Insurance & Liability Guide

Insurance & Liability

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Complete risk management guide for animal-assisted education programs in Colorado schools

Insurance Coverage Types

General Liability Insurance

$500–$1,200/year

Coverage: $1,000,000 per occurrence / $2,000,000 aggregate

What it covers: Bodily injury, property damage, and personal injury claims arising from your programs. If a child trips over a leash or a dog scratches furniture, this covers legal defense and settlements.

Essential for: Every program, regardless of size. Schools will require proof of coverage before allowing programs on campus.

Animal Interaction Rider

+$200–$400/year (added to general liability)

What it covers: Specifically covers incidents involving animal bites, scratches, allergic reactions, and animal-related injuries during program activities.

Why separate: Standard general liability often excludes or limits animal-related claims. This rider fills that gap explicitly.

Key detail: Confirm the rider covers therapy/education animals in school settings, not just office pets.

Directors & Officers (D&O) Insurance

$500–$1,500/year

Coverage: Protects board members and officers from personal liability for governance decisions

What it covers: Claims of mismanagement, breach of fiduciary duty, failure to supervise, employment practices. Covers legal defense costs even if claims are frivolous.

Why essential: Qualified board members will not serve without D&O coverage. Their personal assets (homes, savings) would otherwise be at risk.

Professional Liability (Errors & Omissions)

$400–$800/year

What it covers: Claims that your educational program caused harm through negligent instruction, poor curriculum design, or failure to meet professional standards.

Example: A parent claims your program exacerbated their child's anxiety around animals rather than helping it.

Recommended for: Once you are delivering regular programming. Can defer until pilot begins.

Total Annual Insurance Budget: $1,600–$3,900/year for comprehensive coverage. Budget $2,500 as a reasonable middle estimate for Year 1.

Insurance Providers

Nonprofits Insurance Alliance (NIA)

Website: insurancefornonprofits.org

Specialty: Exclusively serves 501(c)(3) organizations. Understands nonprofit risks. Competitive pricing.

Products: GL, D&O, Professional Liability, Property, Auto, Workers Comp

Best for: One-stop nonprofit insurance shop. Recommended first call.

Philadelphia Insurance Companies

Website: phly.com

Specialty: Nonprofit and social services organizations. Strong in education sector.

Products: Full commercial lines with nonprofit endorsements

Best for: Organizations needing customized animal interaction coverage.

Markel Specialty

Website: markel.com

Specialty: Specialty and hard-to-place risks. Strong animal-related program experience.

Products: GL, Professional, Animal Liability specifically

Best for: If NIA or Philadelphia cannot cover animal interaction component.

Pet Partners Registered Teams

Key Fact: Pet Partners registered therapy animal teams carry their OWN $1,000,000 liability insurance as part of their registration. If you use Pet Partners-registered volunteer handlers, their insurance covers the animal interaction component of your visits.

This means:

  • You still need your own general liability for program operations (slip/fall, etc.)
  • The animal bite/scratch risk is covered by the handler's Pet Partners policy
  • This can significantly reduce your animal interaction rider cost or eliminate the need entirely
  • Pet Partners teams are also required to have current evaluations, health screenings, and training
  • Verify each team's registration is current before every visit

Pet Partners registration includes: Handler training course, team evaluation, animal health screening, $1M liability insurance, biennial re-evaluation.

Colorado Law: Animal Liability

CRS 13-21-124 — Dog Bite Strict Liability

Colorado imposes strict liability on dog owners and keepers for serious bodily injury caused by dog bites. This means:

  • The owner/keeper is liable regardless of whether they knew the dog was dangerous
  • No “one free bite” rule in Colorado for serious injuries
  • “Keeper” includes anyone with possession, custody, or control of the animal
  • Applies to serious bodily injury (broken bones, disfigurement, etc.)
  • For non-serious injuries, Colorado follows negligence standard (was handler careless?)

What this means for CCE: The organization and handler could both be considered “keepers” during program activities. This reinforces the need for: (1) excellent insurance, (2) rigorous animal screening, (3) proper handler training, and (4) signed waivers from parents.

