Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Restaurant Insurance And Your Company Cars - What is DOC coverage and do you need it?

One of the wonderful things about owning your own business is that it offers you opportunities for tax savings and other lifestyle options that you would never have as an employee of that company. Often, one of the first perks a restaurant owner gives himself often is the company car. There are tax breaks associated with buying a car in your company name. But there are also some lesser understood insurance coverage issues that go along with this choice and this blog will help you understand one of them.

When you insure a vehicle that you purchase in the name of your company, you will need to purchase a business auto insurance policy. For the most part, this policy looks and acts a lot like the personal auto insurance policy that you are used to. But there are significant differences, one of which has to do with the problem of who is a named insured on the policy. With your personal auto insurance policy, the named insured is you of course. With a business auto policy, the corporation or business entity is the named insured. The subtle message here is that there are some protections that are afforded to a named insured on a policy that are not extended to the driver. By trading in your personally owned vehicle for a company owned vehicle with its associated business auto policy, you are giving up some protection for yourself.

I think an example might help point this out better. Let’s say one of your good friends comes and dines at your restaurant. After dinner he hangs around at the bar to watch a ball game and before you know it he is closing the place down. Your realize that maybe he shouldn’t be driving and so you agree to drive him home and you have your spouse follow you in the company car. Now, let’s further assume that on the way home you make an error of judgment, have an accident that is your fault and now face damages in that accident of $500,000. Your friend’s insurance company will pay most of the claim, but now they want to subrogate against you since you were liable for the accident in the first place (as the driver). So here’s where it gets tricky. If you have a North Carolina personal auto insurance policy and you are the named insured, then your personal auto policy will come to your aid and serve as excess coverage over that provided by your friend’s insurance company. But, if you have only a business auto policy, no such excess protection exists. And the real danger for most restaurant owners in this situation is that they just assume it would.

So what is the solution to the coverage gap? It’s pretty simple really. Just add DOC (stands for Drives Other Cars) coverage to the business auto policy. This endorsement will put you in the position of a named insured on your business auto policy. The policy can now list you and your spouse on your business auto policy and extend protections to you when you drive cars other than those listed on your business auto policy. Now I want to make it clear that if you are driving a company car and you still keep a personal auto insurance policy in force on your personally owned vehicles, that this coverage isn’t needed. But if the only cars you have are owned by your company, then call your agent today and make sure that this coverage gap is closed.

At Clinard Insurance Group, in Winston-Salem, NC, we specialize in helping restaurant owners all across North and South Carolina with their restaurant insurance needs. We want all restaurant owners to be informed insurance consumers. We understand every restaurant is different from all the others and we know that you don’t want to buy protections that you don’t need or worse yet, miss out on the ones that you do need because you were lumped into some overly broad category of restaurant insurance. That is why we have created 5 distinct restaurant insurance programs. We have a special restaurant insurance package for fine dining restaurants, a unique restaurant insurance program for casual dining restaurants, a fast food restaurant insurance package, a bar and grill and tavern insurance program and a special insurance program for caterering companies. If you would like help with your restaurant insurance questions, please feel free to call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557 or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantStore.com.

You can find the source article for this essay along with other restaurant insurance articles at www.RestaurantInsuranceGuy.com.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Restaurant Insurance And Your Company Cars - What is DOC coverage and do you need it?

One of the wonderful things about owning your own business is that it offers you opportunities for tax savings and other lifestyle options that you would never have as an employee of that company. Often, one of the first perks a restaurant owner gives himself often is the company car. There are tax breaks associated with buying a car in your company name. But there are also some lesser understood insurance coverage issues that go along with this choice and this blog will help you understand one of them.

When you insure a vehicle that you purchase in the name of your company, you will need to purchase a business auto insurance policy. For the most part, this policy looks and acts a lot like the personal auto insurance policy that you are used to. But there are significant differences, one of which has to do with the problem of who is a named insured on the policy. With your personal auto insurance policy, the named insured is you of course. With a business auto policy, the corporation or business entity is the named insured. The subtle message here is that there are some protections that are afforded to a named insured on a policy that are not extended to the driver. By trading in your personally owned vehicle for a company owned vehicle with its associated business auto policy, you are giving up some protection for yourself.

