Hudson Valley Cannabis News – Rockland County Business Journal

Hudson Valley Cannabis News – Rockland County Business Journal

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Guidance Issued For Cannabis Growers’ Showcases

August 1, 2023 – According to the CCB, a Cannabis Growers Showcase or CGS means a temporary event approved by the Office authorizing AUCC and AUCP licensees to showcase cannabis products which shall be sold by CAURD licensees to customers. The “guidance” was published on July 20, 2023.

A Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD) licensee or an Adult-Use Conditional Cultivator (AUCC) licensee may apply to be a Cannabis Grower Showcase Organizer (CGSO) for a Cannabis Grower Showcase or “CGS”, granting them authorization for temporary retail sales at an approved location.

The guidance is extremely detailed and complex, and seems to undermine the intent of the program  — to provide outlets for unsold cannabis products, to connect growers and retailers, and to provide additional outlets for retaiil sales to blunt the prevalence of illegal sellers offering substandard product.

To be eligible, the CGSO must partner with at least three (3) or more cultivators and a licensed dispensary. The CGS Vendor will be authorized to sell cannabis products, produced, and distributed by the participating AUCCs, to customers. For every three (3) AUCCs participating, one (1) Adult-Use Conditional Processor (AUCP) may participate. For every three (3) AUCCs participants beyond the first three (3), an additional CAURD may participate as an additional CGS Vendor. At least one (1) of the participating AUCCs must be someone the CAURD does not currently carry in their storefront or delivery only inventory.

All participating CGS Vendors must be CAURD licensees with final retail authorizations, including those who have been approved to operate temporary delivery only locations and have received a license certificate from the Office of Cannabis Management and adult-use cannabis tax registration from the Department of Taxation and Finance. In other words, unless you are an approved licensee with an approved and operating retail location, you can’t participate.

And, all Cannabis Growers Showcase Organizers must submit a letter of approval signed by an official or representative from an administrative body responsible for event permitting in the city, town, or village where the CGS is to take place on official letterhead, that states the location, days, and times at which cannabis products are being offered for sale or sold. Cannabis Growers Showcases may only be held on premises in municipalities that have not opted-out of allowing cannabis retail dispensaries to operate within their jurisdiction pursuant to Section 131 of the Cannabis Law. A list of municipalities that have opt-ed out of retail dispensaries is available on the Office’s website: https://cannabis.ny.gov/local-government.

Authorized inventory for retail sale at a CGS include:
• cannabis products;
• cannabinoid hemp products (only if granted a Cannabinoid Hemp Temporary Retail Permit by the Office to sell hemp);
• cannabis paraphernalia;
• merchandise including stationary, gifts, and other minor incidentals;
• branded merchandise and apparel containing the licensee’s brand, including jewelry and accessories (in adult sizes only); and
• other items as approved by the OCM.

No samples of cannabis products are allowed to be offered at a CGS.

To view the complete guidance, click here...


Plans For Growers Showcase Events At Concerts, Fairs And Festivals Moves Forward

July 23, 2023 – New York’s Cannabis Control Board approved a measure last week that would allow, though only temporarily, the sale of cannabis products at “growers showcase” events.

The Cannabis Control Board approved the so-called “Cannabis Grower Showcase Initiative,” allowing farmers to partner with licensed retailers to sell pot at events, including farmer’s markets.

“Showcase” sales can occur at concerts, fairs and festivals, though no actual regulations governing this new sales vehicle have been proffered or developed. Experience with the Board dictates that regulations may still be a far-away occurrence, if past practices equal prologue.

The plan is intended to help New York growers who have had to warehouse the hundreds of thousands of pounds of marijuana cultivated last year with few places to sell legally. The state’s slow roll out of retail sales has put dire financial strain on many growers.

Early discussions indicate that each event would require the sale of product from at least three cultivators and one retail licensee to qualify. Sales would only be permitted in venues in municipalities that allow cannabis retailing, and within those municipalities, local zoning may limit the availability of venues. Also, the venues cannot be at places where “it can reasonably be expected that the primary audience is going to be underage,” state Director of Cannabis Policy John Kagia said.

For example, while a farmers’ market may be a “showcase” venue, it can only happen if the location of the farmers’ market was zoned for retail cannabis sales.

The state’s commitment to “showcase” sales is difficult to gauge, as the agency has flip-flopped on allowing the sales of product outside its licensed retail locations.

The Cannabis Association of New York issued a statement Wednesday cautiously commending the board for approving the measure. “This is an initiative we have supported with thoughtful and evidence-based recommendations to the Office of Cannabis Management,” CANY said in its statement.

“But now, as with any new program, the devil is in the details. We await the details of the ‘grower’s showcase’ and look to see how the OCM will put this into practice.”


212 New Conditional Adult Use Retail License Issued Statewide; 18 More In Mid-Hudson Region

The Cannabis Control Board voted Wednesday to approve 212 additional CAURD retail licenses.

Licenses were awarded to 46 applicants in Manhattan, 44 in Brooklyn, 28 in the Capital Region, 24 on Long Island, 18 in the Mid-Hudson region, 14 in Queens, nine each in the Finger Lakes, Western New York and the Bronx, five in Richmond, four in the Southern Tier and one each in Central New York and the Mohawk Valley.

The eighteen new licensees in the Mid-Hudson are:

It marks another, but unexpected, expansion of the state’s Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary license program, which prioritizes applicants with a cannabis conviction under former drug laws or people who have a family member with a previous conviction.

“This expansion is necessary to help prepare New York’s market for the next phase of adult-use cannabis,” Office of Cannabis Management Executive Director Chris Alexander said at Wednesday’s meeting. “The decision to further expand the CAURD program will help ensure the retail market is robust enough to sell the cannabis grown by New York farmers and accelerate the transition of New York consumers from the illicit to the legal market.”

Licensees must still secure retail locations and submit plans for approval to OCM.

The board has awarded 463 conditional adult-use licenses to date, though the program, expanded several times since inception, was initially intended for 150 licenses.

“The provisional approval of today’s 212 CAURD licenses by the Cannabis Control Board marks a momentous leap forward in our pursuit of an inclusive and fair cannabis industry,” Cannabis Control Board chair Tremaine Wright said in a statement Wednesday. “These licensees are demonstrative of the innovation and diversity of New York state.”

Of the 463 licenses, only 20 legal dispensaries are open across New York.

The board will approve one more tranche of CAURD applications in the coming months, with additional applications opening outside the social equity program this fall.

For a complete list of new licensees, sorted by region, click here.


Two More Licensed Adult-Use Cannabis Retailers Open

June 19, 2023 – Marijuana Monday welcomes the Flynnstoned Cannabis Company, 219 Walton St Syracuse, NY 13202, (315) 299-9334; License Number: OCM-CAURD-23-000010

Hours:  Sunday, 10:00am-8:00pm; Monday through Thursday, 10:000am-9:00pm, Friday-Saturday, 10:00am-10:00pm; Website:flynnstoned.com

Also, and a bit closer to home, welcome to Sesh, NYC, a delivery only location. No in-person sales are allowed at this location.  According to its website, Sesh serves customers in the Bronx, lower Westchester, and upper Manhattan. License: OCM-AURC-TD-P23017; Website: myseshnyc.com

With the opening of these locations, there are now 15 licensed retailers across New York State. For a complete list, click here.

New York’s Cannabis Control Board Approved 34 Additional CAURD Licenses Thursday

Seven licenses were approved for the Finger Lakes region – the last region to receive approvals after litigation holding up the issuance of licenses there was resolved.

In addition to the seven Finger Lakes licenses, licenses were also awarded as follows: Bronx (2), Brooklyn (7), Central New York (2), Manhattan (2), Mid-Hudson (10) and Queens (4).

The provisional licensees are now able to submit final application materials to the state, enabling them to receive final licensure and open their retail dispensaries.

Currently there are 15 open cannabis retailers statewide and over 40 in development. Over 250 licenses have been approved across the state, with 21 percent of New Yorkers now living in a city with legal cannabis access.

OCM also reported that New York legal cannabis sales so far this year total $22.6 million.

At the meeting, growers continue to express frustration over the slow speed of the industry roll-out, saying the lack of sales outlets are causing financial hardship and endangering their continued participation.

Efforts to Close Down The Illicit Retail Market Gain Traction – Enforcement Outside NYC Started Last Week

The Office of Cannabis Management and the Department of Taxation and Finance began their first joint inspections authorized by new enforcement laws the week of June 5, 2023, in New York City, where inspections will remain active and ongoing. The two agencies inspected 11 shops in Manhattan last week.

All of the shops inspected in New York City last week were selling cannabis without a license and were issued Notices of Violation and Orders to Cease Unlicensed Activity.

The following shops were inspected last week:

  • Varieties on Broadway – 736 Broadway
  • Roll 2 Nation – 738 Broadway
  • Baby Jeeter – 793 Broadway
  • Maze – 16 St. Marks Place
  • LaGuardia Smoke – 510 LaGuardia Place
  • Nomad – 59 West 30th Street
  • Play lane – 117B W 23rd Street
  • Cannabis Culture – 403 8th Avenue
  • Smoke Factory – 287 7th Avenue
  • Go Green Dispensary – 603 6th Avenue
  • Daydream – 1181 Broadway

“We continue to take action against bad actors who seek to skirt around our laws,” Governor Hochul said. “Unlicensed dispensaries violate our laws, put public health at risk, and undermine the legal cannabis market, and we will continue to take these critical enforcement measures to protect New Yorkers from illicit, unregulated sales.”

