2018 City of Shakopee Budget
166
2018 Annual Budget
Fund:
Self Insurance Internal Service Fund
Description of Services:
This fund pays the costs related to the City's workers' compensation and property/casualty insurance policies through charges received from city departments and divisions. Coverage is maintained through the League of Minnesota Cities Insurance Trust (LMCIT).
Key Measures:
Actual
Actual
Budgeted
Budgeted
2015
2016
2017
2018
Workers Compensation: Deductible
$1,000 $6,636
$500
$10,000 $13,887
$10,000
Amount Paid
$7,183
NA NA
Experience Modification (less than 1.0 is good)
1.12*
1.05*
0.70
General Liability: Deductible
$2,500 $14,562 0.821*
$50,000 $10,620 0.799*
$50,000 $19,650
$50,000
Amount Paid
NA NA
Liability Rating (less than 1.0 is good)
0.878
* City of Shakopee and Shakopee Public Utility Commission were in a combined pool for insurance.
Establishment:
Budget Impact: The Self Insurance Fund was created in 2016 as a result of savings realized from increasing deductible premiums for the property/casualty policy. General liability moved to the self insurance fund at the 7/1/16 renewal. Workers Compensation moved to the self insurance fund at the 1/1/17 renewal. In addition, a 2016 transfer of $75,000 from the General Fund surplus created an inital balance suitable for covering annual deductible claims expenses. The goal of the fund is to establish an appropriate fund balance with the ultimate goal of moving towards a self insurance program, thus realizing the benefit of reduced premiums. The workers comp mod factor relates to the frequency and severity of an employer's workers compensation claims over a three-year period, and it is used to calculate the premium. A mod factor of 1.00 is considered average for an employer's particular industry; the lower the mod factor, the better. The liability rating is calculated using a formula that looks at the city's expected liability claim losses compared to the actual losses. Data is used over a three-year period, and it is used to calculate the premium. A liability rating of 1.00 means the city's actual losses equal the expected losses for a city of similar size and expenditures.
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