Managing the Inherent Risks of Personal Vehicle Use Within Your Company

Author, Daniel Frazee, Executive Vice President, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

Image of person hand on driving wheel of vehicle driving down road.

While costs associated with auto liability continue rising across the country, there are risks within existing fleet safety programs that often get overlooked. If your business allows employees to use personal vehicles to conduct business, even just occasionally, you could be exposing your firm to considerably more risk. You can ignore this potential gap in coverage or closely examine the exposure while simultaneously developing a risk mitigation plan.

Review and Examine Liability Coverage

Before developing any guidelines, we encourage clients to identify those drivers that are using personal vehicles. Again, the pool here should include regular and non-regular drivers who are using personal vehicles. Once that list is finalized, request current declaration pages and/or certificates of insurance showing coverage periods and limits. As you examine this information, ensure that coverage is in force and pay close attention to the limits as many state minimum coverage requirements will be much lower than typical commercial auto policy limits (Example: $10,000 to $15,000 for bodily injury). Working to develop company standard minimum limits for personal use of vehicles is something you can establish with and through recommendations from your broker partner and carrier.

Hiring with Auto Exposure in Mind

Just as many managers do when hiring employees who will drive company vehicles, consider requiring the same guidelines for potential new hires who may use their own vehicles. These guidelines may include a current Motor Vehicle Report (MVR) which allows you to review accidents and track behavior. You may also enroll drivers in the Employer Pull Notice (EPN) Program which notifies businesses when employees have any type of driving activity in or out of the workplace. Lastly, be prepared with documented steps to take when your drivers exhibit unsafe driving behavior. This can include additional training, a suspension, or even termination depending on the frequency.

Written Expectations and Usage Guidelines for Drivers

Vehicle use agreements have become commonly used documents for employers. Depending on the layout, usage guidelines can help establish clear expectations and encourage real buy-in from the employee. As a reference point, Rancho Mesa offers an example of a usage guideline form available within the Risk Management Center.

Creating and Maintaining a Culture of Safety

Evaluating your respective safety programs is a process that takes time. Many employers are unfamiliar where to even start and perhaps which areas of their operation pose the greatest risk to their business’ financial health. With auto liability, in general, the potential for direct loss can impact balance sheets of all sizes. Part of our role as commercial insurance brokers is tying in years of experience seeing these gaps within programs, like personal vehicle use. We recommend first how to mitigate them and then tailor an insurance program that further reduces or eliminates the exposure. The points listed above represent only the start to your process in revamping your Fleet Safety Program. Call or email Rancho Mesa Insurance for a complete “all lines” safety review and coverage audit. Your company’s financial future could depend on it.