On May 3, 2023, Governor Hochul signed legislation enabling for the enhanced, statewide enforcement by OCM on unlicensed cannabis businesses. The legislation now enables OCM to also assess civil penalties against unlicensed cannabis businesses, with fines of up to $20,000 a day for the most egregious conduct, and starts the process of potential closure of a retail location selling cannabis without a license among other penalties.

The new law also makes it a state crime to sell cannabis and cannabis products without a license.

Inspections also took place at storefront businesses not licensed to sell cannabis in Ithaca and Binghamton.

The following shops were inspected in Ithaca:

  • Black Leaf — 103 East State Street, Ithaca, NY
  • Zaza Convenience — 101 East State Street, Ithaca, NY
  • The Rezz — 312 Fourth St, Ithaca, NY

The following shops were inspected in Binghamton:

  • Green Magic – 144 Henry St
  • Takeoff 2 – 63 Chenango St

Governor Hochul Unveils New Statewide Cannabis Public Education Campaign

“Why Buy Legal New York” Will Encourage New Yorkers to Purchase Safer, Regulated Cannabis Products from Licensed Dispensaries

April 22, 2023 – Governor Kathy Hochul announced the launch of “Why Buy Legal New York”, a public education campaign promoting safer, informed, legal purchases of cannabis from licensed dispensaries in New York State.

The campaign focuses on three key pillars: protecting public health and promoting social equity and community reinvestment. Governor Hochul made the announcement alongside the New York State Office of Cannabis Management at CUNY Law School in New York City. The “Why Buy Legal New York” announcements explain and emphasize the potential health risks associated with purchasing cannabis products from unlicensed businesses and why regulated cannabis products are safer. It also outlines how buying legal supports the advancement of New York’s social and economic equity goals for communities across the State.

“To bolster the public health and safety of all New Yorkers, we are providing them with information they need to make informed decisions and enjoy cannabis responsibly,” Governor Hochul said. “As we continue to build a healthier and more equitable cannabis market, I am proud to launch this important public education campaign to promote safer, legal purchases of cannabis from licensed dispensaries throughout our state.”

The primarily digital campaign will target cannabis consumers 21 years old and over and includes various educational materials, such as “The Guide to Safer Cannabis Consumption”. These materials will provide information on how to find legal dispensaries in New York and tips on how to consume cannabis safely. Materials are available at: https://cannabis.ny.gov/consumers.


Section 280E Tax Relief Available To Cannabis Businesses In New York State; Federal Relief Proposed

April 18, 2023 – Earl Blumenauer, a Congressman from Oregon, introduced a bill this week that would allow legal marijuana businesses to take tax deductions they have been historically denied, despite their availability to other legal businesses.

The Small Business Tax Equity Act (H.R. 2643), would allow marijuana businesses operating in compliance with state laws to take business deductions associated with the sale of marijuana. Section 280E of the federal tax code currently prevents cannabis businesses from deducting ordinary expenses associated with running a small business, including rent, utilities, and payroll.

Legally operating marijuana businesses cannot claim the Work Opportunity Tax Credit when they hire veterans, cannot depreciate American-made irrigation equipment, and cannot take any credit or deduction relating to construction or operation costs to revitalize or restore a building.

“State-legal cannabis businesses are denied equal treatment under 280E. They cannot fully deduct the cost of doing business, which means they pay two or three times as much as a similar non-cannabis business,” said Blumenauer, founder and co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus. “This grotesquely unfair treatment incentivizes people to cut corners. If Congress wants to get serious about supporting small businesses and ending the illicit cannabis market, it is commonsense that we allow legal cannabis operations to deduct business expenses, just like any other industry.”

Even if passage of federal legislation is an uphill climb, New York State has taken steps to decouple state taxation from federal returns.

A law contained in New York State’s Budget carved out an exemption from IRC Section 280E. This exemption allows NYS-licensed cannabis businesses to take tax deductions for business expenses and claim credits at the state level that they are barred from utilizing on their federal returns.

By decoupling the state tax code from the federal law for purposes of 280E, New York-licensed cannabis businesses would see significant tax savings beginning in tax year 2023.

Many states simply mirror federal tax policy in their own tax codes. Because of this, the federal tax code’s restrictions on cannabis businesses also blocks state-level deductions unless a state acts to exempt these businesses from these restrictions.

Because of the connection to federal returns, it is estimated that many cannabis businesses pay effective tax rates of up to 80%. To help resolve the issue, New York has joined California, Colorado, Oregon, Massachusetts, and other states to provide relief. Nineteen states have decoupled state returns from federal returns.

A bill pending in Connecticut would similarly decouple state and federal tax returns. When neighboring states have different tax structures, competition suffers.

Forcing a business operation to pay taxes on gross revenue, where it cannot deduct payroll, rent, utilities and other expenses is a recipe for near-certain economic failure, and encourages the continued proliferation of the illicit marijuana trade.


A Tangle of Lawsuits Is Crippling New York’s Entry Into Legalized Cannabis Sales

March 29, 2023 – Let’s face it. New York’s legalization and launch of licensed cannabis retailers has been less than perfect. Okay, it’s been a disaster. To date, there are only a handful (less than five) retail cannabis operations open, and those are only open conditionally.

Illicit sellers and retailers abound, offering marginal product, paying no taxes, and unafraid of State or local law enforcement.

The preference given to those with prior involvement with cannabis-related offenses has closed the market to the thousands of other operators vying to open up shop. The system of in-state preferences has basically shut down the industry in the Hudson Valley and other areas of the state, while a federal lawsuit grinds its way through courts that are part of a system that still holds cannabis to be illegal.

What’s to be done to jump-start the industry, or to keep it from collapsing under its own regulatory weight?

A group of New York-affiliated medical cannabis operators filed a complaint against the state’s regulators asking the Court to open available licensing options to all retail dispensary applicants – not just those with prior marijuana convictions. The Coalition for Access to Regulated & Safe Cannabis (which includes Acreage Holdings, PharmaCann, Green Thumb Industries, and Curaleaf, and several hopeful dispensary owners) filed suit against New York’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) and the Cannabis Control Board (CCB), the two agencies charged with devising and implementing the state’s cannabis legislation.

The lawsuit filed in Albany County Supreme Court on March 16 alleges: (1) unconstitutional overreach and policymaking; (2) the abdication of the agencies’ duties, and (3) negligent actions that needlessly put New Yorkers’ health and safety at risk.

Plaintiffs allege that defendants failed to fulfill the requirements of the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), the law that legalized cannabis in New York in March 2021. It’s main argument though is that defendants failed to follow the law itself and provide all applicants with equal access to retail dispensary licenses. They say the entire Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD), which restricts eligibility to those with prior involvement in cannabis-related offenses, runs afoul of the law, and has no basis in statutes that established legalized cannabis.

They argue that the agency had no right to limit access to dispensary licenses to a specific group of individuals, as opposed to providing equal access to all to available licenses.

The list of failures continues: a delay of 20 months in proposing regulations for the marketplace, still unfinished; constant changing guidance for growers and processors; failures to realize promised state-subsidized real estate and loans; allowing the cultivation of large quantities of cannabis before establishing a retail infrastructure to sell it; and countless other incidents of mismanagement and incompetence.

The complaint narrative blames the defendants through inaction of allowing the illicit market to thrive, not stopping tainted cannabis products from entering the illegal market, and depriving communities of essential tax revenue.

The narrative also refers to a report (detailed earlier in this newsletter) commissioned by the New York Medical Cannabis Industry Association (NYMCIA) and others that highlighted that about 40% of marijuana products sold in New York’s unlicensed businesses contain potentially harmful contaminants. And it blames the state for failing to shut down unlicensed operators while pointing out the folly of sending “cease and desist letters” to illegal sellers and the failures of law enforcement operations to impact the illegal markets. Estimates are that over 1,400 unlicensed businesses are operating throughout the state, resulting in the likely loss of around $2.6 billion in tax revenue over the next seven years.

Plaintiffs (in a blend of an Article 78 and request for declaratory relief) have asked the court to declare OCM’s CAURD license unconstitutional and outside the agency’s legal authority. It asks the Court to require regulators to take legal action against all illegal cannabis stores. And most important to their interests: to open the licensing process for adult-use retail dispensaries to all applicants now, including registered organizations and those who qualify under the MRTA’s social and economic equity provisions.

Second Circuit Court of Appeals Modifies Injunction, Clearing The Path To Issuance of Dispensary Licenses in Hudson Valley

Finger Lakes Remains Under Injunction; Only A Handful of Rockland County’s Villages Opted In For Retail Licenses

March 29, 2023 – In a one-paragraph Order, issued late Tuesday afternoon, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals cleared the path for the New York State Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) to issue retail cannabis dispensary licenses in the Hudson Valley, Brooklyn, Central and Western New York. The Circuit Court left in place a ban on the issuance of licenses in the Finger Lakes but set an expedited briefing schedule to address issues affecting that region.

The ban arose last November, when a District Court Judge in the Northern District of New York entered a sweeping order halting OCM’s ability to issue retail licenses in the Hudson Valley and other areas. An out-of-state applicant for dispensary licenses claimed his company was discriminated against based on a system of preferences favoring in-state applicants.

The plaintiff, Variscite NY One, Inc. of Michigan, convinced Judge Gary Sharpe that the system New York used to award licenses violated the Commerce Clause of the US Constitution. The Commerce Clause generally prohibits a state from favoring its own residents over out-of-state applicants in commercial matters.

Judge Sharpe halted the issuance of licenses in every region where Variscite sought one, including the Hudson Valley.

OCM’s efforts to lift the injunction or at least modify it at the District Court level went nowhere. OCM was also denied a stay from the District Court pending appeal.

