan, Maran’s managing partner.

The only two insurance options available to the town for workers’ compensation are its current provider, PERMA, and the New York State Municipal Workers' Compensation Alliance, Falkenhan said.

According to the presentation, the State Insurance Fund, Chartis, Zurich and Safety National declined the town because of adverse loss ratios — a measure of losses incurred to premiums earned by insurance companies.

New state and federal laws have increased the cost of workers’ compensation, Falkenhan said. Even without the town’s claims history, many insurance companies are not willing to write new policies, or are doing so at a much slower pace, Falkenhan said.

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Maud Nordwald Pollock June 19, 2013 at 11:38 am
Sid Vicious? What does that name tell us, If you had followed the items I posted you would find thatRead More this information is based on facts. Your rantings are the conspiracy theory. You are the conspiracy carrier. May light fill your angry life.
Sid Viscuous June 19, 2013 at 02:59 pm
Firstly, Maude, it is not Sid "Viscious" it is Sid "Viscuous" - look it up.Read More Secondly, all you tinfoil-hat wearing science deniers need to wake the heck up: "STOCKHOLM -- The World Bank says it will increasingly view its efforts to help developing countries fight poverty through a "climate lens." In a report released Wednesday, the international lending institution warned that heat waves, rising seas, more severe storms and other impacts of climate change will trap millions of people in poverty." As a result, the Washington-based bank said it is stepping up support for efforts to curb climate change and to help the world adapt to it. "Urgent action is needed to not only reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but also to help countries prepare for a world of dramatic climate change and weather extremes," World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said in a statement." "Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity."
Tom Mulrooney June 20, 2013 at 12:33 am
Maud, very well presented. We as citizens should never be so blind as to have contempt prior toRead More investigation. I would hope all who read your post love the environment as much as it appears you do. If we citizens prefer to be stewards of our own lives and property than we need to stand up and investigate that which the town board so very much wants to approve.