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Member Blog: Another Day, Another Lawsuit – Cannabis Companies Are Finding Out the Hard Way They Need EPLI

By Eric Rahn, Managing Director, S2S Insurance Specialists

Harassment, wrongful termination, race, gender and age discrimination, and hostile work environments are wreaking havoc on the cannabis industry, resulting in an upswing of recent lawsuits that are costing companies hundreds of thousands of dollars and causing harm to the workforce and brand damage that is – oftentimes – beyond repair. 

With the average claim costing small-to-mid-sized cannabis companies between $100,000 and $500,000, there needs to be more of a focus on creating a workplace environment free from harassment, discrimination, and bias. Furthermore, cannabis businesses need to be proactive in having the proper insurance policies in place.

You may make a mistake and be exposed to liability. You may do everything right, yet still be sued. Employer’s Protection Liability Insurance (EPLI) is key to protecting your business from employee-related risks and detrimental lawsuits.

What is EPLI and What Does it Cover?

EPLI is a type of management liability insurance that helps safeguard businesses against employee claims alleging inappropriate or unfair treatment. Former, current, and potential employees who believe the company has violated their legal rights can file lawsuits for a variety of reasons. The most frequent types of claims covered under EPLI include sexual harassment, discrimination, and wrongful termination/retaliation. However, EPLI can also cover a broader array of employment issues, such as breach of an employment contract, negligent evaluation, failure to employ or promote, wrongful discipline, deprivation of a career opportunity, wrongful infliction of emotional distress, defamation, invasion of privacy and mismanagement of employee benefit plans.

While policies vary, EPLI generally covers settlement, judgment, legal costs, fines and penalties. EPLI also protects a company’s directors and officers, management, and other employees from being held personally liable in a lawsuit. 

Common Scenarios Resulting in Recent Lawsuits:

Sexual Harassment. According to the 2020 report, Prospects and Pitfalls: Confronting Sexual Harassment in the Legal Cannabis Industry, “sexual discrimination and harassment plague the legal cannabis industry. Moreover, the industry’s past illicit nature threatens to perpetuate employer misconduct.”

Over the past few years, there has been a surge in sexual harassment claims in the cannabis industry. One such suit filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) alleged that a general manager at a medical marijuana dispensary in Maryland engaged in “unwelcome touching,” made “highly offensive sexual comments to and about staff and customers,” and “showed an employee a nude picture on his phone.” Although employees complained for months about the harassment, the company did not investigate until after it learned a complaint had been filed with the EEOC. The courts ruled in favor of the plaintiff, and the dispensary and its parent company were remanded to pay $175,000 to settle the suit.

The cannabis industry is plagued by many of the same gender issues as other mainstream industries. In a study conducted by WeedMaps, 53% of women in the cannabis industry have experienced workplace harassment with 46% reported feeling sexually harassed. However, it’s not just women and lower-level employees making claims. Last February, a large publicly traded California cannabis flower distributor came under fire when its former Chief Revenue Officer – a male – accused the company of fostering a culture of sexual harassment and coverup. In the official complaint, the executive said he was subject “to severe and pervasive sexual harassment, both hostile work environment and quid pro quo, as a result of unwanted sexual advances and other discriminatory conduct.” The pending court case seeks an unspecified amount of damages from the company and also names three of its related companies liable. 

Discrimination. Title VII is the Federal Civil Rights Law that prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of race, color, gender, national origin, and religion. For women, the cannabis industry remains a harassment-filled boys club. The latest in the battle to fight misogyny in the cannabis growing and retail industry, is a lawsuit filed by two workers at cannabis-growing companies in California who claim they were “wrongly fired after protesting workplace conditions and gender bias, including prohibitions on women working in growing rooms and pregnant women working at the companies.” The complaint also alleges that the companies conducted “a sham investigation of their complaints of bias, to further create pretense for firing them.” The plaintiffs are seeking compensatory and punitive damages, as well as other penalties against the companies.  