In seeking to modify the injunction, or limit its application in the District Court, OCM argued that no applicant could have obtained a retail dispensary license in more than one area of the state because the number of applicants in each area precluded any applicant from securing a second regional license. It also argued that even if Variscite had received full credit for in-state residency, it would not have otherwise scored high enough to secure a retail dispensary license.

OCM appealed to the Second Circuit and sought again to have the injunction lifted or modified. Its arguments resulted in a partial victory yesterday, clearing the path for issuance of licenses in every area except for the Finger Lakes – Variscite’s first preference for licensure.

The Second Circuit entered an order late Tuesday afternoon saying, “The district court’s injunction is modified so that it bars the issuance of conditional adult-use retail cannabis dispensary licenses only in the Finger Lakes region.”

cannabisThe NYS Office of Cannabis Management tweeted that, “We are excited to begin advancing licenses to these regions shortly.”

“New York’s brand-new cannabis industry is making significant progress to promote social equity and right the wrongs of the past, creating the fairest and safest market in the nation,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a prepared statement. “This decision will allow New York’s social equity entrepreneurs to open safe, regulated cannabis dispensaries in Central New York, Western New York, the Mid-Hudson Region and Brooklyn. For the first time, New Yorkers in nearly every region of the state will have access to safer, high-quality, adult-use cannabis products. I am committed to ensuring New York continues to lead the nation in our safe and equitable approach to the cannabis market.”

The temporary injunction against OCM prevented the issuance of 18 licenses, six of which would have allowed retailers to operate in the Mid-Hudson Region. The identities of the six Mid-Hudson retailers are being withheld pending a formal announcement.

Earlier this month, OCM announced its intent to issue an additional 150 retail dispensary licenses on top of the 150 previously authorized.

According to a database compiled by Office of Cannabis Management, in Rockland County, only the Villages of Haverstraw, Nyack, Piermont, Chestnut Ridge and Airmont have opted-in to allowing retail dispensaries in their municipal borders. These villages have opted-out of allowing on-site consumption lounges.


Hudson Valley Retail Dispensary Licenses Could Issue Soon If Second Circuit Court of Appeals Lifts Injunction

Argument is set for March 28th at the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan

March 20, 2023 – The Second Circuit Court of Appeals is being asked to stay the preliminary injunction issued by United States District Court (Northern District of New York). The injunction issued below barred the New York Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) from issuing any conditional adult-use retail dispensary (CAURD) licenses in the Finger Lakes, Central New York, Western New York, Mid-Hudson and Brooklyn regions during the pendency of the lawsuit.

The injunction is why there are no retail dispensaries opened or licensed in the Hudson Valley. The plaintiff below (Variscite NY One, Inc.) convinced Judge Gary Sharpe that he was being discriminated against as an out-of-state applicant and that OCM was favoring in-state applicants in contravention of the Commerce Clause of the US Constitution. The Commerce Clause generally prohibits a state from favoring its own residents over out-of-state applicants in commercial matters.

OCM’s efforts to lift the injunction or at least modify it at the District Court level went nowhere. OCM was also denied a stay from the District Court pending appeal. Now, in the appellate case in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, OCM is trying again to get a stay, or a modification of the injunction that would allow it to finally issue licenses in the affected areas.

In its motion for a stay, OCM argues that Variscite met the “significant presence” licensing requirement because it is incorporated in New York; therefore, the cannabis company is not being discriminated against. OCM also argues (as it did at the District Court)  that Variscite’s application did not otherwise score high enough to qualify for a license, essentially saying that he could not have secured a license even if he was given full in-state credit because of other factors in his application.

OCM also argued:

The residency requirements do not violate the Dormant Commerce Clause because they do not discriminate against out-of-state actors, and if the requirements do “burden” interstate commerce, that does not exceed the state’s interest to rectify the harm caused by its historical marijuana laws and the selective enforcement of those laws.

The state will suffer irreparable harm if the injunction is not lifted. “The preliminary injunction leaves the putative recipients of 54 dispensary licenses indefinitely unable to do business and threatens the economic stability of cannabis growers and manufacturers who will, as a result of the injunction, lack enough buyers for their goods.”

Variscite argued against lifting stay blocking New York from issuing the licenses, saying the state is aiming for a “backdoor dissolution” of the injunction that would leave him without the possibility of a remedy.

When New York legalized marijuana, it established residency requirements to curtail outside entities from entering and dominating a newly legalized state market from afar. Meanwhile, the law is very unsettled on residency requirements with many experts believing that until marijuana is legalized nationally, the Commerce Clause does not apply and cannot be violated because there is no legal interstate commerce of cannabis – a drug illegal under federal law.

Courts don’t regulate illegal markets.

With a trial date in the District Court set for mid-2024, the uncertainty surrounding New York’s cannabis market continues, further delaying the approval of 54 licenses in the five territories under injunction.

Let’s just say that the regulatory landscape for the cannabis industry is still very much unsettled.


Women in New York Are Being Left Behind In Retail Dispensary Licensing

March 13, 2023 – In two rounds of license awards, women won only seven percent of Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD) licenses in the first round and 14 percent in the second round.

New York’s social equity program was designed to grant CAURD licenses to qualified entrepreneurs who have either been convicted on a marijuana charge or who had an immediate family member similarly situated. The program was designed to mitigate decades of disproportionate drug enforcement, particularly in communities of color.

To further make up for past harms, New York is also committing to startup funding and real estate assistance to licensees.

So, why have women not fared well in the issuance of licenses? Is it because marijuana enforcement laws were disproportionately aimed at young men of color?  Statistics tell part of the story.

Between 1997 and 2007, 91 percent of people arrested for marijuana possession in New York City were male, according to a report from the ACLU of New York. Of that male cohort, young Black and Latino men were overwhelmingly the prevalent demographic  in marijuana possession arrests during that time period.

To open the door to more women, New York crafted its regulations to include immediate family members of convicted individuals in the qualifying pool of applicants.

“My team early on made an effort to make sure that women have a pathway to get a CAURD license,” said Damian Fagon, chief equity officer of the Office of Cannabis Management.

Despite that effort, a review of the scoring, qualifying based on a conviction is weighted higher than one based on a family member, effectively building in a bias toward men.

There have been calls for both more transparency and reconsideration in the application process — particularly when it comes to awarding points for the “justice-involved questions” on the license application.

The OCM does not make applications, the information contained therein, or its scoring results public when it comes to license awards, as public disclosure may advantage certain applicants who might shape their applications toward those categories weighted more heavily. Secrecy in the awarding of licenses is OCM’s way.

The built-in bias against women remains the norm, and no efforts are underway to re-tilt the tables. Preferences for distressed farmers and disabled veterans will also likely favor men as demographically men dominate those categories as well.

The expansion from 150 to 300 licenses recently did improve the raw numbers for women, but women still remain grossly under-represented in the retail dispensary market.


New York Expands Conditional Licenses to 300

Applicants with a family history of marijuana convictions will soon be eligible to open dispensaries with conditional licenses.

March 6, 2023 – Cannabis regulators will issue 300 retail shop licenses to applicants impacted by past marijuana convictions, expanding the original cohort from just 150 in the first round.

“As we’ve continued to review applications we found there’s still many qualified individuals who can make the most of this opportunity outside of that initial 150,” Chris Alexander, executive director of the Office of Cannabis Management, said at the most recent meeting of the Cannabis Control Board.

There were originally about 900 applicants for conditional licenses, with 150 granted.

Plans to provide the first 150 licensees with access to turnkey locations and loans from a state-initiated fund remain unchanged. Should any from the original 150 licensees decline the resources offered by the State, new applicants may become eligible for those same benefits.

The actual increase in license opportunities will be in line with the original geographic awards, largely based on populations within the different established regions.

Nothing in the issuance of new license opportunities affects the Hudson Valley. A federal court ruling from the Northern District of New York has kept licensing of shops on hold in five of New York’s 14 regions: the Finger Lakes, central New York, western New York, Mid-Hudson and Brooklyn. The federal court injunction arose from an out-of-state challenge of the New York’s policy prioritizing the awarding of licenses to in-state residents.

Efforts to modify or lift the injunction fell on deaf ears in the District Court. The decision is under appeal, but the process will leave these new potential licensees in the same limbo as the original cohort in the affected regions.


What To Do With All That Weed?

February 27, 2023 – In its first harvest, in what some would call an “upstate cultivation boom” 300,000 pounds of weed were produced, valued at three-quarters of a billion dollars.

Here’s just one example, Hudson Cannabis reports it has 2,700lb of harvest bud stacked in storage containers waiting to be certified by one of the five state-approved testing labs. At an approximate wholesale market value of $300 a pound, her inventory is valued at $800,000. That’s today’s value. By most estimates wholesale prices are likely to decrease based on oversupply. Hudson Cannabis is licensed to produce 43,000 sq ft of cannabis flower, 29,000 sq ft of which are grown outside.

And, there are only a handful of state-licensed dispensaries with open doors and delivery services are nascent. So, what’s going to become of all of that product. Lines at open dispensaries snake around the blocks where they are located – some with “bouncers” to moderate the crowd. How many new retailers are ready to open?

So where will all of that product go? What about all of that tax revenue that the state touted?

As of March 2022, weed-legal states reported a combined total of $11.2bn in tax revenue from legal, adult-use cannabis sales. By some estimates, the legal cannabis market could reach $66bn by 2025. What’s up New York?

What can be done to get the dispensaries open a bit faster?What about roadside “pick-your-own” at some farms to help out the cultivators and farmers that invested with the hope that a legal framework would provide them a return on their investments? And, how much product will have to be processed for its active ingredient or sold to edible-product producers, given the dearth of dispensary and delivery options? How much will end up untested and on the black market?


