El Dorado News-Times

ISO rating improves

Changes could affect insurance premiums

- By Tia Lyons Staff Writer

The community’s Insurance Services Office rating has improved by a point, and the change could affect insurance premiums for local homeowners and commercial businesses.

Fire Chief Chad Mosby recently announced that the ISO Fire Suppressio­n Rating Schedule and Public Protection Classifica­tion grade has risen from 3 to 2 within the El Dorado Fire Department’s fire protection service area.

The new rating goes into effect Friday, and Mosby is urging citizens to contact their insurance companies about possible changes in their premiums due to the improved rating.

The ISO’s Public Protection Classifica­tion Program figures prominentl­y in the underwriti­ng process for insurance companies.

Most insurance companies in the U.S. use the ISO informatio­n when deciding what businesses to underwrite, coverages to offer and rates to charge for personal and commercial property insurance.

Typically, the higher the ISO rating, the lower the insurance premiums for residentia­l and commercial properties, Mosby has explained.

He said the notificati­on about the community’s ISO rating change was sent out in late August.

“We have had insurance companies calling already because of the notificati­on. Those premiums are determined by insurers, and each company sets their premiums differentl­y, as determined by the ISO rating,” Mosby explained.

The community’s PPC grade is derived from evaluation­s of:

• Needed Fire Flows, which are representa­tive building locations used to determine, theoretica­lly, the amount of water that is necessary for fire suppressio­n purposes.

• Emergency Communicat­ions, including emergency reporting, telecommun­ications and dispatchin­g systems.

• Fire Department, including equipment, staffing, training, geographic distributi­on of fire companies, operationa­l considerat­ions and community risk reduction.

• Water Supply, including inspection and flow testing of hydrants, alternativ­e water supply operations, and a careful evaluation of the amount of available water compared with the amount that is needed to suppress fires up to 3,500 gallons per minute.

A maximum credit of 105.5 is available for the evaluation. The EFD earned a total credit of

82.

In several categories that fell under the four criteria that make up the PPC grade, the fire department earned perfect scores

The EFD grabbed maximum

scores of 100 in two of the categories for emergency communicat­ions: emergency reporting and telecommun­icators.

For the Fire Department criterion, the EFD earned a score of 36.85 out of 50 available credits.

Credits of 6.85 and 5.44 were applied in the company personnel and training categories. Total credit that was available in those categories was 15 and 9, respective­ly.

The EFD earned a credit of 25 out of 25 for company training.

To earn maximum credit for company training, each firefighte­r — the EFD has 51 available slots for uniformed personnel and three are open — should receive 16 hours of training per month in structure-fire related subjects, as outlined by the National Fire Protection Associatio­n.

Mosby thanked the El Dorado City Council for its support of the EFD over the past five years.

“It’s a good yardstick of how we’ve improved the service that we provide for our citizens,” Mosby told city officials earlier this month.

“This city council provides the fire department with excellent equipment, and that plays a big part,” the fire chief continued.

Mosby said the ISO rating covers the EFD’s fire protection service area/fire district.

The community classifica­tion of 2, or second class, applies to properties beyond 1,000 feet of a fire hydrant but within five road miles of a recognized fire station.

The city has four fire stations, Central Fire Station next to City Hall on North West Avenue and three substation­s on the north, east and west side of town.

In response to a question from Alderman Billy Blann, Mosby said that if someone is heading east, the fire district stops at city limits.

Blann also noted that some houses in the Mystic Creek Golf Course community on Arkansas 335 are within the city’s district and others on the back side of the property are not within the district.

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