Wrongful Termination/Retaliation. According to the EEOC, this is the most common claim brought against employers. The latest case to make headlines was filed in June 2022 by a former employee of a Chicago-based health center who claims she was fired under the pretense that she had bullied a coworker, but in reality she was terminated because she had reported her supervisor’s unwelcome behavior. In the suit, she alleges “violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Illinois Human Rights Act, and asked the court for damages for emotional distress, humiliation and her loss of employment, as well as punitive damages.”

EPLI – Is it Worth It? Critical Points to Consider:

Navigating employee-related issues can be tricky business. Cannabis companies that land in legal hot water are often more focused on boosting profits and growing their business rather than implementing HR policies and ensuring they have the proper insurances in place to protect themselves against legal claims. The dozens of companies over the years that were embroiled in legal litigation and did not have EPLI learned the hard way that they are solely responsible for paying significant defense fees, compensatory and punitive damages, fines and penalties. 

When considering an EPLI, it is critical to negotiate policy limits, selection of counsel and defense limits, when you are first obtaining EPLI insurance or when you are renewing your policy. A qualified cannabis insurance broker can walk you through all the options and guide you on the policy that best meets your needs and budget.

While EPLI can be offered as a stand-alone policy, it is typically more affordable to combine EPLI with an existing policy, such as Directors & Officers Liability (D&O). Certain policies automatically include sexual harassment, but others do not, or you may be required to get a special endorsement for sexual harassment. Keep in mind that coverage is specific and EPLI cost is based on the business type, employee numbers and past lawsuits associated with the organization. Your broker should do the leg work for you and present coverage options and cost comparisons, so management can make an informed decision.

In Summary

Prevention is the cornerstone of reducing the risk of employee-related lawsuits. However, even if you develop and enforce a zero-tolerance policy for sexual harassment, discrimination, and other harmful issues, and take immediate and appropriate action when a complaint is made, claims can and will happen. 

As you hire more employees, your risk of discrimination and sexual harassment increases. An EPLI policy can help your legal defense and settlement of such claims. In today’s climate, business owners and managers need to be proactive and understand the risk management tools and options available to them to protect their business. 


Eric Rahn, Managing Director of S2S Insurance Specialists, is a highly specialized insurance broker and risk management professional with over 30 years of experience providing C-Suite executives strategies and solutions that protect and safeguard their businesses.

Eric has held several executive positions in the maritime and casino/gaming industries, including CEO of the largest privately own casino concessions company operating on cruise ships around the world. He transitioned his knowledge of corporate business practices in highly regulated industries into the burgeoning cannabis space, establishing S2S Insurance Specialists in 2017.

Eric has served on the National Cannabis Industry Association’s (NCIA) Risk Management Insurance Committee since 2016. He is also a national speaker on cannabis insurance and author of NCIA’s Risk Management and Insurance’s “Introduction into Cannabis Insurance.”

 

 

 

 

Member Blog: Will 2022 Be the Year for Cannabis Consumption Lounges?

By Eric Rahn, Managing Director, S2S Insurance Specialists

Key Questions & Considerations for Those Looking to Ride the Next Big Wave 

In the ever-evolving and fiercely competitive cannabis industry, consumption lounges (a.k.a. social or smoking lounges) are generating big buzz. Innovators and proponents for their legalization see it as a prime opportunity to better compete in a saturated market, attract new customers and grow market share. Opponents throw up a heap of red flags, including drugged driving, crime, and the health risks associated with smoke exposure.

Whether this new retail business model blows up in 2022 or not is anybody’s guess. Nevertheless, our industry must prepare for this next big wave in cannabis consumption. As an insurance broker who specializes in the cannabis industry and works with a wide variety of cannabis, hemp, and CBD businesses in every state where marijuana laws are established, we’ve done a deeper dive into the opportunities, and risks versus rewards for businesses looking to ride the potentially next big wave in cannabis. 

