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Soaring health-care
costs and lower investment income from a topsy-turvy stock
market are putting intense pressure on insurance companies
to increase workers compensation rates. "The last
cycle and this cycle, two-thirds of the filings [for all industries]
have been for increases," says Peter M. Burton, senior
division executive for the National Council on Compensation
Insurance Inc., Boca Raton, Fla.
Specifically, 25 of 38 states have
filed for increases in premiums, 10 for decreases and three
for no change, says Burton. "It doesnt seem to
matter which geographic area" a company is in, adds Marcia
DeWitt, president of GuilfordPare, Baltimore, a workers
comp consultant.
But these requests for higher premiums
have yet to hit many contractors and some firms have even
had unexpected relief, according to an annual report compiled
exclusively for ENR by New York City-based insurance broker
Marsh USA Inc. This years national survey of workers
comp rates shows that the average premium for structural ironworkers
per $100 of payroll declined 6.7% to $38.49 after climbing
15.1% over the previous three years.
The rate for bricklayers slipped
2.3% to $15.54 this year after increasing 5% in 2002. Rates
for carpenters appear to be under the most consistent upward
pressure. This years 6.8% average increase lifted the
workers comp rate for carpenters to $19.95, 20% higher
than it was four years ago.
The five most expensive states
for average construction workers comp rates per $100
of payroll are Montana, $35.16; Florida, $33.89; California,
$25.30; Alabama, $23.88; and Minnesota, $23.53. The five cheapest
states are Arizona, $7.09; Kansas, $9.56; Idaho, $10.23; New
Jersey, $10.84; and Arkansas, $11.23.
Florida and California have proposed
workers comp reform in an effort to lower their costs
(see p. 30). And contractors are pushing safety programs as
the most effective way they can control the cost of workers
comp. "Rates are going up and our response is always
to be safer than we were the day before," says Bill Pinto,
president of Hardin Construction Co., Atlanta. "So far,
we have been successful in controlling [workers comp]
costs but there is a lot of industry pressure for those rates
to go up," he says.
A good safety program eventually
will reduce premiums, which are based partly on the frequency
of claims relative to payroll, says Kristen Albright, general
manager of underwriting for Boston-based Liberty Mutual. Because
carriers review records in five-year increments, reduced premiums
can lag a safety program by several years, she says.
But contractors can achieve much
faster results by taking on more risk, says DeWitt. One client,
a building contractor working primarily on the East Coast,
has been paying over $1 million in annual workers comp
premiums over the last several years$800,000 to $900,000
above its losses, she notes.
But that contractor is restructuring
its policy this year to include a higher deductible at $500,000.
Instead of jumping to $1.5 million, as originally quoted by
the carrier, the workers comp premium will drop to $750,000.
"If everybody in the company has been educated and trained,"
the company could save half
a million dollars over the
next year, DeWitt says. And even if losses reach the $500,000
deductible, the maximum cost for the next year would be $1.25
million, "so theyre still ahead" of that $1.5-million
premium cost, she says.
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Summary:
Cheap Money Heating Up Costs
Indexes: Tight
Markets Squeeze Margins
Materials: Perfect
Storm Blows Prices Sky-High
Equipment: Fighting
Rising Insurance Rates
Labor: Unemployment
Fails to Dent Wage Hikes
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