Many in the corporate travel community use "duty of
care" and "travel risk management" interchangeably, but the two
have distinct meanings. Duty of care, put simply, is a "moral and legal
obligation to take a more serious responsibility for the safety of our
travelers," Christopherson Business Travel president Mike Cameron said.
Travel risk management is the course of action to provide that.
"The 'why' has become labeled as the 'what,'" he
said of the confusion. The moral and legal obligation should be the reason why
companies implement the what, risk management practices. He added that duty of
care and risk management's statuses as hot topics validate the need for
professional risk management.
While that clarification can help travel buyers understand
what duty of care means, what it is remains murky, particularly in the U.S.
Liability Versus Duty of Care
By Don Dowling, a partner in law firm K&L Gates' global employer
solutions team
Employers fret
plenty about their liability in case of illness or injury to employees, but
that liability is pretty limited, at least for business travel within the U.S.,
thanks to workers compensation. Once travel managers realize that, they're free
to worry less about liability and to concentrate more on duty of care.
What about
when a U.S.-Based Employee Is Injured Overseas? Read More from Don Dowling
Safety Obligations
If a U.S. employee is injured on the job, workers
compensation insurance generally covers a company's responsibility, said
Stephen Barth, a University of Houston law professor and founder of the
Hospitality Lawyer media and information platform. He explained that once an
employee gets a certain distance from where the business is located—and that
distance varies from state to state—workers compensation no longer provides
coverage. However, the business still has obligations under U.S. Occupational
Safety and Health Administration regulations to provide a safe work
environment. When one's job includes a global travel program, the place where
those obligations begin and end is not always clear, even to legal experts. The
U.K., for example, has the Corporate Manslaughter Act, which clearly spells out
obligations and penalties, but in the U.S., the issue falls under common law,
Barth said.
Generalized advice, that companies should heed the duty of
care, "leaves employers without practical guidance in the international
business travel and global mobility context," according to Donald Dowling,
a partner in law firm K&L Gates global employer solutions team. "Each
foreign business trip and expatriate assignment is unique and presents its own
set of physical risks. No law or regulations tell an employer what specific
steps it must take and what specific precautions it need not take to heed its
duty of care when it dispatches an employee overseas."
In court, decisions have gone both ways, according to a
white paper authored by law firm Fisher & Phillips and published this year
through the International SOS Foundation. For example, after four Union Texas
Petroleum auditors were killed while on business in Pakistan, their families
brought a suit in Houston against the oil and gas company in 1999. The jury
determined the company had taken adequate steps—hiring a private risk
management firm, for example—to ensure the employees' safety. More recently,
however, a jury in Connecticut awarded several million dollars in damages to
the family of a student who suffered severe brain damage after contracting
tick-borne encephalitis during a school trip to China. The jury's decision
cited the argument that the school had not advised the student on how to dress
for a hike or to use insect repellent.
"A United States employer would be remiss if it did not
understand the potential for a negligence action to be filed and the costly
ramifications of such a suit," according to the white paper. "Unfortunately,
there is no clear line of case law on which an employer can rely when
evaluating the risks of sending its employees abroad."
Evaluating Risk
This ambiguity means no company will be able to protect
itself from liability with full certainty. By extension, no company can protect
its employees' safety with full certainty, either. Of course, the very phrase "travel
risk management" implies just that. A company is "thinking about
managing risk. It's rarely, if ever, about eliminating risk," Barth said.
As such, he said, the fundamental formula for travel risk
management boils down to:
- evaluating risks
- mitigating those risks however possible
- insuring against any risks that cannot be brought down to
a manageable level
Travel risk management should begin with an assessment of
employees' exposure to risk, Cameron said. For example, a company whose
employees travel mostly domestically might determine there is minimal benefit
to implementing a sophisticated travel risk management program; such a company
might opt instead to self-insure, he said.
Even so, that does not mean such programs should ignore risk
management altogether. Another common misconception about travel risk
management involves only catastrophic events, such as tsunamis, volcanic eruptions,
civil unrest and terrorist attacks, Barth said. In doing so, they lose sight of
everyday risks that can be just as deadly. "Look at the things that can
happen: pedestrian accidents, car accidents, incidents on subways and buses,"
Barth said. "People forget the basics when they hear 'travel risk.'"
This applies to international travel, as well. Most probably
would not include Japan or the U.K. on a list of high-risk destinations.
However, travelers' itineraries to those countries often include early morning
landings after long flights, at which point the travelers must rent cars and
drive. Not only are they bleary eyed, but they are expected to drive on the
opposite side of the road [than] they do at home, which they may never have
learned to do.
Crafting a policy that allows travelers to use car services
after long or overnight flights falls under travel risk management even though
it addresses a car accident rather than a larger-scale incident. "A lost
passport, someone getting sick, not understanding the culture—stay focused on
the basics," Barth said.
Adapting to Company Culture
Yet another misconception is that the travel department
should be the sole house for a travel risk management. Doing so could be a
setup for failure. "A lot of businesses that are getting into travel risk
are just touching the tip of the iceberg," Barth said. "It's really
unfair to put that burden on a travel manager. You have to think about your
entire ecosystem of travel risk management."
For larger, more complex companies, that includes bringing
in departments that handle security, insurance, HR, legal and communications,
Barth said. These departments need to be involved not only in developing travel
risk management policy but also in executing it when emergencies occur, he said.
At smaller companies, many of those departments do not
exist, making it harder to find a logical home for travel risk management,
Cameron said. For them, travel risk management might be the CFO or controller
merely approving an insurance policy once a year, he said.
Different companies also have different levels of
willingness to manage risk, he said. Some insure against everything, and some
insure only for major crises. In general, companies today are migrating toward
higher deductibles rather than the premium for a sophisticated response to duty
of care, he said. "They say, 'Let's just deal with the costs that will
come along, as things will inadvertently happen. That doesn't make sense
because it could end up costing you a lot of money."
That realization can be harsh. Cameron noted that one client
with a large presence in Belgium implemented a global risk management program
after the airport terrorist attack in Brussels last year. The attack made the
client realize the importance of knowing where its travelers are and what is
happening, he said.
That discovery harkens back to that original
definition of duty of care: the "moral and legal" obligation. All the
concerns about insurance, lawsuits and cost are driven by the legal part. When
companies concentrate on the moral part, however, their actions tend to answer
the legal questions, as well. "The companies that we see take the more
proactive approach are the ones that don't view it as a legal obligation,"
Barth said, "but view it as an ethical corporate responsibility."