Small businesses band together to sue insurers over coronavirus damage
In many cases, the response from insurers has been: We don't cover viruses.
"I've never seen or experienced anything like this," said Prato, who has practiced dentistry in
He is now in the middle of a battle pitting people like him against a powerful industry that insists it is sympathetic to the plight of small-business owners, but not legally on the hook for hundreds of billions of dollars in losses that were never anticipated to be covered under a catastrophic economic standstill.
"Pandemic outbreaks are uninsured because they are uninsurable,"
If insurers are forced to pay, it could wipe out their ability to cover home and auto policies in the future, say industry officials, who favor turning to
Prato, who calls dentistry his passion, was forced to shut down
"It was like a flip of the light switch. Our business stopped overnight," said Prato, whose practice was deemed nonessential under the governor's order.
As a result, 28 employees at Down to Earth Dental were furloughed. The office donated its protective gear to the local medical community.
Prato's lawsuit is among 14 filed as of late last week by attorneys at
"Number one, a lot of these policies don't say at all that they exclude for virus,"
Business owners pay for protection against sudden interruptions of cash flow, Birk said.
"There's not any kind of big exception that says 'except when it's a really big deal and is going to cost a lot of money,' " he added.
Birk and co-counsel
A spokesman for Prato's insurance carrier,
Those included a statement from Sampson, the association president, saying that insurers are voluntarily providing more than
"Business interruption insurance policies do not typically cover losses related to viruses. Only the federal government can be the bridge for a crisis of this proportion," Sampson said, adding that the industry supports federal assistance programs.
Insurers also joined a broad business coalition calling for a recovery fund that would provide immediate financial assistance to impaired businesses to help them survive, reopen, and retain and rehire employees.
They are also encouraging policy makers to develop safety standards that will help business owners manage the uncertainty of reopening.
Insurers are also going on the offensive, rhetorically. "Threats of lawsuit abuse exploiting this crisis with litigation profiteering will stop America's recovery before it even starts," Sampson said.
As
Those policies were generally not designed or priced to provide coverage against communicable diseases, such as COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus, and therefore include exclusions for that risk, said the statement from the
"Insurance works well and remains affordable when a relatively small number of claims are spread across a broader group, and therefore it is not typically well suited for a global pandemic where virtually every policyholder suffers significant losses at the same time for an extended period," they said.
While the
At this point all Prato, the
"I don't know when or how we'll be able to get back to business," Prato said, citing a need to acquire new protective gear and infection-control devices, along with winning the "confidence of both our employees and our patients."
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