The most important aspect of your umbrella policy is that it covers your small business.
Up to a point, I think. What I've been told is that an umbrella policy doesn't provide professional liability insurance. Numerous times I've been asked to provide proof of professional liability insurance as a condition of signing a subcontract for consulting work. I've been advised to respond to such requests by saying that such insurance is prohibitively expensive for my self-owned business and thus I neither carry such insurance nor have the means nor plans to obtain it. I've never been challenged on such an assertion. When I've done work as either an employee or a consultant of a firm that does carry professional liability insurance, I am, in fact, in most cases covered by their insurance.
Possibly too far off the track? Just wanted to make the point that an umbrella policy may cover you for a lot of things, but you should know what it doesn't cover. Should a person delivering a package to my house or coming to my home office for a consultation slip on the ice on my driveway and want to sue me for medical expenses, that umbrella policy would come in very handy. Should someone want to sue me for damages suffered because of a premature failure on a construction project on which I consulted, not so much, or more likely, not at all.
To get back to the OP(razbry)'s original point, it seems to me that, given the nature of the business in question, and professional liability probably not being an issue, the typical-$100/yr-for-$1M coverage umbrella policy would seem to fit the bill. I'd consult a lawyer or at least an insurance agent, to be sure.
Because anybody can sue anybody, which is why waivers don't work in IL, you're never really released from liability.
I agree. Based on what I've been told, I wouldn't even bother with trying to get people to sign waivers, unless you want to use it a psychological ploy to discourage lawsuits in the event of mishaps. No doubt that's why we're asked to sign most of the waivers presented to us, but anyone with a serious injury and a decent lawyer will quickly learn that, in Illinois, they're not worth the paper they're printed on. Anyone who knows the specifics of Illinois law on this, please correct me, but as I understand it, Illinois is one of those states in which waivers are essentially meaningless and unforceable, inasmuch as, no matter what kind of waiver someone tries to press upon you, you cannot sign away, in Illinois, at least, your right to redress in case of injury, whether you show up to run in a marathon, swim in a lake, march in a parade, put your kid in a summer camp, spend a day picking berries, or anything else.
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