Why Insurance Doesn’t Protect Small Businesses From Looting

Between Covid, protests, curfews, and looting, some businesses have racked up big losses. And their insurance may not cover them.

Zara Stone
Marker

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Southern Californian residents help clean up a store the day after a looting occurred in Long Beach on June 1, 2020. Photo: Brittany Murray/MediaNews Group/Long Beach Press-Telegram/Getty Images

On the evening of May 30, amid protests over the death of George Floyd, 15 people, armed with hammers and bricks, broke into California Street Cannabis, a pot dispensary in San Francisco’s Nob Hill. They smashed the windows and countertops and cleaned out the store, carting away around $10,000 of product. For founder Drakari Donaldson, a 24-year-old Black Mexican American, it was devastating. His business was only five months old, and the Covid-19 lockdown had put a dampener on a jam-packed calendar of education and community initiatives he had planned for the shop’s debut, in the hope of reducing the lingering stigmas surrounding cannabis use.

The day after the looting, Donaldson and his team barricaded the dispensary windows with scrap metal and boards and opened back up since medical marijuana is considered an essential business. The boards are still up due to a citywide shortage of window repair. “I’m waiting to hear back about what the insurance will cover,” he says. He’s hopeful they’ll be covered, but he doesn’t know for sure.

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