New York’s Office Of Cannabis Management Asks District Court To Modify Its Injunction And Allow Retail Cannabis Sales In Hudson Valley

December 27, 2022 – An injunction entered against New York’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) last month is preventing the issuance of any retail cannabis dispensary licenses in the Hudson Valley and four other regions in New York State. But a court filing by the OCM last week may clear the way for approved licensees in the Mid-Hudson region and three other blocked areas to open retail dispensaries.

The case was originally filed by Variscite NY One, Inc., through Michigan-based Kenneth Gay, its 51 percent owner, who claimed that application requirements for retail dispensary licenses in New York violated the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution because the law favored New York residents over out-of-state applicants. The Commerce Clause generally prevents a state from favoring its own residents over out-of-staters in commercial matters.

Variscite had filed an application listing five areas where it sought a retail license, including its first preference, the Finger Lakes, as well as Central New York, Western New York, the Mid-Hudson Region, and Brooklyn. New York is divided into fourteen different geographic zones for retail licensing. Based on the information available to the Court at the time, it agreed with Variscite and issued an order granting Variscite temporary relief, which has prevented OCM from issuing licenses in the five regions.

OCM in its recent filing is attempting to show the court that only licenses in the Finger Lakes region should be at issue, while the other regions shouldn’t be affected because of the way the New York law is written. The law says an applicant can only get its first choice of region when there are an insufficient number of applications for its second and later choices. At best, Variscite would only be eligible for a license in the Finger Lakes region, according to the filing.

In its request to modify the injunction, OCM stated that approved retailers, processors and cultivators in the Hudson Valley (and the other affected regions) would be irreparably harmed if the Court did not narrow the injunction to the one area where the Petitioner may have be eligible for a retail dispensary license.

OCM also states in its affidavit that Variscite would not have even qualified for a license in the Finger Lakes region because it did not score high enough on the qualifying application to have been selected.

OCM also told the Court that the injunction affects the economics of “54 potential retail dispensaries, 121 licensed cultivators, and 16 processors,” many of whom have invested millions of dollars in their operations relying on OCM’s licensing regulations. What the defendant is saying is that if the retailers can’t get up and running, then the entire eco-system of the cannabis market will be disrupted.

The OCM received more than 900 applications for Conditional Adult Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD) licenses. The Board recently approved 36 provisional licensees, including 28 qualifying individuals, and eight nonprofit CAURD applicants outside the five areas included in the lawsuit. The temporary injunction against OCM prevented the issuance of an additional 18 licenses, six of which would have allowed retailers to operate in the Mid-Hudson Region. The identities of the six Mid-Hudson retailers are being withheld pending the outcome of the litigation.

Per the law, up to 175 licenses will be granted; roughly 150 may be granted to individual applicants, and about 25 to nonprofit applicants. It it expected that there will be 17 Mid-Hudson licenses approved.

In addition to asking to modify the injunction, OCM has also filed an appeal, a request to the court to delay enforcement of its order, and a motion to dismiss Variscite’s complaint.

Variscite filed a similar case in California, also claiming a violation of the Commerce Clause, but earlier this month the District Court in California dismissed the complaint, finding Variscite lacked standing to pursue its case. The court in denying Variscite’s claims also questioned if the Commerce Clause even “applies to federally illegal cannabis markets.”

It remains uncertain as to whether Commerce Clause violations are applicable to markets and products that are still illegal under federal law. Marijuana is a Schedule I substance under the Controlled Substances Act.

The case number in New York’s Northern District is: 1:22-cv-01013-GLS-DJS.


How Do You Know If Your Cannabis Retailer Is Legitimate (Licensed)?

Cannabis Icon QR CodeDecember 16, 2022 – We recently reported on the dangers of purchasing adulterated cannabis from unlicensed retailers in New York City. But, how does a consumer know if their retail outlet is actually licensed by New York State? State officials are taking steps to steer consumers to licensed retailers. With the first round of retailers ready to open their doors, the OCM unveiled a state-sanctioned icon and scannable QR Code that will be posted in the window of every licensed storefront in the state. Purchasers who buy from unlicensed retailers deprive the state of tax money and may take their health into their own hands.

“It is critical that consumers know and trust that the new, legal cannabis market offers tested products and follows protocols designed to protect public health,” said Tremaine Wright, chair of the Cannabis Control Board.

The state is also planning a marketing program called “Why Buy Legal New York” that’s set to launch in 2023. Other efforts to crack down on illegal sales are also in the works to shut down illegal storefronts and trucks selling illicit and often tainted marijuana and cannabis products.


Home Delivery? Really?

December 9, 2022 – In an effort to assist a fledgling cannabis market and enable retailers who have yet to open their doors distribute their products, the Office of Cannabis Management has issued delivery guidelines that allow for home delivery of cannabis products. The new regulations will allow:

  • Retail licenses to secure a warehouse from which to fulfill delivery orders while building permanent dispensary locations for up to one year;
  • Customers to place online and phone only; no in-person sales or pick-up from the warehouse location;
  • Customers must pre-pay; no cash payments from cannabis consumer to delivery employee permitted;
  • Deliveries can be made by bicycles, scooters, motor vehicles;
  • Consumers must be at least 21-years-old with valid identification upon sale and delivery;
  • Businesses can have up to 25 delivery staff per business, as dictated by New York state cannabis law.

One reason for the rush to home delivery is likely the enormous backlog of warehoused product from the first growing and processing season. Hundreds of millions of dollars worth of cannabis grown in the state remains warehoused, for want of sales outlets. A report by Bloomberg estimates the value of the 300,000 pounds of warehoused cannabis to be in excess of $750 million dollars.


OCM Asks District Court Judge To Modify Injunction And Allow Sales In Enjoined Areas, Including Hudson Valley

December 12, 2022 – In a recent court filing in the Northern District of New York, the OCM has asked the Court to modify its injunction against issuing adult retail dispensary licenses in Central New York, Western New York, the Mid-Hudson Region and Brooklyn. In support of its motion, OCM relies on the fact that a petitioner/licensee, Variscite NY One, Inc., could have only received a license in its “first” choice area because there were more than the requisite number of applicants in the other areas. Under the rules established by the OCM, licenses would only be issued in 2nd or later choices if there was an inadequate number of applicants in the other areas.

As it relates to the Mid-Hudson region, OCM reports that it received 75 applications for 17 available licenses, and that approved retailers, processors and cultivators in the Hudson Valley (and the other affected regions) may be irreparably harmed if the Court does not narrow the injunction to the one area where the Petitioner may have be eligible for a retail dispensary license. Petitioner’s first choice for location was the Finger Lakes region.

OCM reports that the injunction affects the economics of 54 potential retail dispensaries, 121 licensed cultivators, and 16 processors, many of whom have invested millions of dollars in their operations relying on OCM’s licensing regulations. OCM adds in its affidavit that the applicant that sought and received the injunction would not have qualified for a license in the Finger Lakes region anyway, as it simply did not score high enough on the qualifying application to have been selected.

The case number in the Northern District is: 1:22-cv-01013-GLS-DJS.


A Hard Look At New York City’s Illicit Cannabis Dispensaries

November 29, 2022 – A report prepared by the New York Medical Cannabis Industry Association, the New Jersey Cannabis Trade Association, and the Connecticut Medical Cannabis Council reveals significant problems in New York City’s unlicensed and unregulated cannabis retail market. The report says that many of these locations falsely advertise the sale of THC products as legal or licensed, misleading consumers and selling products blatantly masquerading as popular name-brand chocolates, candies, gummies, and other well-known snacks.

In addition to deceptive advertising practices, these illicit operations and their products represent a significant public health concern. From 2019-2020, more than 2,000 individuals were hospitalized, and 60 people died due to illness caused by vaping-associated lung injury (EVALI), a phenomenon that was largely linked back to additives in illicit THC vapes like those currently sold in these illegally operating shops.

Testing of the products sold reveals an existing major health crisis. Results revealed the presence of several harmful contaminants, such as E. coli, pesticides, heavy metals, and salmonella in 40 percent of the illegal products purchased, including vapes. Many of the products tested did not contain the amount of THC advertised on the label and in one case, featured double the amount of listed THC. After reviewing the items under the state’s proposed branding regulations, 100 percent of the products failed.

And, tests conducted at independent labs found the presence of E.coli, salmonella, and pesticides in various products offered for sale. E.coli and salmonella were found in flower and edible products purchased at some locations. E. coli in cannabis can cause many types of infection and is most often associated with diarrheal illness and lung infections that can become dangerous. Also, if inhaled, salmonella bacteria can cause severe fevers and fatigue symptoms that can remit and relapse. Salmonella infection can also be extremely difficult to treat and can have prolonged detrimental effects.

Several products also contained heavy metals, including nickel and lead. Ingesting these contaminants in cannabis is also a cause for concern. Certain metals have the potential to cause headaches, nausea, and in cases of prolonged exposure, cancer, and organ failure. Respiratory illness can also occur upon combustion and inhalation of contaminated flower. To read the report, click here.


Proposed Regulations Affect Cultivators, Establish License Types and Tiers

The Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) has proposed changes to its adult-use cannabis program, with some changes specifically affecting cultivators.

The proposed regulations and licenses support a structure similar to New York’s alcohol industry, separating supply (cultivation, processing, distribution) from retail. The regulations maintain prohibitions on individuals having an interest in businesses across tiers. Essentially, operators or investors in a business on the supply side cannot also hold any interest in a retail business. This separation opens the market to more potential players and prevents the likelihood of concentrating economic power in a few stakeholders.

As the regulations affect cultivators, they create different tiers of cultivation licenses that are differentiated by light source. The allotted square footage per license ranges from 5,000 – 100,000 square feet. They also incentivize sustainable cultivation practices and limited energy utilization including outdoor cultivation.

