Sorting out insurance woes
Q&A: Broker can provide clear information about policy coverage
Tony Gioventu
The Province
Dear Tony:
We live in a 110-unit bare land strata in the Okanagan Valley. Our recent building appraisal increased our property valuation by more than 500 per cent because the in-ground systems of water, sanitation and roads were included in the assessment. As a result, our insurance doubled.
We have been talking to our insurance broker over the reason for the increase and questioning whether the costs cover anything new. Our policy includes earthquake coverage, but we don’t know what is actually covered because our homes are insured by each owner.
We have also noticed our earthquake deductible is now 15 per cent of the appraised value, but we are confused about what the earthquake insurance actually covers, if anything.
Patricia V.
Dear Patricia:
The Strata Property Act requires that strata corporations be insured for full replacement value, which is the reason for your appraisal values.
Bare land strata corporations are a bit “out of the box” when it comes to typical commercial/strata insurance coverage because they rarely cover buildings. As a result, your strata corporation will want to verify whether the insurance you purchase is covering anything in your strata corporation, and under what conditions the assets would be covered.
I always recommend a strata corporation use a broker to assist with insurance placement. This provides the strata with an agent who acts on their behalf and somebody who can provide clear information about your policy coverage.
Earthquake coverage for bare land strata corporations is a good example as it is optional. Before your strata adds and pays for earthquake coverage, have your broker provide you with a written confirmation of the value of the coverage, under what circumstances the coverage is applicable, what assets are actually covered, and what exemptions apply. Does the earthquake coverage apply to the in-ground services like water and sanitation? Does it apply to roads and electrical/lighting? Would the coverage apply in the event of a tsunami, dike breach, slope shift, landslide, sinkhole or overland flood?
Once your strata corporation has determined the value of the coverage, it may be best for your owners at your next general meeting to decide whether to continue the additional coverage or not.
Earthquake deductibles are based on the total appraised value of the strata corporation’s common property, assets and fixtures. A deductible of 10 per cent applied to a 100-unit highrise with an appraised value of $35 million is $3.5 million. That amount would be shared by all 100 units based on unit entitlement.
In the event of an earthquake claim, that would average out to $35,000 per unit. While the first week after a disaster is critical, the subsequent months and years that follow are devastating for homeowners if the strata corporation cannot collect the deductible amounts or has insufficient insurance. Without the deductible amounts being paid, reconstruction will be interrupted. Homeowner policies that cover an owners’ share of earthquake deductibles or other types of claims such as water escape may make all the difference.
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