USA | sloughclub - 2/27/2024 02:08
If you’re doing zero custom work , which I understand is not what lots here are doing , but with no custom work we were able to get covered under our farm spray policy . They did a investigative report of our drone and the size of the machine was an issue but they worked through it and accepted it actually added a very small amount to our farm policy , but had to sign off to doing work on our listed farms only .Having been on the spray road for many many years , if you are doing customer spraying, you need to follow coups lead there and make sure you have good coverage, our farm policy specifically calls for our aerial applicators to have workmen’s comp insurance and will try to make us pay it if we hire an aerial applicator that doesn’t carry it , this is under Missouri law , hiring folks to come operate a custom business on your farm can get complicated, as a farmer hiring folks to do this , I’d check with your agent to see about the workmen’s comp issue , I dang sure know what mine would say .The first time I was confronted with this I really couldn’t believe they were gonna try and make me pay for a contractor’s workmen’s comp , believe me it happened[/QUOTE
ILL requires aerial applicators license to be legal to spray with a drone, can't get an aerial application license until have proof of liability insurance. |