Cultivators are divided into categories based on the size of the cultivation canopy and the type of cultivation: (1) outdoor; (2) mixed light; (3) combination of outdoor and mixed light; and, (4) indoor. Within each category, there are five different tiers based on “canopy” size ranging from less than 5000 square feet up to 100,000 square feet.

Under the regulations, “canopy” or “cultivation canopy” is an area measured in square feet using clearly identifiable boundaries of all areas(s) that will contain non-immature cannabis, vegetative or flowering, excluding seedlings or small clones. Under the regulations, canopy areas may be non-contiguous.

The regulations are not final until after a 60-day public comment period.


Cannabis Control Board Approves First Conditional Adult Retail Dispensaries, But No Licenses Issued In Rockland or Hudson Valley

NYS Cannabis Control Board Approves 28 Licenses for Business Owners with a Cannabis Conviction or a Family Member with a Cannabis Conviction, 8 Approved for Nonprofit Organizations.

November 25, 2022 – The Office of Cannabis Management received over 900 applications for CAURD licenses. At today’s meeting, the Board approved 36 provisional licensees, including 28 qualifying individuals and 8 nonprofit CAURD applicants. At least one CAURD license was granted in each available region of the state.

Because a federal judge temporarily blocked New York State cannabis regulators from issuing licenses in certain regions of New York, including the Hudson Valley, no conditional licenses were issued pending the outcome of that litigation. Regulators said that 18 additional successful applicants would have been announced in the first wave if a recent injunction by a federal judge hadn’t blocked them from issuing licenses in the Finger Lakes, central New York, western New York, Mid-Hudson and Brooklyn.  Six of those licenses on hold are from the Mid-Hudson Region.

Going forward, up to 175 licenses will be granted in total: as many as 150 to individual applicants and up to 25 to nonprofit applicants and licenses applications will be sent to the Board for its consideration on a rolling basis.

Additionally, the Cannabis Control Board approved an additional 16 Adult-use Cannabis Conditional Cultivator Licenses, growing the total number of approved Adult-Use Cannabis Conditional Cultivator Licenses to 277. The approval of 8 Adult-Use Cannabis Conditional Processor Licenses raises the total issued by the Board to 33, and the approval of three laboratory permits brings the total to seven.


November 10, 2022 – A federal judge temporarily blocked New York state cannabis regulators from issuing retail licenses amid a lawsuit by an applicant denied approval to operate in the state.

U.S. District Court Judge Gary Sharpe issued the injunction based on a legal challenge brought by a Michigan-based operator. Variscite challenged those provisions in the law that require that licenses for retail cannabis dispensaries be awarded to people who have been affected by New York state drug laws.

Variscite’s owner was previously convicted of a marijuana-related offense in Michigan. The affected regions  — the Finger Lakes, Central New York, western New York, the Mid-Hudson region and Brooklyn — are areas in which Variscite had sought and been denied a license to operate.

Read the 29-page injunction here. The basis of the injunction was that the limitation to in-state licensees violates the federal interstate commerce clause, which generally prevents states from preferring its own residents over the residents of other states without a showing that its regulations or law are narrowly tailored to accomplish a legitimate purpose and that the preference to residents of its own state was in fact a legitimate purpose that could not be accomplished by other means.

“We don’t comment on pending litigation. The Office of Cannabis Management is committed to the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act’s goals of including those impacted by the state’s enforcement of cannabis prohibition in the market that we are building and we are additionally committed to getting New York’s cannabis supply chain fully operational,” said Office of Cannabis Management spokesman Freeman Klopott. “The Cannabis Control Board will soon have before it applications for the Conditional Adult Use Retail Dispensary license which will start closing that supply chain.”


Will President Biden’s Pardons Lead To De-Scheduling Marijuana And Passage Of The SAFE Banking Act

October 20, 2022 – On October 6, President Biden announced that he would issue pardons for all prior federal convictions for simple possession of marijuana, and urged state governors to do the same. President Biden also directed the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Attorney General to “initiate the administrative process to review expeditiously how marijuana is scheduled under federal law. ” Marijuana is classified as a Schedule I drug, along with heroin and LSD.

Questions abound as to the possibility that the executive action will usher in cannabis banking reforms. Should cannabis actually be de-scheduled, banks and financial institutions will be more willing banking with cannabis companies. And, there is wide-spread belief that Biden’s announcement may move Congress to finally pass the SAFE Banking Act, or some version of it.

The SAFE Banking Act – which has passed the House of Representatives seven times in recent years but has never been taken up in the Senate – would enable cannabis businesses to access the federal banking system and also allow providers to the cannabis industry such as attorneys, accountants, lenders and landlords to contract with and accept payment from cannabis businesses without the risk of violating federal law.


Applications for NY’s First Retail Marijuana Locations Are In

October 6, 2022 – With the first round of applications for New York’s Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary licenses closed, some 900 hopeful entrepreneurs are now awaiting action on their applications.

New York’s Office of Cannabis Management has yet to publish regulations for any of the state’s nine general adult-use cannabis license categories. However, according to Syracuse.com, the state will issue up to 150 CAURD licenses, and recipients will open New York’s first legal adult-use dispensaries pursuant to those licenses.

Individuals who qualify for a CAURD license must have been arrested in New York for a cannabis offense (or have a family member who was) before March 31, 2021, and have run a profitable business for at least two years. License recipients will have access to storefronts that are currently being secured and will be built out into dispensary spaces by the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY).

Plans also include granting 25 licenses to qualifying nonprofits, but those nonprofits won’t have access to the DASNY properties or New York’s $200 million social equity cannabis investment fund.

New York Set to Hobble ‘Legal’ Cannabis with Taxes and Regulations

September 6, 2022 – “Since June 1, the New York’s Cannabis Control Board has issued 162 recreational cultivation licenses,” Bloomberg Tax recently noted. “Those fortunate enough to obtain one of New York’s recreational cannabis licenses will be forced to contend with a gauntlet of state and local taxes.”

The analysis, prepared by three accountants, detailed a long list of sales taxes, corporate taxes, and “recently enacted adult-use cannabis taxes.” Given the number of jurisdictions involved and uncertainty as to how they’ll apply to businesses that won’t be able to open their doors until the end of the year, at soonest, the authors declined to guess at the final tax burden. But it will be high, and compliance a guessing game with penalties awaiting those who cross the authorities. It’s a good bet that many entrepreneurs accustomed to operating in the illicit market will remain underground rather than risk the costs and hassles of legal operation as envisioned by Empire State officials. After all, technical legalization hobbled by stiff taxes and regulation has already stumbled elsewhere. Read more…



An Update on New York’s Recreational Cannabis Market

As of June 1, New York state’s Cannabis Control Board has issued 162 recreational cultivation licenses. The first recreational retail licenses aren’t expected to appear until the end of 2022. According to Chris Alexander, executive director of the state’s Office of Cannabis Management, final regulations are still being designed. And while some dispensaries will probably be licensed by end of 2022, a mature market isn’t expected for another two to three years.

Also, by signing the 2022-2023 state budget into law, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul enacted Senate Bill S8009, freeing state cannabis taxpayers from the burdensome impact of IRS Code Section 280E, beginning January 1, 2023.

Section 280E disallows deductions and credits on federal returns for expenditures connected with the illegal sale of drugs, requiring retail cannabis businesses to add back such significant expenses as rent and wages for sales staff. Like California, however, New York state now allows these and other standard business deductions on state returns.


OCM Issues Public Service Announcement

June 20, 2022 – The New York State Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) recently released a public service advertisement calling attention to the state’s goals of creating a diverse and inclusive industry and repairing harm done during cannabis prohibition.

The advertisement released today is the first cannabis related advertisement in the nation focusing on the disproportionate enforcement of cannabis prohibition to appear on broadcast television. It highlights the wide disparity in arrest rates for cannabis offenses for Black, Brown, and White New Yorkers during the 30 years prior to cannabis legalization. It states that Black people in New York were 15 times more likely to get arrested for cannabis than White people over the last 30 years; Latinos were 8 times more likely. Despite these disparities, data has shown that cannabis use among different races is essentially the same. The data points are based on New York State arrest data from data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics.

View the PSA here.

Misdemeanor and felony marijuana arrest data by race/ethnicity and county from 1990 to 2020, and notes about the data, are available on the OCM website.


New York Regulators Approve Marketing Rules for Legal Cannabis

June 7, 2022 – New York regulators voted to approve draft regulations for the packaging and advertising of licensed cannabis products in advance of the launch of recreational marijuana sales later this year.

Under the draft regulations from the New York Cannabis Control Board, companies will be permitted to advertise their products on television, radio, social media and other platforms. But the proposed rules include strict provisions designed to protect children from being influenced by cannabis marketing.

“Protecting public health, reducing harm and promoting sustainable industry practices are key components of legalizing cannabis for adult use and I look forward to considering these regulations as we develop the industry,” Cannabis Control Board Chair Tremaine Wright said in a statement quoted by the New York Post. “We are committed to building a New York cannabis industry that sets high standards for protecting children and keeping products safe and sustainable.”

Labels for cannabis products must include the serving size, potency, ingredients, and directions for usage and storage. Packaging and advertising that contain cartoon characters, bubble lettering, neon colors, references to candy, or other elements likely to appeal to person younger than 21 are not allowed.

The regulations also forbid the use of endorsements from celebrities who appear to be younger than 21 and ban the use of common terms in the cannabis culture lexicon including “weed,” “pot,” “stoner,” and “chronic.” Misleading claims of health benefits and indications that the product is “safe” or “organic” are also prohibited, as are actual images of marijuana or people vaping or smoking.