I think an example might help point this out better. Let’s say one of your good friends comes and dines at your restaurant. After dinner he hangs around at the bar to watch a ball game and before you know it he is closing the place down. Your realize that maybe he shouldn’t be driving and so you agree to drive him home and you have your spouse follow you in the company car. Now, let’s further assume that on the way home you make an error of judgment, have an accident that is your fault and now face damages in that accident of $500,000. Your friend’s insurance company will pay most of the claim, but now they want to subrogate against you since you were liable for the accident in the first place (as the driver). So here’s where it gets tricky. If you have a North Carolina personal auto insurance policy and you are the named insured, then your personal auto policy will come to your aid and serve as excess coverage over that provided by your friend’s insurance company. But, if you have only a business auto policy, no such excess protection exists. And the real danger for most restaurant owners in this situation is that they just assume it would.

So what is the solution to the coverage gap? It’s pretty simple really. Just add DOC (stands for Drives Other Cars) coverage to the business auto policy. This endorsement will put you in the position of a named insured on your business auto policy. The policy can now list you and your spouse on your business auto policy and extend protections to you when you drive cars other than those listed on your business auto policy. Now I want to make it clear that if you are driving a company car and you still keep a personal auto insurance policy in force on your personally owned vehicles, that this coverage isn’t needed. But if the only cars you have are owned by your company, then call your agent today and make sure that this coverage gap is closed.

At Clinard Insurance Group, in Winston-Salem, NC, we specialize in helping restaurant owners all across North and South Carolina with their restaurant insurance needs. We want all restaurant owners to be informed insurance consumers. We understand every restaurant is different from all the others and we know that you don’t want to buy protections that you don’t need or worse yet, miss out on the ones that you do need because you were lumped into some overly broad category of restaurant insurance. That is why we have created 5 distinct restaurant insurance programs. We have a special restaurant insurance package for fine dining restaurants, a unique restaurant insurance program for casual dining restaurants, a fast food restaurant insurance package, a bar and grill and tavern insurance program and a special insurance program for caterering companies. If you would like help with your restaurant insurance questions, please feel free to call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557 or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantStore.com.

You can find the source article for this essay along with other restaurant insurance articles at www.RestaurantInsuranceGuy.com.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – Company Cars and Your Employees

Many restaurant owners out there have vehicles that are owned in the corporate name. This can run the gamut from personal cars for the restaurant owner to vans used for pickups and deliveries. These vehicles, titled in the business name should always be insured on a commercial auto policy in the same business name. There is a wrinkle in the coverage protection in this instance that can leave an injured employee without any coverage and could perhaps, leave your restaurant vulnerable.

I’m not talking about DOC protection which of course is another dangerous wrinkle when your restaurant has company owned cars. To learn how to protect your personal assets from that particular coverage gap, watch my DOC for restaurant owners video.

The problem that I want to address in this particular blog really relates to the risks of injuries that could occur to one of your employees. Sure, you have workers compensation insurance in case one of them gets injured. If not, read my blog on why you need to buy that coverage even if the law doesn’t require it. But the problem that can occur with a company owned vehicle and your employee is best described with an example.

Let’s say you send out an employee to make a delivery and since it is the last one of the night, you tell them to just drive the van home and bring it back when they come to work tomorrow. Now, assume that on the way home, after the last delivery was made, they have an accident that is their fault. Also assume that your employee is injured in this accident. Many restaurants do not offer health insurance to their employees so now where is this employee going to get the money to pay for his or her medical bills due to this accident? Well, the simple answer would seem to be that you just file a workers compensation claim for those injuries. After all, the employee was on the job. Wasn’t he? Well, in North Carolina we are seeing that type of claim denied by insurance companies. The argument is that when the employee is using the vehicle for personal use (in this case driving home from work), then that employee is not covered by workers compensation.

Now what are the downsides for you, the employer? First of all, your employee may face overwhelming medical bills and may not be able to afford the help needed to get back to work as quickly as otherwise might be the case. Also, there is some risk to you, the employer that a sharp attorney may find a way to drag you into a long, drawn out legal case due to the fact that your vehicle was involved. The final result for you is unclear and difficult to prognosticate but suffice to say, this is a situation that you want to be aware of and avoid if possible. I don’t have an insurance solution for you except to say that if your employee has life insurance, health insurance and disability insurance then most of the gaps will be covered. If not, the best advice is to make sure that you don’t provide company owned vehicles for your employees’ personal use.

