... there ’s insurance to cover it
On a dive trip last year, one of
our readers flooded his digital
camera and housing. The Divers
Equipment Protection Plan
(DEPP) that insured him paid
for cleaning and testing the housing.
It also replaced the camera
with a newer, more expensive
model, since the model destroyed
had been discontinued.
Debbie Lewis, of Chicago, IL,
had her locked luggage broken
into while flying on TACA. Her
brand-new women’s Dacor wetsuit;
retail value $139, was missing.
After the airline balked at
replacing it, Deb told us that
DEPP replaced it with the next,
newer model within a week.
What’s the value of all the dive
gear you travel with, including
those expensive cameras? To
replace it would be a major hurt,
wouldn’t it? Nearly every diver we
have talked to tells us that DEPP
provides excellent coverage at a
reasonable price. However,
before we tell you more about
DEPP, consider your other
options.
PADI and two DAN diver
insurance plans cover gear lost or
damaged because of a dive accident.
However, even the most generous
accident policy will pay no
more than $2,500 for covered gear
losses.
As a homeowner or renter, your
insurance policy may cover loss or
theft of dive gear at locations other
than your home. However, will
your policy replace gear at its current
cost? Many reimburse only the
depreciated value, which doesn’t
mean much for a five-year-old regul
ator. And, your policies may have a
deductible value, so they will only
reimburse you for losses above a $500 or $1,000 threshold, for
example.
If you recently charged your
equipment, or even the trip, to a
credit card, you may be covered
for short periods up to modest
limits. For example, American
Express cards come with a
Purchase Protection Plan that
covers items purchased with the
card for 90 days after purchase,
up to $1,000 per occurrence,
$50,000 per card member per
policy year. Read your cardholder
benefit statement. Clarify any
uncertainties by calling your
insurance agent or credit card
customer service center.
Dive equipment insurance
that is secondary to homeowner’s ,
renter’s and credit card benefits,
can be purchased through companies
such as Access America
and Travel Guard. (Secondary
means you must first apply to
your primary insurer). Bundled
typically with trip cancellation
protection, these policies cover
up to $1,000 of losses related to
loss, theft or damage. Understand
the particulars to avoid unpleasant
surprises. For example, the
practical effect of Travel Guard
coverage is that if they steal your
$1,500 camera from your hotel
room, don’t expect to see more
than a $500 reimbursement.
Then there is DEPP, which is
administered by Aw ry
Enterprises, in Louisville, KY.
DEPP standard plans range from
$2,000 worth of coverage for
$30/year, up to $20,000 worth of
coverage for $270/year. They
have a $25 deductible, per occurrence.
You can purchase additional
coverage for $10/year per
$1,000 increment, with a surcharge
of 4 percent on items
worth more than $5,000, such as
rebreathers and photo equipment.
Sandy Hall, vice president
of Aw ry Enterprises, told
Undercurrent that they have about
$20 million of equipment under
coverage. One European diver currently
insures $80,000 worth of diving
equipment.
DEPP policies cover gear loss,
breakage, damage and theft worldwide.
You submit an itemized list of
equipment, but if you forget anything
— even that automatic inflator
on your BC — it won’t be covered.
And, don’t expect cash reimbursement.
The company, at its
option, will either repair or replace
your gear.
One European diver currently insures
$80,000 worth of diving equipment. |
You can add coverage for those
frustrating and expensive camera
floodings. This carries a deductible
of 10 percent of the cost, not to
exceed $250. The price is 4 percent
of the value of your photographic
gear, plus a 4 percent surcharge
on more than $5,000.
Flooded photographic gear will
need to be shipped to a DEPP
receiving center within five days of
the accident to avoid a penalty.
However, Hall assured Undercurrent that they accommodate divers
whose problems occur while
they’re in a remote location where
prompt return isn’t feasible.
Another diver, Davida Hinton
made three camera-related claims
within the first year. “A flooded
sync cord and strobe, was repaired
for $328, with my deductible being
just 10 percent. Likewise for my
Sea & Sea MMII EX-Pro that sustained
chassis damage while on a
dive boat, was about a $300 tab. All
three repair facilities I’ve been
referred to have been very good to
exceptional. Dealing with the people
at DEPP and the repair facilities
they use has been a pleasure.”
As you might imagine, some
unusual claims get submitted. Hall
told us of one diver who flooded
his brand new housing. Upon
inspection, the repair facility
found there were no o-rings anywhere
in it. The diver thought
that the case was already
equipped with o-rings and never
inserted what he thought were
“backup” o-rings that accompanied
the case.
Then there is the diver who
flooded his Nikonos, which DEPP
repaired. The next time diving,
he returned to the surface with
his Nikonos again flooded.
Someone on the boat remembered
seeing him put a roll of
film into his BC pocket. Seems
that after he shot up a roll of
film, he had been popping open
the back of his camera underw ater
and replacing the spent roll
with a fresh one.
Both divers, Hall said, had
their errors covered.
One diver we talked with, however, was unhappy with the policy
and stopped his coverage. “About
two years ago in Baja the car was
stolen along with all my equipment.
I split the claim between
my homeowner’s and DEPP.
Within a week, I settled with my
home insurer. It took DEPP at
least two weeks to decide whether
they would even honor the claim
since I had no police report. After
six months, I received most of the
items less my personal wetsuit.
They tried to match exactly what I
listed. Some of their vendors did
have the items in stock, but they
held delivery until the unstocked
items came in to save on shipping.
I ended up with fins with
too-small foot pockets and weight
belts five sizes too big. They replaced my vintage Nikonos II
with a 28-mm lens and bracket
with a Nikonos III minus lens
and brackets (I only listed the
camera on my application — didn
’t say lens). The total claim was
for $2,500.”
Yes, for a loss to be reimbursed,
you must have listed the
component. In this diver’s case,
his failure to obtain a police
report of the theft clearly hindered
his claim. To prove a loss,
when a formal police report is
unobtainable, a notarized letter
from hotel security or a dive operator, for example, may be accepted.
If you accidentally drop a
piece of insured equipment while
diving, and it cannot reasonably
be retrieved, obtain documentation
such as a letter from the dive
boat captain. Of course, the company
expects policyholders to
take reasonable steps to protect
their gear. If your gear is lifted
after you’ve left it in your
unlocked car during a Bonaire
shore dive, don’t anticipate a
successful claim.
For more information, contact:
DEPP: http://www.equipmentprotection.com/page10.html. 760-674-
8655/888-678-4096
PADI: http://www.diveinsurance.com.
714-739-3177/800-223-9998.
Access America: http://www.etravelprotection.com/servlet/WASCPure .
800-284-8300.
Travel Guard: http://www.travelguard.com. 800-826-1300.