If you were performing your official state duties at the time of the alleged medical malpractice incident, then liability coverage is provided to you per the State Tort Claims Policy (TCP-401-14-19) and the General Liability Agreement (CGL-401-14-19), regardless of the date the claim or lawsuit is brought against you and/or Georgia Tech. However, if you should receive notice of a claim or lawsuit you must immediately provide these documents to the Georgia Tech Office of Legal Affairs to avoid jeopardizing your coverage.

If you are performing your official state duties at the time of the accident, then liability (bodily injury and/or property damage to others) coverage is provided to you per the State Tort Claims Policy (TCP- 401-14-19).

If you are performing your official state duties at the time of the accident, then liability (bodily injury and/or property damage to others) coverage is provided to you per the State Tort Claims Policy (TCP- 401-14-19).

The General Liability Agreement (CGL-401-14-19) can provide you with a civil defense for alleged civil rights violations in the work place that were unexpected and unintentional.

No, however, if you are renting a vehicle for travel through one of the in-state, statewide contracts with either Hertz or Enterprise or the inter-state statewide contract with Hertz, the Loss Damage Waiver is automatically included in the contract rental vehicle rate.

See the File a Claim page for information.

Loss due to mysterious disappearance or theft without visible evidence of forced entry or forced removal from a security device (e.g. cable lock) is not reimbursable under the State Owned Building and Personal Property Agreement (PROP-401-14-2-19). The loss must satisfy the “Burglary” definition in the Agreement in order for coverage to apply.

No. The Automobile Physical Damage Agreement (APD- 401-14-19) only provides coverage for damage to state owned vehicles. You should check with your insurance agent to verify whether or not your personal automobile insurance policy will cover any damage to your own vehicle while using it on Georgia Tech business.

Answers provided to all the questions below are general in nature and do not supersede any of the provisions contained in the State Tort Claims Policy (TCP-401-14-19), General Liability Agreement (CGL-401-14-19), Automobile Physical Damage Agreement (APD- 401-14-19), State Owned Building and Personal Property Agreement (PROP-401-14-2-19), or the Special Property All Risk Agreement (SPAR-401-14-2-19).

No. The injured passenger(s) will need to file claim under their own health insurance policy and/or seek payment from the at-fault party.

No, the State Owned Building and Personal Property Agreement (PROP-401-14-2-19) only covers buildings and personal property (i.e. contents) owned by the State of Georgia (BOR/Georgia Tech).

No, however, if the Georgia Tech employee was injured while performing official state duties, workers’ compensation coverage would be available to respond to the employee’s injuries.