Clinard Insurance Group, located in Winston Salem, NC is an agency with a niche specialty in helping restaurant owners in both North Carolina and South Carolina with their restaurant insurance needs. We have developed specialized programs for several different types of restaurants so that you don’t have to buy a one size fits all policy for your restaurant. We have a specialized insurance program for catering companies, a fast food restaurant insurance program, a bar and grill and tavern insurance program, a unique fine dining insurance program and a casual dining restaurant insurance package. If we can help you with your restaurant insurance questions, please feel free to call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557, or visit us online at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com.

This article was created from source material which can be found online at www.RestaurantInsuranceGuy.com.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – What Does Facebook Have To Do With Your Insurance Rates?

Most savvy restaurant owners know that it is no longer enough just to have a web page. You need to have a mobile version of that page and for sure you had better have a place on Facebook. In fact, most people under age 25 are more likely to do a Facebook search for your restaurant than they are to search on Google. And the Facebook platform really allows restaurants to keep an open, flowing and connected form of communication with their clientele. But very few restaurant owners have taken even a moment to consider how their Facebook site might affect their insurance rates.

Let me start by saying that if you are leaving your restaurant insurance with the same company year after year and never shopping your restaurant insurance policies in the marketplace, then it may take much longer for the ensuing discussion to apply to your restaurant insurance policy. While it is true that some insurance companies will do reviews of restaurants prior to renewing their existing policies, this renewal review process is much lighter duty in general and affects a small percentage of restaurants in any given year. But what about the day you decide to switch agents or switch companies either for better service or a better product or just to save money? Well, when that day comes you don’t want your Facebook page to bite you in the butt.

Restaurant insurance pricing, just like most every other commercial insurance policy is pretty fluid. Sure, the companies will file their base rates on their product with the state authority. In North Carolina, rates are filed with the NC Insurance Commissioner’s Office. But they also file a list of schedule credits, which are just credits that they can choose or not choose to apply to their policies. In truth, very few restaurants are paying the full filed rates on their policies; most enjoy some level of scheduled credits that reduce their rate by some percentage from the base rate. And most important of all for the restaurant owner, is that the application of these credits is based on the underwriter’s comfort with how you are running your dining establishment.

In the old days, before the internet, all an underwriter had to go on was the application submitted by the agent, and perhaps a photo or two. But then came the internet and the underwriters started verifying the application information with the information found on the restaurant website. All of that worked pretty well and could actually work in the restaurant owner’s favor. Then came Facebook. And let’s face it, Facebook is a social media platform and the key word here is social. So many restaurants use their Facebook page as a way to show how much fun it is to visit their place of business. But it is important for the restaurant owner to understand that insurance underwriters are visiting there as well.

If you, as the restaurant owner, are not actively involved in operating your Facebook page, then you may be leaving yourself vulnerable to higher insurance rates on your restaurant insurance policy. Now, it may be worth it to show people dancing on the tables or having a big time at your establishment, if it brings in more business. But there may be a future hidden cost in your insurance policy that you are not counting on. My advice is to maintain your Facebook page in a way that won’t scare off a stodgy underwriter’s personality. If that makes the page to banal for your tastes and ambitions, then just be sure to recognize that you may see higher restaurant insurance rates in the future.

Clinard Insurance Group, Inc, is an independent insurance agency located in Winston Salem, NC. We specialize in insuring all types of restaurants all across North Carolina and South Carolina. Since not every restaurant has the same insurance needs, we have created 5 distinct restaurant insurance packages. We have a fast food restaurant insurance program, a bar and grill insurance program, a casual dining restaurant insurance program, an insurance program for fine dining restaurants and even a specialized insurance program for caterering companies. If we can help you with your restaurant insurance questions, please call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557, or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com.