More details about cannabis marketing can be found here.


Green Kulture and Two Chicks and Flowers in partnership with NY Small Farma host “Erasing the Stigma” at Rockland Community College Cultural Arts Center

May 15, 2022 – Erasing the Stigma, is an informational cannabis event on May 20, 2022, 5pm to 8pm at RCC Cultural Arts Center Theater. This FREE event in partnership with NY Small Farma LTD will be produced by NY based cannabis cultivation company Green Kulture; and NY based cannabis lifestyle brand Two Chicks and Flowers. Erasing the Stigma aims to bring awareness to the plight of BIPOC who have been affected by the ‘War on Drugs’ who are now eligible to apply and operate legally in the cannabis industry in New York State.

This informational event was carefully constructed with Rockland county local government officials, cannabis advocates, attorneys, business owners and community leaders aimed to bring awareness and provide information to aspiring New York BIPOC and minority entrepreneurs for the highly anticipated licensing process forthcoming. This initiative is particularly laudable as the cannabis industry continues to grow not only nationally but in New York State, with the entrant of more brands and entrepreneurs POC into the space to meet the growing needs of cannabis consumers.

Green Kulture and NY Small Farma LTD will join forces with Two Chicks and Flowers who recently hosted their cannabis informational event titled “A Piece of The Pot” on December 7, 2021 in Brooklyn’s BedStuy Restoration Plaza which includes a similar layout for Erasing the Stigma.

Registration for ‘Erasing the Stigma’ will be a first come, first RSVP approach as this is a FREE public community event limited to the 500 seats capacity theater via a dedicated EventBrite link. In accordance with New York State guidelines, attendees will be required to provide proof of vaccination prior to entering the venue.


Approval of First 52 Adult-Use Cannabis Conditional Cultivation Licenses to Farms in New York

April 15, 2022 – The Cannabis Control Board approved 52 Adult-use Cannabis Conditional Cultivator Licenses across the state. These are the first adult-use cannabis licenses granted in New York State and they advance the Seeding Opportunity Initiative

The approved licenses are from a pool of more than 150 that have been submitted to the Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) following the March 15 opening of the online application portal. The OCM will continue to review applications on a rolling basis and will work to get them to the Board for approval as quickly as possible. A list of the licenses approved today is available here.



March 9, 2022 – New York State plans to introduce retail sales of marijuana by year-end 2022. Abundant stores of product will be available to licensees grown by New York farmers. New York may also lease storefronts to facilitate the opening of dispensaries. The first licensees must be either a person convicted of a marijuana-related offense or an immediate family member of one.

The policy, to be announced by Gov. Kathy Hochul on Thursday, is part of a concerted push to assure that early business owners in the state’s projected billion-dollar marijuana industry will be members of the communities adversely affected by the state’s criminal justice system. To read the full fact sheet, click here.


CONDITIONAL USE CANNABIS CULTIVATOR LICENSES FOR NY HEMP FARMERS

February 22, 2022 – Governor Kathy Hochul signed legislation creating a new Conditional Adult-use Cannabis Cultivator license, establishing a pathway for existing New York hemp farmers to apply for a conditional license to grow cannabis in the 2022 growing season for the forthcoming adult-use cannabis market. Under the law, conditionally licensed cannabis farmers must meet certain requirements, including safe, sustainable and environmentally friendly cultivation practices, participation in a social equity mentorship program, and engagement in a labor peace agreement with a bona fide labor organization.

With a conditional adult-use cannabis cultivation license, farmers can grow outdoors or in a greenhouse for up to two years from the issuance of the license. It also allows them to manufacture and distribute cannabis flower products without holding an adult-use processor or distributor license, until June 1, 2023. Cultivators are limited to one acre (43,560 square feet) of flowering canopy outdoors or 25,000 square feet in a greenhouse and can use up to 20 artificial lights. They can also split between outdoor and greenhouse grows with a maximum total canopy of 30,000 square feet as long as greenhouse flowering canopy remains under 20,000 square feet.

The OCM will be developing a license application process and opening the program as soon as possible. To qualify for an Adult-use Cannabis Conditional Cultivator License an applicant must have been an authorized industrial hemp research partner for the Department of Agriculture and Markets, cultivating hemp for its non-intoxicating cannabinoid content for at least two of the past four years and in good standing as of December 31, 2021, when the research program ended.

Holders of the license must also participate in a social equity mentorship program where they provide training in cannabis cultivation and processing for social and economic equity partners, preparing them for potential roles in the industry. Growers will also have to meet sustainability requirements to ensure the cannabis is grown in an environmentally conscientious way.


January 16, 2022: Cannabis Career Institute Online (CCI Online) announced today that they are co-hosting a one-day workshop, Cannabis Business Opportunities in New York, with Rockland Community College. The workshop will showcase the full scope (from seed to sale) of business and career opportunities in the New York Cannabis Industry. The workshop will be held virtually on February 10th, 2022. The cost of admission is $219, and you can register here.

Opening remarks for the event will be delivered by Michael A. Baston, President Rockland Community College. Panels will be made up of entrepreneurs, social equity business owners, economic developers as well as municipality representatives, including Grant Valentine, Deputy Mayor for the Village of Chestnut Ridge and Consultant for New York State Cannabis Association of Minorities & Women Professionals.

Panel topics to be discussed include, Seizing Cannabis Market Expansion Opportunities: Social Equity, Diversity & Inclusion, Job Creation as well as Employment & Legal, Banking/Finance, Entrepreneurial Perspectives of Owning Your Own Cannabis Business. By interacting with the extensive list of panelists, participants will gain crucial information needed to successfully enter the emerging market of recreational cannabis and the expanding medical cannabis market.

Rockland Opt-In, Opt-Outs
Towns


Villages


Marijuana Opt-Out Tracker – Brought To Us By The Rockefeller Institute

December 7, 2021 – For an easy to use and up-to-date presentation of New York’s villages’ and towns’ decisions on dispensaries and consumption lounges, check out the Marijuana Opt-Out Tracker by the Rockefeller Institute.


JP Morgan Chase Restricts Trading on Cannabis Stocks

November 3, 2021 – According to Reuters and based on a letter it reviewed, JP Morgan Chase plans on limiting its clients access to US-based securities, effective November 8, 2021. Clients will still be able to liquidate their positions after that date.

Other banks, including Credit Suisse have similarly limited its clients’ abilities to execute transactions or have it hold shares for clients in cannabis-related companies with U.S. operations.

The Chase restrictions apply to companies with U.S. operations that are not listed on the Nasdaq, the New York Stock Exchange or the Toronto Stock Exchange and have a “direct nexus to marijuana-related activities.”

Cowen and Co, another U.S. bank active in the cannabis trading space, in September increased its cash margin requirements for all marijuana related trades on its platform.

Some investors have blamed recent selloffs in U.S. cannabis stocks on banks backing away from the sector and the new restrictions at JPMorgan and Cowen could add to the pressure.

“JPMorgan’s move to block its customers from buying securities in fully legal, regulated cannabis companies is beyond disappointing,” U.S. Cannabis Council CEO Steven Hawkins said in a public statement following the news. “Publicly-traded cannabis companies operate entirely within the law, and the industry is poised for tremendous growth. JPMorgan’s new policy is regressive and at odds with the majority of Americans, who want legal, regulated cannabis. What’s more, it’s self-defeating. The end of federal cannabis prohibition is within site, and the industry is already growing rapidly. I imagine more than a few JPMorgan customers will take issue with being blocked from one of the hottest industries on the market today. JPMorgan is on the wrong side of history on this and will come to regret its decision.”


Nyack Village Board Defers Decision on Cannabis Opt-Out Until November 18, 2021

October 29, 2021 – During a lengthy Zoom meeting last night, the Nyack Village Board took public input on the draft of its local law opting out of both retail cannabis dispensaries and lounges. Citing uncertainty in state regulations and a lack of provisions for dispensaries and lounges in its local zoning code, the Board initially was poised to vote on the Local Law opting out. After several speakers on the Zoom conference spoke in opposition to the plan, the Village Board decided to keep the public hearing open, do additional research, and reconvene on November 18, 2021.

Speakers spoke of lost opportunities for additional tax revenue and the filling of vacant retail space, and misconceptions regarding the availability of dispensary licenses in the future. Residents also pointed out that opting out would only bolster the existing illegal market for cannabis. Others talked about the quality control for the products that licensed dispensaries would provide versus whatever was currently being sold on the streets.


Gifting of Marijuana Illegal in New York If Part of Another Transaction

October 26, 2021 – The gifting of limited amounts of marijuana between adults is not illegal in New York, unless the gifting is part of another transaction. During its October 21st meeting of the Office of Cannabis Management, Tremaine Wright, Chair of the Cannabis Control Board opined on the practice of gifting. Wright said:

“As a reminder to all, we do not yet have state regulated adult use cannabis products on the market. We have not authorized recreational sales. We are hearing many examples of sales of marijuana products by individual vendors and retail locations. However, they are not licensed, nor are they selling regulated products. There are current 38 medical dispensing facilities across the state. We do not have any adult use nor recreational dispensaries. Any individuals selling cannabis or marijuana products in these unlicensed dispensaries, pop up shops or markets is not licensed, nor are they selling safe, tested products. I also wanted to share that any unlicensed sale or distribution of cannabis remains illegal. While gifting or transferring cannabis under the possession limit between adults who are 21 years or older without any money paid or services provided is legal.

Gifting does not include instances in which cannabis is given away at the same time as another transaction nor when it is offered or advertised in conjunction with an offer for the sale of goods or services (emphasis added). There are no legal producers of cannabis other than those whose production is intended for medicinal use. The cannabis being exchanged in the transactions just described those remain illicit. There is no gray market in New York State. This conduct is not legal and must stop. Individuals who do not cease run the risk of severe financial penalties.”

