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Loss Control
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Mandatory Loss Control Requirements
What is Loss Control?
Loss Control is the general term insurance
companies use when talking about your hood & ducts, fire suppression systems,
and fire extinguishers. You may also hear it referred to as Risk Control.
After your insurance is bound, the company may send an inspector out within a
few weeks to give them a better idea of the risk they are insuring.
Sometimes, after the inspector files his or her report, the company may issue
Loss Control Requirements. These can be mandatory changes you must make,
or some may just be recommended changes.
How it Affects You
In recent years, most companies have really began
enforcing the already existing rules regarding loss control compliance.
All companies have these requirements in your policies, but some may not inspect
each year, and therefore aren't as diligent in making you adhere to these rules.
If a company does find that your equipment is past due for servicing upon
inspection, notify you of the need to get the work performed, and you do not get
the equipment serviced in time, the insurance company will cancel your
insurance.
Why do Insurance Companies Care?
Quite simply, because in the event of a claim, they
want someone to be held accountable. If your hood & ducts were just
serviced by a licensed contractor, and a week or month later your establishment
has a fire because of a grease buildup, the insurance company may choose to
litigate against the contractor. Conversely, if the company stipulates in
your policy that the fire suppression system must be serviced every six months,
and you haven't had yours looked at in a year, you'd better hope you don't have
a fire. If your equipment is out of compliance at the time of the loss,
your claim will be denied. The company will likely deem that you were in
violation of the terms of your policy and therefore you would not have coverage.
Who Sets the Standards?
Maybe you have had coverage refused or cancelled
because you didn't have the right kind of fire suppression system, or the wrong
type of extinguisher in your kitchen. It's not your insurance company that
actually makes the rules, they can only control how diligently they enforce the
existing rules on their customers. The governing body that looks at
figures and statistics about fires and sets the standards is the
National Fire Protection
Association. Other similar organizations are the
National Association of Fire
Equipment Distributors and the
National Fire Sprinkler Association. If you're interested in learning
more about how they set their guidelines and why, follow the links provided.
Other Information:
Watch an interactive
tutorial on different types of fires, and the methods and extinguishers used
to fight them.
See a before
and after of professionally-cleaned hoods & ducts.
Industry definition: What's the
difference between
warming food and cooking food.
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