When writing this article, we pulled extensively from a source article which can be found on our restaurant insurance blog site at www.RestaurantInsuranceGuy.com.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – Your Business Is A Niche Within a Niche

In my last blog I addressed the fact that as a restaurant owner, you owe it to yourself and your business to do a bit of research to be sure that you are dealing with a specialist. And the beauty of that is that you will often be able to hire that specialist for less money that you will spend if you let an agent who doesn’t specialize in restaurant insurance do the work for you. This week, I want to look at specialization in a more drilled down fashion. In this case I want to take a look at the specialization of the restaurant insurance policy or program itself.

It is clear to even the most casual observer that not all restaurants are created equal. In fact, that’s what so many of us love about eating out, we have many different choices to suit out time constraints, our moods, or even the level of impression we want to make on our dining partners. And as a restaurant owner, you work hard to play to your niche market, to give them exactly what they are looking for when they visit your establishment. So it should go with your restaurant insurance policy.

One trend in insurance over the years has been to consolidate all of the different types of coverages and protections into one big, packaged up, policy. This has made selling the policy a bit easier for the less sophisticated agent, I mean when you throw in everything but the kitchen sink, what’s not to like? But the truth is that there are costs associated with all of these add on coverages, and if you need them, then this package concept is great, you are spreading the costs of what you need across many different businesses that are purchasing protections in the package that they don’t need and will never use. But, look at it from the other direction and you don’t want to be the business that is buying things you don’t need and as such, subsidizing other businesses that do need those coverages.

This is why, beyond needing an agent who specializes in restaurants, you need one with a program that specializes in your specific type of restaurant. If you are running a fast food restaurant, you may not need a built in $25,000 limit for fine arts coverage that a fine dining restaurant might need. And if you are running a catering operation, will you need $25,000 of built in employee dishonesty protection that might be something a restaurant that handles lots of cash receipts might need? The examples here are seemingly limitless but the important point is that you should watch your policy carefully for add on coverages that you might never need but that you are paying for in your package. Likewise, you want to be sure as well that the types of protections that you do need are available and available in the limits that you need. A built in $5000 of spoilage coverage might be far too much for one restaurant and not near enough for another.

Take the time to look at the add in coverages that are on your current restaurant insurance policy and make sure you understand how each of them works, and be sure that the limit of coverage is the right amount for you.

At Clinard Insurance Group, located in Winston Salem, NC, we are a restaurant insurance specialist. We insure many different kinds of restaurants all across North Carolina and South Carolina. If we can help you with your restaurant insurance questions, please call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557 or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com. Remember, we have specialized insurance programs for 5 different kinds of restaurants. Check the list below and click on the links to see our specific niche within a niche restaurant insurance programs.

Fine Dining Restaurant Insurance

Casual Dining Restaurant Insurance

Fast Food Restaurant Insurance

Bar and Grill and Tavern Insurance

Catering Company Insurance

The source information for this blog can be found in full at the blog located at http://www.restaurantinsuranceguy.com/.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – Before You Buy, Qualify Your Agent

Restaurant insurance is a complex and wildly variant contract. Each restaurant has its own quirks and operational differences from the kinds of food that may be offered to how it is prepared to how it is served. And all of these variables make insuring a restaurant a complex and highly interactive process when it is done correctly. These factors point out the need for a specialist.

Restaurants are not cookie cutter businesses. They vary widely in scope and design and they have some really unique risk factors that, if overlooked, could prove catastrophic to the business itself. So, as a restaurant owner, whether you like it or not, you are going to need to have some working knowledge of the insurance industry. Now for someone starting a new restaurant, the path of least resistance would be to call up the insurance agent who handles your car insurance or your homeowners insurance and ask for a quote on your restaurant. And here’s the scary part: This agent could give you a quote and most likely write you a policy. Why is that scary? Well, let me highlight that with an example. Imagine if you had a rare disease and your family practice doctor would or could take a crack at trying to heal you instead of sending you to a specialist who understands that rare disease. Now that’s a scary thought isn’t it? Well, not protecting your restaurant business by hiring a specialist should be just as scary a proposition.

