The success of Minnesota’s experiment allowing THC consumption in bars, restaurants and taprooms for the past two years has come at a high price: Insurance costs are astronomical, and policies are hard to find.
“It’s always fun to be the first to do things, but it comes with a lot of headaches, and we’re finding insurance to be that primary hurdle,” said Bob Galligan, director of government relations for the Minnesota Craft Brewers Guild.
The main issue is a lack of experience in the industry. Because there haven’t been any lawsuits for a business over-serving cannabis to someone who later crashes their car, as an example, insurers aren’t sure what their liability might be.
“They don’t know how to provide coverage unless something has happened. It’s a blessing and a curse at the same time,” Galligan said. “Insurance providers want thousands of pages of data to write that policy, but as I tell our members, we are that data.”
With alcohol, decades of claims and court cases can pinpoint potential liability based on a tavern’s sales and address. Because on-site THC consumption is so new and has so many unanswered questions, policies can cost twice as much for far less coverage compared with liquor liability or “dram shop” coverage.
And the largest insurance carriers typically won’t touch cannabis at all because they operate globally and don’t want to risk money moving from a place where cannabis is legal to a part of the world where it is not.
“Because these companies are global, they run into money-laundering issues,” said Cory Lake, owner of Lake Group Insurance, which handles cannabis policies. “That would be way more expensive than money you’d be winning from any sort of cannabis business.”
The issue has turned into a persistent growing pain for the industry in Minnesota and has caused some businesses to keep THC off the menu as insurers deny or don’t renew coverage.