The Opportunity

The concept of a cannabis consumption lounge is nothing new, really. Similar to a bar that serves alcoholic beverages, consumers at least 21 years of age can not only purchase flower, edibles, etc. from a budtender but also consume these products in a social gathering place. Amsterdam’s “coffee shops” serve as the inspiration and model for cannabis innovation in the U.S. In the Netherlands, however, coffee shops operate in a legal grey area with their products being supplied by an entirely underground cultivation market. Of course, here in the U.S., the burden falls on individual states since marijuana remains illegal at the federal level. 

Analysts predict cannabis consumption lounges will be a budding business in states where recreational and/or medical marijuana is legal. This emerging business model is particularly attractive to states with more mature cannabis laws, like California and Nevada.  Alaska became the first U.S. state to allow consumption lounges in 2019 and Nevada is the latest to announce plans for the first state-sanctioned lounges by mid-2022. In all, seven states including the aforementioned, as well as New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Illinois, are forging ahead with their plans to allow for consumption lounges in 2022. These states will likely serve as a blueprint for other states as their popularity grows. 

Risks versus Rewards of Cannabis Consumption Lounges 

State regulatory bodies are grappling with how to develop, implement and enforce the rules surrounding social consumption lounges. For example, what will the laws around consumption lounges look like? How will business mitigate the myriad of risks? From an insurance perspective, will there be a need for new products? Should coverages be similar to Bar/Restaurant/Lounge insurance (DRAM Insurance), as both types of businesses face similar risks? 

They will also need to carefully address questions and concerns about public health implications. Could public consumption spaces cause people to over-consume? Will there be limits on how much cannabis a person is allowed to consume at a lounge in one visit? What is a “single serving” of cannabis anyway? These are all questions surfacing to the top.

Many see the potential benefits of licensed social consumption lounges as ways to curb the illicit market, regulate public consumption, ensure consumption in a safe space and bolster the economy. A “Designated Consumption Establishment License” is particularly attractive to entrepreneurs looking to enter the cannabis market, but aren’t interested in growing, processing, or operating a traditional dispensary. Furthermore, cannabis consumption lounges are particularly attractive for their potential to attract tourism dollars. The masses of tourists buying cannabis products in states that have legalized recreational marijuana have nowhere to smoke it legally — not on the sidewalk and not in their hotel rooms. 

What Lies Ahead?

In order for the cannabis industry to continue to thrive and expand, new retail models must be considered. We believe it is highly likely that social consumption lounges will become increasingly common, especially in major U.S. cities with legal adult-use cannabis programs. 

If you’re thinking about opening a cannabis consumption lounge, it’s important to stay on top of your state’s specific laws since they do vary from state to state and are likely to change and evolve. It’s equally important to make sure you have the right insurance policies in place. Many insurance companies have exclusions in their policies that prohibit onsite consumption, meaning your lounge would not be covered if an unexpected event like a theft, fire, data breach, product defect, accident, or any other type of lawsuit occurs. It’s important to examine your current policies and make adjustments, if necessary. It all boils down to the THREE P’s: being “Proactive, Prepared and Protected.” 


Eric Rahn, Managing Director of S2S Insurance Specialists, is a highly specialized insurance broker and risk management professional with over 30 years of experience providing C-Suite executives strategies and solutions that protect and safeguard their businesses.

A graduate of Babson College School of Entrepreneurial Studies, Eric has held several executive positions in the maritime and casino/gaming industries, including CEO of the largest privately own casino concessions company operating on cruise ships around the world. Eric transitioned his knowledge of corporate business practices in highly regulated industries into the burgeoning cannabis space, establishing S2S Insurance Specialists in 2017.

Eric has served on the National Cannabis Industry Association’s (NCIA) Risk Management Insurance Committee since 2016. He is also a national speaker on cannabis insurance and author of NCIA’s Risk Management and Insurance’s “Introduction into Cannabis Insurance.”

 

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