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Insurance Inspector

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The insurance industry can be pretty hard to understand. Yet consultant Cathy O'Neil can easily sum up what a risk inspector does.

"You are the underwriter's eyes," she says. Her job is to do inspections that will help the underwriter make decisions. She has to check for all kinds of risks, including fire hazards, crime risks and financial liabilities. She makes recommendations on how businesses can reduce their risk of having to file for insurance by improving upon things like safety features.

"What you have to find out is what is norm for the risk," she says. This means checking things like whether a building meets fire code regulations. She may check roof and floor construction, heating and sprinkler systems, and the use and storage of combustible and flammable liquids.

For example, many florist shops have helium containers for balloons. O'Neil says helium can act as a "mini-torpedo," and could blow a large hole in a building or take off someone's legs. The florist would need to store the helium properly to be eligible for insurance in case of fire.

Or O'Neil may check an automotive shop where spray paint is used. In the working room, there needs to be a side-draft or downdraft exhaust system, to clear the air of any debris. An interlocking system ensures an exhaust fan comes on automatically when the spray paint is in use.

If she were to do an inspection at an automotive shop, she could recommend an interlocking system be put in place to reduce the fire hazard. She might ask the underwriter to put a warranty on file. This would mean the exhaust fan would have to be on at all times when spray paint was being used. If a fire started when the fan wasn't on, the shop's claim would be null and void.

O'Neil says she can pat herself on the back when the company can get out of a claim because of a recommendation she has made. Making recommendations to prevent the problem in the first place is a big part of her job. And this, in part, is why she quit her job as a claims adjuster to go into inspection. "I wanted to be around people more, and be able to prevent claims instead of paying for claims," she says.

O'Neil also looks at something called "moral hazards" when inspecting a building. She explains that if there were five pizza places on one corner, she might drive by at about 5 p.m. to see how business is doing. There may be one rundown restaurant, two established restaurants and two fairly new restaurants. If she happens to notice that the rundown restaurant has no cars in the parking lot, where the other ones have many, this might raise her suspicions.

"You know that you have a moral hazard, and a good indicator for arson," she says. The next step might be to check if the company is having financial problems. "Is the person going to end up flicking your Bic, if you know what I mean," she explains.

Moral hazards, building construction, industrial hazards and liability are all things O'Neil had to learn about for this career. "You have to know your stuff."

She suggests anyone interested in a career as an inspector work towards getting an education in building construction, fire protection and insurance. She says the courses can be boring and hard, but lead to a rewarding career.

The career is certainly not without some excitement.

Don Lopes has been knocked flat on his back testing a fire hydrant, covered in soot, rust and water while testing a building's sprinkler system, and even kicked out of a building by an irate manager.

It's all in a day's work.

"I've been doing this for nine years and I really enjoy it," says Lopes, an inspector. "I graduated...with a degree in structural engineering. I did that for awhile, but I found it kind of boring."

Lopes was playing golf with a friend one day when his companion happened to mention a job opening for an inspector at the insurance company where he worked. Lopes decided to check it out and ended up getting the job. He says he has never regretted his career move.

"Now I get to work with people a lot more. I have more freedom and the job's really interesting," he says.

Lopes is responsible for inspecting buildings that his company is insuring. Some of them are finished, some are still under construction.

Rogers Centre in Toronto, Canada, is just one of the buildings Lopes has inspected. When it was being constructed, Lopes checked in almost every day, making sure things were being done properly.

"Initially, the engineers treated me like I didn't know what I was talking about, because I was the insurance guy," says Lopes. "But it didn't take long before they realized I knew my stuff."

Being an inspector carries a lot of responsibility, says Lopes.

"We recommend certain safeguards -- shut-off switches, that kind of stuff -- or we can tell them not to smoke in a certain area," he says.

In addition to making these recommendations, inspectors have to be able to explain technical problems to clients, company presidents, underwriters and employees.

"We have to sit down with people and tell them what needs improving," says Lopes. "Our biggest responsibility is making the recommendations -- making sure we know what we're talking about and being firm about it.

"Your communication skills have to be good because you have to sell them on making these changes."

Even when an inspector has done a completely thorough job, however, it's still no guarantee that nothing will go wrong.

Lopes recalls a case where he inspected a plastics plant. He gave the plant a great report.

"Everything looked fine. It was a brand new building," he says.

A month after his inspection, the building blew up and burned to the ground. An employee had heated a drum improperly and it exploded.

Events like this are impossible for an inspector to predict, says Lopes. "We can inspect the building all we want, but we can't control the actual procedures that take place."

Aside from technical know-how and good communication skills, an insurance inspector needs to have flexibility. On any given day, says Lopes, he's not really sure where he'll be going and what sort of job he'll be inspecting. But this is part of what he likes about his career.

"It's such a diverse job," says Lopes, "and most people are really good. I could probably count on one hand the number of times in the last nine years of working here that I've been given a hard time."

Kendra Bradley is a self-employed inspector. "I really don't know how I got into this field. It just sort of happened."

Bradley, who has an engineering diploma, left the corporate world to become self-employed after gaining a few years of experience. She has no regrets. "I really enjoy what I do. I work the hours I want to work and I get paid well to do it."

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