Doctors will give referrals to specialists, but unfortunately for you, most insurance agents wouldn’t dream of referring on business of which they are not well qualified to insure. They don’t want to give up the commission. So how do you, as a restaurant owner, protect yourself from this risk? Well, start by asking your agent how many restaurants he or she currently insures. If they give you a number under 10 you should be worried, as they can’t have accumulated the combined experience and wisdom needed to understand your business if they just insure a handful of similar businesses. A better number would be more than 100 though. You see, unlike the patient with the rare disease, these agents’ lack of knowledge might never be exposed unless and until there is a large loss. So even they may not know what potential problems are lurking there for their current clients.

Do your research online. Take a look at their website. Do they seem to specialize in restaurants or do they look more like a generalist? Have they been blogging about restaurant insurance issues? Do they o present themselves to the public as a specialist that can really help you uncover the root issues that you may have with your insurance program?

Restaurants are a unique and interesting niche out there for insurance agents. As a result, there are many who do specialize in helping restaurants manage their risks in the most effective ways. You can find them without having to do hours and hours of research and in this case Google can be your friend. Take a moment to check up on your current agent and make sure that you are dealing with a specialist. It won’t cost you more to hire the best to help you and in fact the irony is that, unlike most professions, with insurance you can hire the specialist for your business and pay less at the same time. It’s a real win win for restaurant owners and you can take advantage of this situation with less than an hour’s worth of research.

At Clinard Insurance Group, in Winston Salem, NC we are one of those agencies with a specialty in restaurant insurance. We insure more than 50 different restaurants all across North Carolina and South Carolina. We know that each restaurant is different from the others and so we have developed 5 different restaurant insurance programs to help make a better custom fit for our clients. We have a bar and grill and tavern insurance program, a casual dining restaurant insurance program, a fine dining restaurant insurance program, a dynamite insurance package for fast food restaurants and even a specialized insurance program for caterers. If we can help you with restaurant insurance questions, please call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557 or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com.

The source information for this blog can be found in full at the blog located at http://www.restaurantinsuranceguy.com/.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – Your Promotions And Your Restaurant Insurance Policy

In the restaurant business, the name of the game is getting customers to enter your doors and open their wallets. Restaurant owners are very savvy in this regard and there are many creative approaches to promoting used by different owners to increase their business and their profile in the community. One of the great things about running a restaurant, is the freedom that you have, as a business owner, to dream up and implement promotions for your establishment. But when you are coming up with ideas, don’t forget to consider the insurance angle.

There is really no limit, beyond what you can dream up, to what you can offer your clients to get them in the door spending money with you. I suppose if you can get it by the health department, you could have dwarf bowling, or keg midgets or even goat dancing contests if you thought it would help you increase sales. But don’t make the mistake of planning these promotions without considering the impact they may have on your restaurant insurance program. You don’t want to find out at renewal, or worse yet, after a large loss or accident, that what you were doing conflicts with your insurance plan or causes the insurance company to regard you as a higher risk.

Let’s take a quick look at some of the more common promotions and how they might affect your restaurant insurance policy. One of the most common is drink promotions. There are happy hours, ladies nights, half price drink nights and drink specials. Each of these can be a successful way to increase your sales but it is important to keep an eye on the ratio of liquor sales to food sales. There is a tipping point, beyond which your restaurant begins to look more like a bar to the insurance company and this can drive up the price of your liquor liability insurance or worse yet, can cause you to fall out of a preferred restaurant program, into one for higher risk establishments at a significant increase in premiums. That may be ok if you gain enough revenue to overcome the additional insurance costs, but you shouldn’t go into a promotion flying blind on the insurance impact.

Another revenue enhancer that we see establishments trying is adding delivery services for their customers. There are auto insurance and some workers compensation implications here that should be considered before you make these changes to your restaurant. These include impacts on your protection and coverage as well as on your rates.

We also see restaurants staying open a bit later and essentially turning their establishment into a bar after they stop serving food. Often they add a dance floor and DJ or have other live entertainment. These changes will all have large impacts on your restaurant insurance program and it is best if you bring in your agent for consultation and advice on the front end of these decisions. If you move forward without notifying your agent, you will lose the opportunity to factor in these changes in your overall return on investment for this plan, and you may find yourself in a position where you could even have trouble obtaining insurance protection at any price.

