True John. Also, a lot of the policies from one of the larger commercial carriers are only written for a five hundred mile radius. The insurance company told me that the mileage radius is only a problem if the trucks gets into a really expensive accident. Also, some insurance policies list a UPS mailbox center with a PMB number on them as the carriers physical address. If that company has a truck that gets into a big accident, the insurance company can refuse to pay because the carrier doesn't actually have a physical address at that location.
These are just a few things that an insurance agent was telling me a few months back. Also, I have seen some of the companies on Sylectus that have lower insurance levels on safer web. A lot lower than their partner carriers require them to have to move freight for them. I never knew how rinky dink I was until I started looking into all of the things that can go wrong if you're not properly insured.
Also, how does it work if a multi-carrier cargo van gets into an accident? Who pays for the freight claim? Does the carrier pay for the freight claim, or does the individual driver pay for the damage to the freight? It seems like it would be a pretty complicated matter. It probably hasn't come into play much because you don't really see cargo vans getting into huge wrecks like the bigger trucks. But that is what happens when shippers and brokers want their freight moved for substandard rates.
These are just a few things that an insurance agent was telling me a few months back. Also, I have seen some of the companies on Sylectus that have lower insurance levels on safer web. A lot lower than their partner carriers require them to have to move freight for them. I never knew how rinky dink I was until I started looking into all of the things that can go wrong if you're not properly insured.
Also, how does it work if a multi-carrier cargo van gets into an accident? Who pays for the freight claim? Does the carrier pay for the freight claim, or does the individual driver pay for the damage to the freight? It seems like it would be a pretty complicated matter. It probably hasn't come into play much because you don't really see cargo vans getting into huge wrecks like the bigger trucks. But that is what happens when shippers and brokers want their freight moved for substandard rates.
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