Re: traveling show insurance question



We due a tour insurance policy and put the premium into the fee but we also write into the Exhibition Contract that the exhibitor is responsible for the deductible which is $500 for each incident occurring on their premises.  This puts additional responsibility where it makes sense to be.
Linda Stubbs, Registrar

-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Maloney <bmaloney@smm.org>
To: PACIN ListServ <pacinlist@pacin.org>
Sent: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 12:43:28 -0600
Subject: Re: traveling show insurance question

Our museum covers its traveling exhibits continually throughout the run of a tour. However we require borrowing institutions to have their own policies in effect during their venue. If anything should happen their policy is primary. If for any reason (such as insurance lapse, non-coverage, unscrupulous activities, or oversight) our museum's policy is secondary and protects us. Presumably the loan fee covers our insurance costs although it is not a separate line item but rather part and parcel of the loan fee. 
 
On Jan 31, 2006, at 9:04 AM, Brian Kelly wrote: 
 

> Post this as "from your registrars" 
>   
> Their confusion comes from equating responsibility with cost. 
>   
> The organizer has the responsibility of arranging and providing > continuous coverage for loans to the exhibition, usually through a > special exhibition policy.  Lenders should not bear the risk of > pieced-together coverage, and should not be caught in the cross-fire > of a blame game when loss occurs. 
>   
> Generally, a borrowing venue has the responsibility of covering the > cost of coverage while the exhibition is on their premises, and while > on transit to the next venue (because the condition reports and actual > packing is carried out under their custody and control).  Borrowing > venues are either billed by the organizer for their share of the > insurance, or it is bundled into the exhibition fee. 
>   
>   
>   

> From: pacinlist-bounces@pacin.org [mailto:pacinlist-bounces@pacin.org] > On Behalf Of Rebecca Buck 
> Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2006 9:07 AM 
> To: PACIN ListServ 
> Subject: RE: traveling show insurance question 
>   
> Valerie, 
>   
> I think it remains best, so that things don't fall through the cracks > and so that no problems with lenders or venues arise, for the > organizing museum to maintain insurance all through the show.   Buy a > rider for the specific exhibition and figure the cost of the insurance > into the price of the show, or, alternatively, write the > financial responsibility for insurance into the contract.  Many > lenders may be unsettled about different policies covering their works > during a single show, and then you have the type of situation that you > describe as well.  
>   
> So either treat it as crating is treated (usually part of the cost of > the show) or as shipping is usually treated (usually as pro-rated in > addition to cost of the show). 
>   
> Rebecca Buck 
> Chief Registrar 
> The Newark Museum 
>   


> From: pacinlist-bounces@pacin.org on behalf of Valerie Imus 
> Sent: Mon 1/30/2006 8:35 PM 
> To: list@pacin.org 
> Subject: traveling show insurance question 

> This is more of a Registrarial question, but hopefully someone in > PACIN can help out with this. When you are travelling an exhibition of > borrowed work, at what point does the organizing venue typically > insure the work and at what point does the exhibiting venue typically > take over? Our policy as an organizing institution has been thus far > limited to covering the work as it is shipped to us from the lenders, > while it's on site, and travels from us to the first exhibiting venue. > Once it arrives at the exhibiting venue, it is covered by them until > it reaches the next venue, and so on, until it returns to us, when we > take over again. I know some institutions cover their shows throughout > the entire tour, but it's financially not really viable for us to > maintain insurance for all of our travelling exhibitions all the time > while also covering exhibitions in-house. Right now we are going > through a domestic to international transition in a tour, and a venue > is balking at their contractual obligation to cover the show in > transit. Does anyone have experience with these issues, any > suggestions or good resources? 
> Thanks very much. 


>         Valerie Imus 
>         Exhibitions Manager 
> > YERBA BUENA CENTER FOR THE ARTS 
> > 701 Mission Street 
> > San Francisco, CA, 94103-3138 
> > P: 415.321.1327 
> > F:  415.978.9635 
> > www.YBCA.org 
> > 


> Spam 
> Not spam 
> Forget previous vote 

 
 
Bill Maloney 
Traveling Exhibition Program 
 
Science Museum of Minnesota 
120 West Kellogg Boulevard 
St. Paul, MN 55102 
 
Phone: 651.221.4737 
Fax: 651.221.4590 
eMail: bmaloney@smm.org 
 
Visit our Traveling Exhibits Website at: 
http://www.smm.org/salesandservice/travelingexhibits 
 
Featuring these fine traveling exhibits: 
 
Cabaret Mechanical Theater® 
Robots + Us 
Playing With Time 
When Crocodiles Ruled 
Raise The Roof 
Hunters of the Sky 
 
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contained in this message that do not relate to the official business of The Science Museum of Minnesota shall be understood as neither given nor endorsed by it. 


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