Insurance by Industry
Insurance built for agencies that serve people
Social services organizations carry unique risks, and the right coverage should reflect the people you serve, not just the building you work in.
Social services agency insurance is a bundle of business and specialty coverages designed for nonprofits, community organizations, and human services providers whose work puts them in close contact with vulnerable populations. A food bank in Nampa, a youth counseling center in Meridian, a senior day program in Caldwell, and an emergency shelter in Boise each face a different risk profile, even though they all operate under the broad umbrella of social services. Bittick works with multiple carriers to find coverage combinations that match what your organization actually does, rather than defaulting to a generic business policy that leaves gaps. We place coverage for agencies across Idaho, Texas, and six other states: CA, CO, NV, OR, VA, and WA.
What this coverage includes
General liability and premises coverage
General liability insurance protects your organization when a third party, such as a client, volunteer, or visitor, suffers a bodily injury or property damage tied to your operations. Social services agencies often see high foot traffic, sometimes from people who need physical assistance or who are in crisis. If someone is hurt on your property, general liability pays for their medical costs and covers your legal defense if they sue. It also covers property damage claims you accidentally cause to others.
Professional liability and directors and officers coverage
Professional liability insurance (sometimes called errors and omissions) covers allegations that your staff gave negligent advice or made a mistake in delivering services. Counseling centers and case management programs face this exposure constantly. Directors and officers (D&O) liability is a separate but related coverage: it protects the personal assets of your board members and executive leadership if the organization is sued and they are named individually. Many funders and grant programs now ask nonprofits to carry D&O before writing a check.
Abuse and molestation coverage
Any organization working with children, elderly adults, or other at-risk populations carries the risk of an abuse or molestation claim, even when the allegation is unfounded. Defending against such a claim is expensive regardless of outcome. Abuse and molestation insurance covers defense costs and, where a claim is proven, payments to victims. This coverage is typically excluded from standard general liability policies, so it usually needs to be added specifically.
Workplace violence coverage
Agencies serving people in acute distress, including emergency shelters, mental health programs, and addiction recovery services, face an elevated risk of violent incidents on their premises. Workplace violence insurance addresses the costs that follow such an event: security and public relations consultants, direct payments to affected employees and survivors, and business interruption losses while your facility recovers and reopens. Standard property and liability policies rarely cover these specific expenses.
Commercial auto, cyber liability, and core business coverages
If your organization transports clients in agency-owned vehicles, a commercial auto policy needs to reflect that use explicitly. It also extends to employees and volunteers using personal vehicles for agency business, covering accidents that a personal auto policy would likely exclude. Cyber liability matters because client files often contain sensitive medical, financial, and family data that makes nonprofits a target for data breaches. Commercial property insurance covers your building contents, and workers' compensation is legally required in Idaho for most employers with one or more employees.
Pairs well with
Commercial Property Insurance
Covers the physical contents of your facility, including furniture, office equipment, and program supplies. Most donated or grant-funded assets are still at risk from fire, theft, or vandalism and need to be listed.
Learn more ›Workers' Compensation Insurance
Idaho law requires most employers to carry workers' comp. Social services work can involve physical lifting, client transport, and field visits, all of which create injury exposure for your staff.
Learn more ›Commercial Auto Insurance
Pairs directly with social services coverage when your agency owns vehicles or reimburses volunteers and staff for driving on behalf of the organization.
Learn more ›Cyber Liability Insurance
Client files at social services organizations are rich with protected health information and financial data. A breach triggers notification costs, regulatory fines, and credit monitoring obligations that add up fast.
Learn more ›Umbrella / Excess Liability Insurance
Adds a layer of liability limits above your general liability and auto policies. Useful for agencies with large client volumes, multiple program sites, or grant contracts that require higher limits.
Learn more ›What this coverage protects against
Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.
-
A visitor trips on a broken threshold at your community center entrance.
The risk
Foot traffic at a busy Boise community center means a lot of people moving through doors that see hard daily use. A worn threshold, a wet floor during a winter storm, or a crowded hallway can result in a fall and a serious injury claim against your organization.
How this coverage helps
General liability coverage pays the injured person's medical expenses and funds your legal defense if they pursue a lawsuit. Your organization keeps serving clients while the carrier handles the claim.
-
A grant funder sues your board over alleged financial mismanagement.
The risk
Nonprofit boards are made up of volunteers who give their time, but that does not shield them from personal legal exposure. A funding organization or state agency can name individual directors in a lawsuit even when the organization itself is the primary defendant.
How this coverage helps
Directors and officers liability insurance covers the personal legal defense costs for named board members and reimburses settlements or judgments, so a lawsuit does not wipe out someone's personal savings for their service to the community.
-
A former client files an abuse allegation against a youth program employee.
The risk
A claim of abuse against a youth program staff member, even one that is later shown to be unfounded, triggers an immediate legal response. Defense costs in these cases often run into the tens of thousands of dollars before any verdict is reached.
How this coverage helps
Abuse and molestation coverage, which is a separate policy from general liability, pays for your legal defense and, if the claim is proven valid, covers payments to the victim. Carrying this coverage also signals to funders and licensing bodies that your organization takes its duty of care seriously.
-
A volunteer rear-ends another driver while dropping off a senior client.
The risk
A retired volunteer using her own car to shuttle a client from an Eagle senior program to a medical appointment gets into an at-fault accident. Her personal auto policy excludes business use, which means your agency is exposed to the injured party's claim.
How this coverage helps
A commercial auto policy that extends to non-owned vehicles covers accidents involving volunteers and employees using personal vehicles for agency business, filling the gap that personal auto policies leave open.
-
A hacker accesses your case management system and exposes client records.
The risk
A social services agency's database is a concentrated file of sensitive information: mental health diagnoses, immigration status, financial records, and family case notes. A phishing email that compromises one staff login can expose hundreds of client records and trigger state notification requirements within days.
How this coverage helps
Cyber liability insurance covers the cost of notifying affected clients, hiring a forensics firm to identify and contain the breach, and managing any regulatory response. It can also cover credit monitoring services for those whose data was exposed.
-
A violent incident at your emergency shelter injures two staff members and forces a temporary closure.
The risk
Emergency shelter staff work with people in acute crisis, and de-escalation does not always succeed. When a violent incident occurs, the costs go beyond immediate medical care: you may need security consultants, a public communications response, and a period of reduced operations to rebuild safety protocols.
How this coverage helps
Workplace violence insurance covers the direct costs of the incident, including payouts to injured employees, consultant fees, and business interruption losses while your facility is closed or operating at reduced capacity. These expenses fall outside the scope of most standard liability or property policies.
-
A counseling client claims your case manager gave advice that caused financial harm.
The risk
A case manager who helps a client navigate housing assistance, benefits eligibility, or financial resources can face an allegation that incorrect advice led to a denial of benefits or a costly decision. Even a well-documented, good-faith error can result in a professional liability claim.
How this coverage helps
Professional liability insurance, also called errors and omissions coverage, pays for your agency's legal defense and any damages awarded when a client alleges that a staff member's advice or actions fell below the expected standard of care.