From my note this afternoon to Larry Dent:
One area of your letter has raised the concerns of several racers who post on the Improved Touring forum. I am by no means speaking for the IT racers on the Forum, all IT racers or all road racers in general, however most of them probably have concerns about rising costs, especially the cost of insurance. Is there any way that you can share with us the method that the Club uses to distribute the cost of insurance that trickles down to our entry fees? I think that what we are looking for is just an assurance that the process is fair and equitable.
And his response, posted with his permission:
"A tough and complicated question that to the best of my knowledge and belief is most fair and equitable. Here is a copy of a note I just sent to another member who asked about the same questions.
Joe, the road race program has suffered significant losses in the past also, and the insurance pool has covered those, so don't think you are supporting solo, because there have been times that solo has supported you. Our insurance is a blanket policy that covers every activitiy of the SCCA and the premiums are allocated accordingly. Solo is in for a 25% plus increase in premium. The insurance costs are one of the more equitable areas of the club in my view, and I am on the insurance committee for the club and was the insurance agent of record for the club for 4 years in the past."
And when I asked for a clarification of the statement "the premiums are allocated accordingly" he responded:
"Could I say SWAG (stupid wild ass guess)? Mostly claims history, and taking into account the loss ratios at the time of establishing next years coverage and costs with the insurance company. After 5 years the losses drop off the chart so the rates basically reflect the losses over the past 5 years. One big loss can sway the loss ratio for an individual group, and right now the loss ratio is high in the solo and rally department, so they are getting the brunt of the increase. But that could change next year if we had a big loss in the racing area.
Many years ago it was likely by SWAG, but now days the loss ratios tell the tale as much as anything else.
It's a balancing act based mostly on historical patterns, perceived dangers, and convincing the insurance companies we are taking steps to assure losses are kept to a minimum. As I said, complicated and complex."
I thank Mr. Dent for his responses and expecially his willingness and the speed in responding to my questions.