Restaurant insurance is a unique and tricky kind of policy and there is no doubt that you need a restaurant insurance specialist helping you with your insurance program. If you have the right agent and can form a partnership with your agent in helping you plan for the insurance impact of any major changes or promotions that you plan to implement, you will have a better big picture view on the true costs of your promotion or changes.

At Clinard Insurance Group, located in Winston Salem, NC, we specialize in restaurants and we understand them. I have owned 4 restaurants in my lifetime so I know what restaurant owners struggle with day to day. I also know that not every restaurant has the same insurance needs so I developed 5 specialized insurance programs for the 5 broad categories of restaurants. I have a specialized program for catering companies, a bar and grill and tavern insurance program, a fast food restaurant insurance program, a fine dining restaurant insurance program and a casual dining restaurant insurance program. If you need help with your restaurant insurance, please feel free to call me, at 877-687-7557 or visit my web page online at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com.

The source information for this blog can be found in full at the blog located at http://www.restaurantinsuranceguy.com/.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – Equipment Breakdown Coverage Revisited

In the past I have blogged about equipment breakdown coverage for restaurants and I have discussed one of the more obvious reasons for needing it – breakdown of heating or air conditioning systems. However, with rapid technological changes in the restaurant industry, there are new areas of concern that give new weight to the value of carefully considering adding this protection to your restaurant insurance policy.

Specifically, I want you to think of the new technologies that you may have added to your restaurant in the past 5 years that you now rely on for smooth day to day operations. Which of these could you do without for an extended period of time? How much would it cost you to replace lost income due to the breakdown of this equipment? For instance, many restaurants now use sophisticated, computer based cash registers that integrate with point of sale software systems. What losses would you face if this system broke down? Could you stay open?

Another area of consideration for your equipment breakdown coverage is your commercial grade sound system if you have one, or your inventory scanner system or even your time clock and payroll system that might be run from your computerized register. If these systems go down, your restaurant could be crippled and the lost revenue while you struggle to get your systems running again could be substantial.

All of these new electronic systems are at risk for power surges and electrical arcing. Unbudgeted losses from breakdown of these systems can be significant enough that for some restaurants equipment breakdown coverage should no longer be considered an optional coverage but rather a critical one. Take a moment to check your restaurant insurance policy and see if you have equipment breakdown coverage. After the systems break, it will be too late to go back then and add the coverage.

Restaurants are a unique kind of business and they present unique insurance challenges. If you own a restaurant then you should take the time to seek out an insurance agent who specializes in restaurant insurance. Don’t trust your protection to a generalist. You will likely save money and be better protected if you find an agent who understands restaurants and insures dozens or even hundreds of them.

Clinard Insurance Group, located in Winston Salem, NC is an independent insurance agency that specializes in restaurant insurance. We write insurance for more than one hundred restaurants in North Carolina and South Carolina. Our understanding of how each restaurant is different from the others has led us to create 5 distinct restaurant insurance programs. We have a fine dining restaurant insurance program, a casual dining restaurant insurance program, a fast food restaurant insurance program, a bar and grill and tavern insurance program and a specialized insurance program for catering companies. If we can help you with your restaurant insurance needs, or if you simply need a professional second opinion on any restaurant insurance issues, please feel free to call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557 or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com.

You can find the original source material for this article at www.RestaurantInsuranceGuy.com.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – UL 300 System Part 2

In part one of this two part series we discussed ways to identify if your current system is a UL 300 system or not. If you have discovered that you are using an older system, then what should you do about it? Well our advice is to replace your old system with a new one that is UL 300 approved.

Before we get to the replacement question, here is a list of situations where most local governments will require the use of a UL 300 system.

Use of vegetable based oils in frying.

Any addition or change or any appliance from the original installation.

Any change to the hood or duct system.

The suppression system can no longer be maintained as required for 6 month maintenance due to the lack of available replacement parts or the servicing company refusing to service the out of date unit.

In addition, it is important to note that all dry chemical units are non-compliant as are the following wet chemical units unless modifications have been made:

Ansul R-102, all sizes 1988- 1995,

Ansul Steel tanks (red in color), all sizes 1988 – 2001,

Kidde Aqua Blue, all sizes 1988 – 1995,

Range Guard, all sizes 1977 – 1995.

