flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Commercial building owners having tougher time securing insurance policies and renewals

Codes and Standards

Commercial building owners having tougher time securing insurance policies and renewals

Insurers’ fears of civil unrest in wake of election prompt builder’s risk coverage moratoriums.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | November 4, 2020

Courtesy Pixabay

Some of the nation’s largest commercial property insurers have put moratoriums on issuing new insurance policies and renewing current ones due to fear of potential civil unrest resulting from a closely contested presidential election.

The multifamily sector has been most impacted, but other all sectors have been affected. The situation has been most acute in urban areas, including Chicago, New York, Portland, Ore., and Los Angeles.

Some insurance carriers haven’t pulled back from the market, but even a few lenders waiting things out to see what happens following the election is burdensome for larger projects. In the current climate, projects cannot secure builder's risk coverage from just one carrier and must instead use three or four carriers. That raises project costs.

Insurers that have instituted moratoriums say they will continue to put policy decisions on hold until at least after the election. If the election becomes a drawn-out, litigious affair, that may mean moratoriums could be extended for many weeks.

Related Stories

Codes and Standards | Jul 8, 2021

New York City shuts down 322 construction sites for unsafe conditions

Action comes as inspectors visit more than 2,100 sites.

Codes and Standards | Jul 7, 2021

Bechtel, Nautilus partner on sustainable, high-performance data centers

Facilities would use 70% less power for cooling, eliminate consumption of drinking water.

Codes and Standards | Jul 7, 2021

Surfside condo collapse could spur new legislation

Natl. Institute of Standards and Technology is investigating.

Codes and Standards | Jul 7, 2021

Intl. Code Council appoints committees to lead energy code development

One-third of appointees are government regulators.

Codes and Standards | Jul 1, 2021

COVID-19 made payment delays to contractors much worse

Only one in ten companies is always getting paid in full.

Codes and Standards | Jun 30, 2021

New resource for public sector organizations to develop energy data management program

Dept. of Energy document contains more than 30 examples of successful implementations.

Codes and Standards | Jun 29, 2021

Biden China policy may spur more increased U.S. PV manufacturing capacity

Senate bill proposes advanced solar manufacturing production credit.

Codes and Standards | Jun 28, 2021

Local and state building energy performance standards aim to curb climate change

Owners must up the ante on operations and retrofits.

Codes and Standards | Jun 24, 2021

Biden Administration will restore ‘Waters of the U.S.’ protections ended by Trump

Early revision more likely to hold up in court, says legal expert.

Codes and Standards | Jun 23, 2021

Denver unveils renewable heating and cooling plan

City releases roadmap to decarbonizing existing homes and buildings.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021