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In the past few years employers have become more aware that they are legally responsible for their employees' actions. Between 1992 and 1996, for example, the number of civil-rights cases filed in federal court more than doubled from 10,771 to 23,152. This, combined with the growing number of employment-related liability lawsuits, has driven the increased demand for EPLI. Today more than 50 national insurance companies offer this type of coverage.
What EPLI Covers
EPLI covers defense costs, judgments and settlements (up to the
policy limits) for the corporate entity, former and current
employees, directors, and officers. It covers a variety of
workplace-related legal actions, including:
EPLI policies do not cover workers' compensation, bodily injury or property-damage cases, nor do they cover cases that another insurance policy specifically covers.
EPLI Premiums
EPLI rates vary from state to state and from company to company.
Generally an insurer calculates premiums by determining the amount
of coverage a business needs and its perceived risk. An insurer
will base rates on several risk factors, including the number of
employees at a company, the turnover ratio, whether or not the
business has a human resources department, and any past harassment
or bias suits against the company. Businesses with 10 to 20
employees that have good HR practices and a clean record can expect
to pay approximately $1,500 a year for EPLI coverage.
Employers can lower their company's liability exposure and keep insurance rates down by taking certain precautions:
Businesses that purchase EPLI coverage may actually reduce the likelihood of workplace harassment and discrimination. Insurers generally review a company to check for workplace liability before they issue a policy. And since insurers hate risk, they'll usually recommend changes that reduce a business's exposure to lawsuits. Many of the steps you can take to ward off harassment claims and meet the demands of insurers begin with basic education and setting up the right environment.
Our Manager's Guide to Receiving Harassment Allegations cautions against the things managers must not do when handling such matters.
Find additional employment law information and tips on OSHA regulations at AllBusiness.com.
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