Group Home
Group homes can house many individuals from those recovering from substance abuse to those living with mental health and developmental disabilities.
Email Alyssa Zackey →
Account Manager – New Business
877-977-4474, ext. 7023
Insurance policy highlights can include:
- Defense outside limits
- Separate or shared limits for psychiatrists, psychologists and other MD/mid-levels professionals
- Industry leading broadening forms
- Broad definition of who is an insured
- Underwriting expertise with limited customer distribution
- Ability to provide admitted and non-admitted terms
- Coverage can be written claims-made or occurrence
- Risk management services
- Separate limits for general liability, professional liability and abuse and molestation
- In-house claims experts
Coverages can include:
- Professional liability
- General liability
- Abuse and molestation
- Directors and officers
- Employment practices liability
Additional coverages available:
- Auto
- Cyber liability
- Employment benefits liability
- Property
- Umbrella
Markets
Claim Examples
Professional Liability
Negligent professional services are rendered to a patient of a group home. The patient sues for pain and suffering due to the negligent professional advice.
General Liability
A client slips and falls when walking into the foyer of a group home. The client breaks his arm and sues the organization.
Abuse and Molestation
A man who is volunteering for a group home receives consent to take a girl he is mentoring on a trip. During the trip, the girl is sexually molested. The girl’s family sues the organization, and the abuse and molestation coverage responds for bodily injury and mental duress.
Directors and Officers
A donor made a large contribution to a local group home requesting that the money be used to enhance the building’s facilities. The board instead votes to use the money to buy a new car for the director. The donor files suit alleging misappropriation of funds.
Employment Practices
A volunteer at a group home receives numerous sexual advances from a staff member. The volunteer sues the organization, and the employment practices liability policy responds for sexual harassment.
Hired and Non-owned Auto
Holly is a staff member working for a group home that provides mentoring. While Holly is driving a volunteer for a visit to the supply office she fails to yield at a stop sign and strikes another vehicle. The volunteer sustains a severe bodily injury and sues Holly’s personal auto policy. It turns out that the claim amount will ultimately exceed Holly’s personal auto limits, and a secondary claim is made against the hired and non-owned policy of the nonprofit organization.
Property
A fire breaks out as a result of cooking in the common kitchen area of a group home, which results in extensive smoke and heat damage to both the building and its contents, and forces the group home administration to seek an alternative facility for a period of one month. The organization suffers a loss of $75,000 in property damage and extra expenses.