![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I posted a while back about finding a way around my company's policy of not
allowing employees to fly private aircraft to places of business. Someone suggested getting my own insurance and having the company named on the policy. I pursued that and here's what happened: I checked out AOPAIA and they offer coverage up to $1,000,000 for liability. Adding my company as named insured cost an extra $50/yr and with $10,000 a/c damage coverage the total cost per year for renters insurance was $465. Not bad at all I thought and the cost would be recouped from the reduced flying cost (Aircraft Rental - Airline Ticket or mileage cost) The cost breakdown is as follows Liability - $240 Damage - $175 Additional Insured - $50 Interesting that the $10,000 damage is pretty close to the $1,000,000 liability. I'm sure that the insurance companies have run the numbers here and worked out that the chances of a pilot getting sued for a mil are about the same as incurring $10k damage... So I proposed this to my company but no go. They said they need at least $3,000,000 liability coverage. sigh Back to AOPAIA I went but they don't offer coverage over $1,000,000 and suggested I get blanket coverage from somewhere. So I tried PICLife. $3,000,000 coverage costs $3,930/yr with a 10 year policy!!! Over $1,000,000 must be a magic number in the insurance world. Anyway, the $4,000 breaks the bank for me, back to the drawing board. Iain |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Iain Wilson" wrote in message
ink.net... Interesting that the $10,000 damage is pretty close to the $1,000,000 liability. I'm sure that the insurance companies have run the numbers here and worked out that the chances of a pilot getting sued for a mil are about the same as incurring $10k damage... If the chances were equal, then $1M liability coverage would cost 100 times as much as $10K damage coverage. If the costs are about the same, then incurring $10K damage should be about 100 times as likely as incurring $1M liability. --Gary |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I"m in the same boat, my company would never allow me to fly. $1M
policy wouldn't even pay for their large legal staff. I assume only people who work for very small companies are able to use the $1M policy to encourage the use of flying themselves. Most companies seem to want at least $10M. When you are talking about companies that have more than $100M in stock issued, $1M doesn't sound like much. -Robert "Iain Wilson" wrote in message link.net... I posted a while back about finding a way around my company's policy of not allowing employees to fly private aircraft to places of business. Someone suggested getting my own insurance and having the company named on the policy. I pursued that and here's what happened: I checked out AOPAIA and they offer coverage up to $1,000,000 for liability. Adding my company as named insured cost an extra $50/yr and with $10,000 a/c damage coverage the total cost per year for renters insurance was $465. Not bad at all I thought and the cost would be recouped from the reduced flying cost (Aircraft Rental - Airline Ticket or mileage cost) The cost breakdown is as follows Liability - $240 Damage - $175 Additional Insured - $50 Interesting that the $10,000 damage is pretty close to the $1,000,000 liability. I'm sure that the insurance companies have run the numbers here and worked out that the chances of a pilot getting sued for a mil are about the same as incurring $10k damage... So I proposed this to my company but no go. They said they need at least $3,000,000 liability coverage. sigh Back to AOPAIA I went but they don't offer coverage over $1,000,000 and suggested I get blanket coverage from somewhere. So I tried PICLife. $3,000,000 coverage costs $3,930/yr with a 10 year policy!!! Over $1,000,000 must be a magic number in the insurance world. Anyway, the $4,000 breaks the bank for me, back to the drawing board. Iain |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Marty Shapiro wrote: Size of the company is not always the answer. True. My former employer allowed people to fly private aircraft on business. They simply wouldn't reimburse you for doing so. Insurance was not a factor. I was told that this was the result of an early executive attempting to obtain compensation for his entire loaded cost (hangar rent, maintenance, etc.). The year before I left, the company employed over 8,000 people. George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"G.R. Patterson III" wrote in
: Marty Shapiro wrote: Size of the company is not always the answer. True. My former employer allowed people to fly private aircraft on business. They simply wouldn't reimburse you for doing so. Insurance was not a factor. I was told that this was the result of an early executive attempting to obtain compensation for his entire loaded cost (hangar rent, maintenance, etc.). The year before I left, the company employed over 8,000 people. George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. If my memory isn't too faulty, at the time IBM reimbursed the higher of a) automobile mileage OR b) unrestricted coach air fare. They also reimbursed tie down & landing fees. Marty -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Marty Shapiro wrote in message ...
If my memory isn't too faulty, at the time IBM reimbursed the higher of a) automobile mileage OR b) unrestricted coach air fare. They also reimbursed tie down & landing fees. Marty The company also needs to have a semi-knowledgable accounting department. You are required by the IRS to prove to the company that you spent all your reimbursement on your travel, otherwise they need to add it to your W-2 taxes (as compensation). You must be able to document your costs. Simply saying it costs more than a coach fare is probably not enough. Cars are a very special exception because the IRS granted everyone the 30.9c (or whatever today) per mile without you having to show all your costs associated with your car. It may be cheaper to rent a Bonanza than to fly your own Mooney since a rental receipt for costs is pretty black and white. -Robert |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Iain Wilson" wrote in message link.net...
I posted a while back about finding a way around my company's policy of not allowing employees to fly private aircraft to places of business. Someone suggested getting my own insurance and having the company named on the policy. I pursued that and here's what happened: I checked out AOPAIA and they offer coverage up to $1,000,000 for liability. Adding my company as named insured cost an extra $50/yr and with $10,000 a/c damage coverage the total cost per year for renters insurance was $465. Not bad at all I thought and the cost would be recouped from the reduced flying cost (Aircraft Rental - Airline Ticket or mileage cost) The cost breakdown is as follows Liability - $240 Damage - $175 Additional Insured - $50 Interesting that the $10,000 damage is pretty close to the $1,000,000 liability. I'm sure that the insurance companies have run the numbers here and worked out that the chances of a pilot getting sued for a mil are about the same as incurring $10k damage... So I proposed this to my company but no go. They said they need at least $3,000,000 liability coverage. sigh Back to AOPAIA I went but they don't offer coverage over $1,000,000 and suggested I get blanket coverage from somewhere. So I tried PICLife. $3,000,000 coverage costs $3,930/yr with a 10 year policy!!! Over $1,000,000 must be a magic number in the insurance world. Anyway, the $4,000 breaks the bank for me, back to the drawing board. Iain A company I used to work for had a policy of NO private aircraft for business trips, period. I flew anyway. On one trip to Chicago I ran into the company CEO at the job site. He asked how I traveled to the site and I told him "I flew my airplane". He was real curious about time savings and costs and stuff like that. It was just me and him in the room. He never said anything about it being against company policy. Then the company CFO walked in and the flying talk immediately ceased. After awhile the CEO left the room and the CFO ran the same line of questions at me. When the CEO came back all talk of flying stopped. I had the distinct impression that neither officer wanted to talk about it in front of the other and it was kind of a "wink wink" thing for me to be flying myself around on company business. Plausible deniability for them I suppose. Just my experience with the subject. BillC |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
molding plexiglas websites? | [email protected] | Owning | 44 | February 17th 05 09:33 PM |
Bush's Attempt to Usurp the Constitution | WalterM140 | Military Aviation | 20 | July 2nd 04 04:09 PM |
Getting around company insurance policy | Iain Wilson | Piloting | 19 | May 22nd 04 05:43 PM |
"I Want To FLY!"-(Youth) My store to raise funds for flying lessons | Curtl33 | General Aviation | 7 | January 9th 04 11:35 PM |
PC flight simulators | Bjørnar Bolsøy | Military Aviation | 178 | December 14th 03 12:14 PM |