The statements were in response to numerous stories of vendors coupling “gifted” marijuana with sales of over-priced items, under the guise that the marijuana was not actually sold. Wright’s statement likely does not have the force of law. For a full transcript of the meeting, click here.


Town of Ramapo Considers Opting Out of Retail Dispensaries and On-Site Consumption Lounges

opting outOctober 28, 2021 (UPDATE) – Decision deferred to November 10, 2021 Town Board Meeting
October 26, 2021 – The Town of Ramapo is the latest Rockland County municipal government considering opting out of cannabis retail dispensaries and consumption lounges. At a public hearing on October 13, 2021, the Town Board adjourned without voting and deferred the decision to October 27th’s meeting. The opt-out decision will only affect the unincorporated areas of the Town, not the villages therein. On October 3, 2021, the Village of Suffern in the Town of Ramapo also opted out of retail dispensaries and consumption lounges.


New Workplace Guidance Issued By New York State Department of Labor

October 21, 2021 – The MRTA amended Section 201-D of the New York Labor Law to clarify that cannabis used in accordance with New York State law is a legal consumable product. As such, employers are prohibited from discriminating against employees based on the employee’s use of cannabis outside of the workplace, outside of work hours, and without use of the employer’s equipment or property.

PERMITTED EMPLOYER ACTIONS

The MRTA amended New York Labor Law Section 201-D by adding a new subsection 4-a, which provides that
employers MAY take employment action or prohibit employee conduct where:
• An employer is/was required to take such action by state or federal statute, regulation, or ordinance, or
other state or federal governmental mandate
• The employer would be in violation of federal law
• The employer would lose a federal contract or federal funding
• The employee, while working, manifests specific articulable symptoms of cannabis impairment that decrease or lessen the employee’s performance of the employee’s tasks or duties
• The employee, while working, manifests specific articulable symptoms of cannabis impairment that interfere with the employer’s obligation to provide a safe and healthy workplace as required by state and federal workplace safety laws

Detailed workplace policies are outlined in the DOL Guidance, including drug testing, retaliation for use, termination, reinstatement, off-hours or off-site use, and work-from home use. For a more in depth look, review the guidance here.

The MRTA and New York Labor Law Section 201-D do not apply to individuals who are not employees (e.g., students who are not employees, independent contractors, individuals working out of familial obligation, volunteers) or provide any consumer protections. Employees under the age of 21 are also not covered, as cannabis use by individuals under the age of 21 is prohibited by New York Law and not subject to the present protections. The law also does not apply to employees of the federal government.


New York Municipalities Continue to Opt Out of Recreational Marijuana Dispensaries and Lounges

October 7, 2021 – Cannabis consultant Mike Doyle has created and is maintaining a municipal cannabis opt-out tracking map for New York State. The map also tracks opt-ins, pendings, and still-to-be-decideds. Please read the maps notes before using for a full explanation of the icons and methodology.

Leaning-In are 14 municipalities. Leaning-Out: 20. Opted-In: 37. Opted-Out: 102. Undetermined: 58. Upcoming Meetings: 67 (Information as of 10-7-2021)

In accordance with the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), towns, villages, and cities have until December 31 to decide if marijuana dispensaries and cannabis cafes can situate in their communities. Counties can’t decide, and villages within towns make their own decisions. When a town opts out, it only binds the unincorporated areas within those towns — not the villages themselves.

For example, on October 3, 2021, the Village of Suffern opted out, even though the Town of Ramapo has yet to decide the issue. As the year winds down, there will be a flurry of new local laws passed for those municipalities choosing to opt-out.

Opting-out municipalities believe they can always opt back in at a later date, and while that may be true, if the state limits the number of licenses issued, the opt-back-in vote may not have much meaning.


Goodness Growth Holdings Completes First National Cannabis Expungement Month

October 6, 2021 – Goodness Growth Holdings, Inc., a physician-led, science-focused cannabis company announced the completion of its first ever national cannabis expungement month.

In September, Goodness Growth hosted or sponsored four expungement clinics in MinnesotaMaryland and New York and helped more than 100 people file the necessary paperwork to get their simple, nonviolent cannabis charges expunged from their records.

In New York, Goodness Growth partnered with Women of Color, CannaClusive, the Black Bar Association and other cannabis industry and legal aid organizations to host a 30-day virtual expungement clinic. The clinic also offered resources for those experiencing PTSD and emotional trauma related to their arrest and conviction. The virtual New York clinic continues through Oct. 16; interested persons can take an expungement pre-qualification survey or access information and resources by visiting https://wocworldwide.com/expungement.


New York Marijuana Regulators Hold First Meeting | Patient Access To Flower Cannabis Approved

October 5, 2021 – New York’s Cannabis Control Board (CCB) held its first meeting on Tuesday. The public was invited to listen in online.

Changes to the state’s existing medical cannabis program include allowing dispensaries to sell flower marijuana products to qualified patients. Home cultivation for patients remains prohibited and although New York Assemblywoman Tremaine Wright (D), who chairs CCB, announced the body is “very committed to drafting these regulations and issuing them for public comments, and expect it to be an agenda item on one of the upcoming board meetings,” it was not clear when home grow regulations will be put into place.

Qualified patients will now be able to access flower cannabis products at existing dispensaries, and the $50 registration fee for caregivers and patients was permanently waived.

The board also signed off on Jason Starr, who served as assistant counsel to former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) and also worked at the New York Civil Liberties Union to become chief equity officer.


How Will Interstate Commerce & Competition Affect New York’s Nascent Marijuana Industry

ANALYSIS

(October 1, 2021) Marijuana produced in one state – raw material or finished product, wholesale or retail – cannot be imported from, or exported to, another state for sale. That’s known as interstate commerce, and each state’s laws limit the movement of marijuana to within the state. Marijuana is still considered a Schedule 1 controlled substance under federal law.

But looking forward to the federal legalization of marijuana, or at least a provision allowing for interstate transactions, sends chills up the spines of local growers, processors, distributors and investors.

The Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution prohibits state laws that unduly restrict interstate commerce under a well-established doctrine created by the U.S. Supreme Court. Under this doctrine, state laws prohibiting the import and export of state-legal marijuana would likely be unconstitutional, if challenged.

Until that happens though, states have an economic interest in protecting their home-grown farmers, processing facilities and distribution networks.

States that have long-established growing facilities and established supply chains (e.g. California, Oregon) would have a cost and logistics advantage over states that have more recently legalized recreational use (e.g. New York, New Jersey), and could adversely affect or even prevent the development of local industry. Those established states already have an oversupply of product and production capacity. Exporting cheaper marijuana grown out west to states like New York and New Jersey would hamper local efforts to establish local supply networks, processing plants and distribution facilities. Facilities in northern states have the added costs of climate control as most year-round growing will likely take place in indoor greenhouses and other energy-hungry facilities.

“Interstate Commerce is the worst thing that can happen to small farmers and social equity businesses. It would benefit California and Oregon to alleviate their oversupply. But, it’s a disaster for newly legalized states to play catch-up with an established supply chain infrastructure as robust as California or Oregon. Building greenhouses and outdoor operations take years to build,” says Allan Gandelman, president of the New York Cannabis Growers and Processors Association.

“And in those two states, specifically, people are selling their cannabis at a low cost of production, which does nothing but drive the market prices to the bottom. The only people who will survive in that system are overcapitalized giant corporations that can scale up and have the financial resources to take a loss for a few years.”

The interstate movement of marijuana may still be some time off, but in all likelihood will be a reality. Newer states need to accelerate the development of their local industries to fend off competition from established states and eventually imports from Mexico and Colombia, where growing costs are significantly cheaper.

Also, Interstate commerce could happen before federal legalization, such as through agreements among neighboring states (an idea being spearheaded by the Oregon-based Alliance for Sensible Markets).

“Even with federal legalization, retail would probably remain local through licensed shops (similar to licensed liquor stores), and Congress would likely ban shipping marijuana products through the mail (similar to nicotine products),” says Marc D. Hauser is an attorney and vice chair of the Cannabis Practice Team at the Reed Smith law firm.

Federal descheduling (or rescheduling) of marijuana could quickly bring a wave of investment, consolidation and competition, all of which could dramatically change how New York businesses and state government might approach the development and acceleration of a New York-based marijuana market.


Crains Communications Acquires Green Market Report, A Cannabis Financial News Site

September 29, 2021 – Green Market Report launched in 2017 and averages about 150,000 page views per month. The New York-based digital media outlet specializes in topics including cannabis legislation, financial reporting and business trends.

“We are excited to add Green Market Report to our now 21-brand portfolio,” KC Crain, president and CEO of Crain Communications, said in a news release. “They focus on the financial, business and economic side of the cannabis industry, so it’s a natural fit with our other business brands.”


Goodness Growth Sale/Leaseback Deal Closes

September 28, 2021 – Goodness Growth Holdings, Inc.  closed on a sale/leaseback deal with Innovative Industrial Properties, Inc. (IIP) in New York. Goodness Growth reported that it sold IIP approximately 92.3 acres of land for $1.2 million. The site is next to Goodness Growth’s existing cannabis cultivation and processing facility in Johnstown, New York, which was formerly the site of a juvenile detention center. IIP said it plans to provide a tenant improvement reimbursement to Goodness Growth of roughly $55 million for the construction of a new 324,000 square foot cannabis cultivation, processing, and research and development facility.


U.S. House Passes SAFE Banking Legislation (Again)

September 28, 2021 – The U.S. House of Representatives passed SAFE Banking legislation by voice vote, as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act.