Safety Protocols

Animal Health Requirements
  • Current rabies vaccination (within 1 or 3 years per vaccine type)
  • Annual veterinary wellness examination (within past 12 months)
  • AKC Canine Good Citizen (CGC) certification as minimum behavioral standard
  • No history of aggression, biting, or unprovoked snapping
  • Current on all core vaccinations (DHPP, Bordetella)
  • Clean bill of health — no contagious conditions, parasites, or skin issues
  • Bathed/groomed within 24 hours of school visit
Allergy Protocol
  • Pre-screen: Parent permission form asks about allergies (pet dander, animal saliva)
  • Classroom prep: Notify all families 1 week before any animal visit
  • Epi-pen: School nurse confirms epi-pen availability; handler carries Benadryl
  • Severely allergic child: Animal does NOT enter room. Child participates in alternative activity (video of visit, stuffed animal exercise, art project about compassion). Never force exposure.
  • Mild allergy: Seat child at distance, no direct contact. Observe for 15 minutes. Hand washing mandatory for all students after contact.
  • Post-visit: Classroom ventilated; surfaces wiped down after animal leaves
Emergency Bite/Scratch Procedure
  1. Immediate: Calmly remove animal from area. Handler takes animal to separate space.
  2. First aid: Wash wound with soap and water for 5 minutes. Apply pressure if bleeding. Bandage.
  3. Report: Notify school nurse/administration immediately. Complete incident report form.
  4. Document: Photograph injury (with staff witness). Note time, circumstances, animal behavior before incident.
  5. Notify parent: Call parent/guardian within 30 minutes. Provide written incident report within 24 hours.
  6. Animal: Animal is removed from program pending review. Veterinary behavioral assessment required before return.
  7. Follow-up: Check on child next day. Offer counseling referral if needed. File with insurance carrier.
Handler-to-Student Ratios
SettingRatioNotes
Classroom visit (K-2)1 handler : 8 studentsTeacher also present as additional adult
Classroom visit (3-5)1 handler : 10 studentsTeacher present
Middle school1 handler : 10-12 studentsTeacher present
Small group (reading buddy)1 handler : 3-4 studentsOne-on-one preferred
Shelter field trip1 adult : 5 studentsMix of handlers, teachers, parent volunteers

Parent Permission Form

This form is ready to copy and customize. Send home at least 1 week before first animal visit.

COLORADO COMPASSION EDUCATION
Parent/Guardian Permission & Medical Information Form

Hold Harmless Agreement

This agreement is signed by the school/district, not individual parents. It establishes shared responsibility.

School Entry Requirements

Background Checks

  • CBI Background Check: Colorado Bureau of Investigation, $39.50, required for all school volunteers in most districts
  • FBI Fingerprint Check: Required by some districts for regular/ongoing volunteers. Through Identogo, $40–$55. Results in 3–5 business days.
  • Valid for: Typically 1–3 years depending on district policy
  • Who needs it: Every handler, every CCE staff member, every regular volunteer who enters school property during student hours

Additional School Requirements

  • Volunteer Application: Most districts require a volunteer application form on file
  • Facility Use Agreement: Written agreement for use of school space (see Hold Harmless above)
  • Certificate of Insurance: Naming the school district as “additional insured” on your GL policy
  • Animal Health Records: Current vaccination records and vet clearance letter on file with school
  • Handler Credentials: Copy of CGC certificate, Pet Partners registration (if applicable), and training completion
  • Mandatory Reporter Training: Some districts require all volunteers to complete mandatory reporter training (free online, 1–2 hours)

Emergency Contact Card

Every handler carries this card during school visits:

Handler Emergency Quick-Reference
  • School nurse location: [fill in per school]
  • Main office phone: [fill in per school]
  • CCE emergency line: [founder phone]
  • Poison control: 1-800-222-1222
  • Animal emergency vet: [nearest 24-hr vet]
  • Insurance carrier claim line: [from policy]

If bite/scratch occurs: (1) Remove animal. (2) First aid. (3) School nurse. (4) Incident form. (5) Call parent. (6) Call CCE. (7) Photograph. (8) File claim within 24 hours.