What will it mean to you as a landlord when Maryland
outlaws additional insured status for landlords?
If Maryland can
outlaw additional insured status for landlords, which seems reasonably likely this session, you need a tracking platform that can integrate current records, track and verify renewals, send out customized compliance notifications, and centrally process all of the renewals, cancellations, and other mail that each policy generates.
Maryland has made an attempt to
outlaw additional insured status for landlords.
Maryland is trying to
outlaw additional insured status for residential landlords.
You generally don't want to require additional insured status — Maryland even tried to
outlaw additional insured for residential leases recently.
You generally don't want to require additional insured status — Maryland even tried to
outlaw additional insured for residential leases recently.
If Maryland can
outlaw additional insured status for landlords, which seems reasonably likely this session, you need a tracking platform that can integrate current records, track and verify renewals, send out customized compliance notifications, and centrally process all of the renewals, cancellations, and other mail that each policy generates.
Maryland is trying to
outlaw additional insured status for residential landlords.
Not exact matches
How do you protect yourself when
additional insured status is
outlawed by the people you elected in Annapolis?
Should your landlord be
additional insured, and why did MD try to
outlaw that?
As a matter of fact, Maryland
outlawing landlords as
additional insureds is a very real possibility, as we've previously discussed.
Should your landlord be
additional insured, and why did MD try to
outlaw that?
The state of Maryland actually tried to
outlaw the listing of landlords as
additional insured on renters policies a few years back.