Many of these UL 300 wet units can be upgraded, but the difference in cost between a new one and a retrofitted one is rarely more than 15% so most restaurants opt for the new system.

One last note about changing your system: If you do so, please remove any dry chemical fire extinguisher from the kitchen area as their interaction with the UL 300 liquid agents will serve to spread the fire rather than extinguish it. NFPA 10 requires that only K rate fire extinguishers be kept in your kitchen area.

In part 1 of this blog I mentioned that you there are ways to have someone else pay for the cost of replacing your old, noncompliant system with a newer UL 300 system. So how does that work? It’s simple really. There are many insurance companies out there that understand the value of the UL 300 system and as such will provide huge discounts for restaurants utilizing this newer system. We have seen these discounts more than pay for the upgrade of systems in our work. If your agent isn’t currently giving you the full discounts for your UL 300 system, you should choose an insurance company that values this safety feature and is willing to cut your insurance costs because you have it installed.

Clinard Insurance Group, Inc., is an independent insurance agency, located in Winston Salem, NC. We specialize in helping all kinds of restaurants all across NC and SC. If you need help with your restaurant insurance questions, or if you would like to see how much money you can save with our specialized restaurant insurance programs, please call us, toll free, at 877-687-7557 or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com. We have several specialized insurance programs for the different types of restaurants out there so we should be able to find a solution that best suits your needs. Our special programs include our fine dining insurance package, our casual dining insurance package, our fast food insurance package, our bar and grill insurance package and our special insurance program for caterers.

The source information for this article was pulled from articles found at www.RestaurantInsuranceGuy.com.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Restaurant Insurance – UL 300 System And Your Restaurant – Part 1

Older fire suppression systems for restaurants may no longer be enough to extinguish restaurant fires today. That is because of new cooking media and newer cooking methodologies that can generate higher temperatures and lower flash points. This 2 part series will look at the new UL300 standards and help you understand what you have now and what you may want in the future.

So what is UL300? UL 300 is the standard for testing of fire extinguishing systems for protection of restaurant cooking areas. Underwriters Laboratories, Inc, referred to as UL, is an independent, not for profit product safety testing and certification organization. How do you know if your current system is UL 300? According to Underwriters Laboratories, the only way to know is to check that the model number on your fire suppression system is UL 300 compliant. If so, then you must verify that all components have been installed as specified by the manufacturer’s manual.

The best place to start is to look for the UL300 label on the systems extinguishing chemical tank. Another indicator is the type of discharge nozzle located over each cooking surface. All UL 300 compliant systems use a wet extinguishing agent. Discharge nozzles for the older, dry chemical systems are fairly large, usually around 2 inches in diameter. Wet system nozzles are narrow, typically ¾ inch to 1 inch in diameter and are typically covered with red, orange or yellow plastic caps to keep them clean.

You may have to ask the fire protection company that is offering the ongoing service and inspections on your system. You can identify them by finding the service record tag. This tag is normally attached to the manual pull box for the system.

Here are some red flag indicators that your system is not UL 300 compliant:

Installed prior to 11/21/1994.

No UL label on the cylinder.

Dry chemical extinguishing media.

Dry chemical discharge nozzles – large size – 2 inches in diameter

System uses water spray to protect appliances.

System uses a single nozzle to protect multiple appliances or multiple cooking surfaces.

So what if your current system is not UL 300 compliant? In that case I would recommend that you replace it with a UL 300 system. In part 2 of this 2 part series I will show you how to go about that and how to get someone else to pay for it.

Clinard Insurance Group, located in Winston Salem, NC, is an insurance agency that specializes in insuring restaurants all across North Carolina and South Carolina. If you have a restaurant in NC or SC and would like our help answering your restaurant insurance questions, please call us, toll free at 877-687-7557 or visit us on the web at www.TheRestaurantInsuranceStore.com. We know that not every restaurant is the same, so we have developed 5 specialized restaurant programs to meet your specific needs. We have a fine dining restaurant insurance plan, a casual dining restaurant insurance plan, a fast food restaurant insurance plan, a bar and grill and tavern insurance plan and a special insurance program for caterers.

The source information for this article was pulled from other articles which can be found at www.RestaurantInsuranceGuy.com.