Showing posts with label insurance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insurance. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

So how does it work?


How many of us really understand what is covered by our insurance, and what the insurance company expects of us?
In the last issue we looked at Insurance terminology, in this issue we pose some hypothetical scenarios to illustrate the terms from the last article in use and show how they can be applied in a practical manner. 
If your vessel sinks, most policy wording will indicate that the liability for damage to the vessel including raising of the vessel is down to the insured .  Why? 
After a hard winter, or heavy rain fall you pop down to check on the boat and found that it is underwater.  You call your insurance company who log the claim and explain that although the vessel has sunk this is not necessarily covered by your insurance. 
 The reason it has sunk has to be identified before the claim can be assessed this is ‘identifying the peril’. Therefore the insurance company will expect you the insured to cover all recovery costs up until the cause of the sinking is identified. If this is due to poor winterisation, or a failed bilge pump the claim may be rejected; unless there is clear evidence that the casue was not preventable. If you did not regularly check your vessel when the river was in flood this could be classed as a failure of ‘duty of care’ and your claim rejected. If due to vandalism it may be covered but until the vessel is raised and the cause identified no insurance company will accept the claim. However once your claim is accepted then all costs incurred will normally be covered.
You are in a lock and you lose concentration, the boat drifts and as the water is emptying, you feel the boat start to tilt, and realise too late that the boat is caught on the sill. You quickly rush to rectify the situation but find that the steering has gone stiff and you can no longer move the rudder. Is this covered by your insurance?
 If you are in a car and you reverse in to a bollard, and had full comprehensive cover then this would be classed as ‘accidental damage’ and would normally be covered by your insurance cover. Apply this to boats and if you hit an underwater obstacle, catch your rudder on a sill, lose your propeller, etc, these could all be classed as accidental damage, and therefore may be covered under your insurance policy.
You visit your boat and find that someone has smashed you windows and doors leaving the boat open and unlocked. You take a wrong turn on a river with a strong current and suddenly find yourself stranded on a weir. Under these scenarios the insurance company would expect you to take measures to secure the vessel to insure that further damage is mitigated. This is your Duty of Care
In the first instance you would need to organise someone to board up the windows and put a lock on the doors, in the second you would need to organise for the boat to be rescued. If you did not undertake these measures and the boat suffered more damage your claims could be rejected or the full damage not covered. Costs of’ mitigating the damage’ is normally covered by your insurance company, once the claim is accepted.

Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Breakdown Guide from Towergate Insurance Marine and River Canal Rescue.


Canal boat insurance provider, Towergate Insurance Marine, has joined forces with breakdown and recovery specialist, River Canal Rescue, to produce a Guide listing the five most common causes of emergency call-outs and how to avoid them.
Available online at www.towergateinsurance.co.uk (click on boat, then boat tips) and www.rivercanalrescue.co.uk (click on tips and advice), the Guide has been written in a bid to reduce the increasing number of people requiring rescue support. 
From January to September this year, River Canal Rescue responded to 3000 call-outs, yet for the whole of 2010 it made 1900 rescue visits.
Last year, the top five call-outs were; fuel issues and contamination 25%, batteries and electrical malfunctions 23%, breaking cables 12%, over-heating/cooling system breakdown 10% and gearbox/drive plate failures 7%.  These were closely followed by; problems with alternators 6%, fan belts 5%, propellers 4%, starters 4% and couplings 4%*.
As well as breakdown advice, the Guide offers general preventative maintenance and tool box contents tips, discusses how to solve problems before calling out a third-party and gives a word of warning about bio-diesel.
Towergate Insurance Marine Managing Director, Nigel Mills, comments: “Over a nine month period, it appears call-outs have shot up by 57%, so in line with our ethos to provide more than just insurance, we thought canal boat owners would find this Guide to be a useful reference tool.”
River Canal Rescue Managing Director, Stephanie Horton agrees: “Many callouts can be avoided by regular servicing/maintenance and learning about your engine.  This Guide will act as a prompt; encouraging owners to develop routines that will really help to keep unnecessary costs to a minimum and ensure a holiday or break is not spoiled by an ill-timed breakdown."
Canal boat owners taking out a Fresh Waters policy with Towergate Insurance Marine can either purchase River Canal Rescue support at a discounted rate or opt for a higher level of policy cover and receive it automatically.
For further breakdown information visit either of the websites and for insurance advice call 0800 515629 or 01743 284664.

Friday, 26 February 2010

IWA Launches New Tailored Boat Insurance Scheme With Built in Breakdown Membership


The Inland Waterways Association (IWA) has teamed up with both Navigators & General and River Canal Rescue to enable an insurance facility that it believes is unique to the market, with the added benefit that every policy taken out and subsequently renewed helps IWA, and so helps our charitable work for the waterways.

Our tailored inland waterway insurance policies cover loss and damage to your vessel, protect against legal claims, pay out for injury and damage caused to other property and provide the additional security of inclusive breakdown membership.

Key policy features

The policy incorporates many features that are unique including:

  • Membership to River Canal Rescue breakdown (which can be upgraded at additional cost)   

  • Dedicated insurance cover for owners who permanently live aboard their boats (Additional cost) - Personal public liability

  • Marina benefits

  • Medical expenses cover

  • £3 million pounds third party cover

Speaking on behalf of IWA, Neil Edwards, chief executive, said:

“IWA currently arranges insurance for over 170 of IWA’s corporate members, including most waterways societies and trusts, many boat clubs, community boat groups, navigation authorities, educational, industrial archaeological, waterways leisure and heritage bodies, museums and a wide range of other non-profit making organisations.  This is something that IWA has done as a non-profit making service for over 35 years, and has helped save many thousands of pounds from waterways insurance bills.  IWA’s experience in insurance matters led us to believe that something advantageous could be put in place for private boat owners too.  We believe that our partnership with Navigators & General, a leading pleasure craft insurer, and with River Canal Rescue, the foremost boat breakdown organisation, makes this scheme a market-leading proposition, and one which provides additional financial benefit to IWA that will allow it to further its charitable work for the waterways.”

For more information please go to: http://www.waterways.org.uk/support_us/boat_insurance