SC liquor liability law aims to help bars. Columbia owners have mixed feelings
For the last couple years, bar and restaurant owners have been sounding the alarm on an escalating liquor liability insurance crisis in
In the waning days of this year’s legislative session at the
In the week since the legislature passed the agreement, various bar and restaurant owners have offered mixed reviews of the new law. Some have praised the ways in which it could reduce the size of the insurance policies places that serve alcohol are required to carry.
Restaurateur
“The compromise passed last week was not everything we hoped for, but it’s better than what we had before and it’s a step in the right direction,” Cook said.
Still, others have pointed out the recently passed deal doesn’t initially seem to offer as much relief for bars that stay open late at night. And some are worried about the fact the new legislation doesn’t take effect until
“Honestly, it’s not great,” Blair said of the bill. “If I had to describe it, I’d say it’s a complete dud. It’s wishful thinking at best, and also doesn’t even take effect until
Blair pointed out it’s only May and that many establishments will have policies that will renew this year before the new legislation is in effect. WECO’s insurance, for instance, renews in the fall.
A state law passed in 2017 required establishments that sell beer, wine or liquor for on-premises consumption after
The new deal approved by legislators offers a handful of ways in which establishments could reduce the amount of liquor liability insurance they are required to carry. The bill describes it as “liquor liability risk mitigation.” Establishments will be able to qualify for relief by doing things like closing earlier than midnight, having employees go through alcohol serving training courses, having less than 40% of their sales come from alcohol, and using a digital identification scanner if serving alcohol
There are various levels of relief depending on which of those marks a bar hits. For instance, the law notes that an establishment that closes by midnight could reduce its insurance requirement by
‘A difficult environment’
“It’s a start,” said Green, who also was a co-owner of venerable underground bar The Whig before its
Specifically, Green noted that the number of providers and underwriters for liquor liability insurance has been greatly reduced in
“We don’t know what the insurers are going to do yet,” Green noted. “We might get to next year and there still only be [a few] operators. Maybe they lower their prices, and maybe they don’t.”
For
Sears said he doesn’t believe the new law provides much relief for establishments that are open late into the night.
“It didn’t do nearly what it should have set out to do,” Sears noted. “It’s just a watered down bill. It doesn’t do a lot for a place like Jake’s, especially, that stays open past midnight and sells more than 40% alcohol. Those deductions on your policy limit, it doesn’t really help anybody who stays open later and sells a good bit of alcohol.”
Cook, who is a longtime leader in the
“At the end of the day, this is much better than where we were six months ago,” Cook said of the recent liquor liability deal. “With the legislature, it’s very easy to criticize a lot of the different things they do, but all we can do is be happy that there was some compromise reached.”
Part of the recently passed bill brings changes to the state’s joint and several liability law as it relates to liquor liability. Under the measure, the people who contributed to a plaintiff’s injuries will be on a verdict form in lawsuits instead of the way it has been, with a plaintiff being able to zero in on one person who only has partial responsibility, but has the deepest pockets.
“The reality is that we have been leaving the person most culpable for the injury off the verdict form for years now, and the goal is to rebalance this and let a bar who has really no liability in all of this not end up being punished for something they didn’t do,” state Sen.
‘Wishful thinking at best’
In the last two years, Blair, the WECO owner, has been strident in his insistence that skyrocketing liquor liability insurance rates have hamstrung the bar and restaurant industry in
While Blair did leave space for some positives — he pointed to the potential reductions in the amount of insurance establishments will be required to carry, for instance — he has a generally dim view of the recently passed reforms.
Blair noted the liquor liability law stipulates that everyone serving alcohol in restaurants and bars in
“I can tell you how many times I’ve been asked for that when I go to renew my insurance: zero,” Blair said. “This is just one more thing that is just placating an imaginary idea that they are going to force the insurance companies to lower their rates.”
While some restaurateurs and bar owners broadly see the recent legislation as a step forward, some say more relief is needed, and would not be surprised to see continued efforts to encourage lawmakers to do more to refine the law in the years ahead.
“I’m glad there was some activity, but I’m worried some people will get complacent about it and say, ‘OK, well, it’s fixed,’” Green, the co-owner of Columbia’s The Hoot, said. “But there are still longstanding issues with how we handle alcohol in this state that make it sort of anti-competitive.”
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