The SAFE Banking amendment would enable financial institutions to support the cannabis industry by explicitly permitting financial institutions to do business with cannabis companies and prohibiting the government from terminating or limiting a financial institution’s deposit or share insurance solely because the financial institution has cannabis clientele.

Only a limited number of financial institutions are currently willing to take on the risk of providing banking services to cannabis companies. Those institutions that are willing to bear the risk often charge exorbitant fees that foreclose access to many smaller and diversity-owned entities. As a result, the economic development of all cannabis industries has been stymied, through reduced access, high barriers to entry, and an unwarranted and unsustaintable dependence on cash transactions. Limited banking option encourages and industry dependent on cash-only transactions — a major security concern to the cannabis industry and to municipal governments that host cannabis related businesses.

The bill will next go to the Senate, which is working on its own version of the legislation.


IRS Provides Resources To Help Cannabis Business Owners Successfully Navigate Unique Tax Responsibilities

September 27, 2021 – In its most recent issue of “A Closer Look” the IRS focuses on the tax implications for the rapidly growing cannabis/marijuana industry.

However, because it’s a Schedule I controlled substance, Section 280E of the tax code applies, even if the business operates in a state that has legalized the sale of marijuana.

At last count, 36 states plus the District of Columbia have legalized marijuana for recreational or medicinal use, or both. These states, such as CaliforniaWashington and Colorado provide tax guidance for businesses and we strongly encourage industry members to remain compliant with state taxes as well. And while there are 14 states that still ban cannabis use, the IRS expects both unlicensed and licensed marijuana businesses to continue to grow.

While IRS Code Section 280E is clear that all the deductions and credits aren’t allowed for an illegal business (marijuana is still considered a Schedule 1 controlled substance under federal law), there’s a caveat: Marijuana business owners can deduct their cost of goods sold, which is basically the cost of their inventory. What isn’t deductible are the normal overhead expenses, such as advertising expenses, wages and salaries, and travel expenses, to name a few.

Here are some other helpful tips from the IRS to help cannabis/marijuana business owners:

Know your investors

There are thousands of people trying to get into the industry legitimately; however, there are some pitfalls with investors that business owners need to be aware of to make sure their investors don’t cause more harm than good. The social stigma and federal designation as an illegal substance have led to unregistered and “silent” financing and ownership arrangements within the industry. Individuals associated with these funding and ownership arrangements are often referred to as “beneficial owners.” A beneficial owner enjoys the benefits of ownership, but the property’s title or activity is in another name. This creates complex compliance challenges for the IRS and may contribute to a business’s failure to file a tax return or accurately report gross receipts. IRS examiners explore the potential for these arrangements during examination engagements.

Additionally, cannabis/marijuana business owners should be aware of nefarious investors who will try to put funds into these new businesses that could cause them to lose their entire business. For example, if one of these silent investors gives initial money, say $5,000 or $10,000, and it grows to where they can then claim ownership, these businesses can become complicit in laundering money for drug traffickers.

Ensure you’re licensed

Make sure you’re licensed for whatever your location requires. Cannabis/marijuana businesses are highly regulated by state and municipal regulatory agencies from a licensing, product development and movement perspective.

File and pay your taxes on time

As mentioned earlier, even if your business operates with cash, you are still responsible for filing and paying your taxes on time.

The Internal Revenue Code doesn’t differentiate between income derived from legal sources and income derived from illegal sources. It’s all income and is taxable and must be reported on your tax return. However, because it’s a Schedule I controlled substance, Section 280E of the tax code applies, even if the business operates in a state that has legalized the sale of marijuana.

But Section 280E doesn’t prohibit a participant in the marijuana industry from reducing their gross receipts by properly calculating the cost of goods sold to determine its gross income. For example, a marijuana dispensary may not deduct advertising or selling expenses, but it may reduce its gross receipts by its cost of goods sold.

Cannabis businesses have no exemption from their employment tax obligations, and as with other small businesses, they often need to make quarterly tax payments. These business owners should always pay their taxes on time to avoid interest and penalties.

Enforcement efforts in the industry indicate there are taxpayers operating in segments of the industry (growers, transporters, wholesalers and retailers/dispensaries) who fail to file U.S. tax returns. These business owners should be aware that non-filers are an IRS enforcement priority.

Another of our top enforcement priorities in the cannabis industry is the use of cryptocurrency. Those who use it need to understand that the IRS considers it property, and there are gains that are taxable.  Anyone using cryptocurrency in their business to work with a reputable exchanger.

Report your cash transactions

Because marijuana is listed as a U.S. Schedule 1 drug, many businesses do not participate in the U.S. banking system and conduct transactions in cash.

Keep good records

All records, such as receipts, canceled checks and other documents that support an item of income, a deduction or a credit appearing on a return should be kept regardless of whether they’re tracked by hard copy or electronically. It’s important for a cannabis business to maintain records for all expenses, even those that are not legally deductible at the federal level, because good, well-organized records make it easier to prepare a tax return, track expenses, substantiate items reported on tax returns, and help provide answers if a return is selected for examination.


Final Members of New York’s Cannabis Oversight Panel Appointed

September 23, 2021 – Governor Kathy Hochul announced two appointees to New York’s cannabis market oversight and regulatory panel on Tuesday, rounding out the panel.

Appointed were Reuben McDaniel, the president and CEO of the Dormitory Authority of New York State, and Jessica Garcia, the assistant to the president of the Retail, Wholesale Department Store Union.

“New York’s cannabis industry has stalled for far too long – I am making important appointments to set the Office of Cannabis Management up for success so they can hit the ground running,” Hochul said. “I am confident Mr. McDaniel and Ms. Garcia will serve the board with professionalism and experience as we lead our state forward in this new industry.”

Earlier this month, Hochul named former Assemblywoman Tremaine Wright of Brooklyn as chairwoman of the board, and former Drug Policy Alliance coordinator Christopher Alexander would become executive director.

The panel, which also includes legislative appointments from the state Senate and Assembly, is in charge of setting regulations for the state’s cannabis industry, including the sale of commercial retail products. The five-person board will oversee licensing, taxation and sales of cannabis products, and was created as part of the broader legalization package approved last spring. The board will have the power of issuing or revoking licenses in the industry.


Ulster County And Hudson Valley Towns Welcome Cannabis Economy, While Some Opt Out of Economic Benefits

September 22, 2021 – A major cannabis facility may be coming to Ulster County as early as spring 2022.

Cresco Labs, a vertically integrated cannabis and medical marijuana company, is planning on developing a major cannabis cultivation, processing, packaging and distribution facility in the Ellenville area.

Cresco Labs is eyeing the former Schrade knife company near Ellenville, a site which closed down 17 years ago.

Cresco Labs says the facility will employ 300 to 400 people. The facility is expected to be at least 360,000-square-feet and would include a new building for cultivation, as well as spaces for processing, packaging, distribution, and offices.

Ulster County has 400-plus farms and nearly 60,000 acres of farmland perfect for growing cannabis.

New York State towns have until Dec. 31 to opt out on allowing marijuana dispensaries or retail cannabis locations in their municipalities. The Towns of New Paltz, Poughkeepsie, Newburgh and Kingston have opted in.

Poughkeepsie has not taken any action on opting out of cannabis sales, and is unlikely to do so.

Newburgh supports allowing dispensaries and on-site marijuana consumption in the city limits.

In the Hudson Valley, the towns of Goshen, Rhinebeck, Phillipstown, Middletown, Crawford, the Village of Chester and the Village of Cold Spring have all opted out.


Cannabis Campus Flowers in Warwick

September 22, 2021 – In an ironic twist, the Mid-Hudson Correctional Facility in Orange County will be re-purposed as a center for medical/recreational cannabis cultivation and production. The facility was closed in 2011 and the 150-acre campus was sold as “surplus state property” to a Local Development Company (LDC).

Renamed Wickham Woods, there was a formal groundbreaking for Chicago-based Green Thumb Industries’ (GTI) first cannabis growing facility in New York on the former prison grounds. New York is the 15th state in which GTI has established operations.

The first phase of GTI’s buildout is valued at $60 million. When the next two phases are complete, the total investment will be approximately $150 million, and an estimated 150 to 200 jobs with benefits will be created by GTI’s, many ranging in the six-figure category. The project is expected to be fully operational by 2023.


Town of Orangetown Opts Out of Recreational Marijuana Lounges and Retail Dispensaries

On June 22, 2021, by Local Law, the Town of Orangetown has opted out of both marijuana lounges and retail dispensaries in the Town’s unincorporated areas. The decision to opt out does not affect the Villages of Piermont and Nyack. As part of the local law, the Town formally requested the Cannabis Control Board prohibit the licensing and establishment of such dispensaries and consumption sites within the unincorporated areas of Town of Orangetown.


Town of Stony Point Opts Out of Recreational Marijuana Lounges and Retail Dispensaries

At a public hearing on July 14, 2021, the Town of Stony Point opted out of marijuana retail stores. The decision was unanimous, with the caveat that the Town might reconsider after the state’s cannabis control board is formed and regulations are in place.

As there are no Villages in the municipal boundaries of Stony Point, the decision to opt out affects the entire Town.


CUNY Launches Cannabis Education Program At Brooklyn’s Medgar Evers College

September 8, 2021 – Brooklyn’s Medgar Evers College, part of the City University of New York, is offering a cannabis minor degree program to assist students choosing to enter the legal recreational marijuana business.

Students can now enroll in “Introduction to the World of Cannabis,” a prerequisite course for many of the other cannabis courses in this degree program. In following semesters, students can choose four courses from any of the 13 newly developed courses to earn a cannabis degree minor in one of four different tracks. These courses provide educational opportunities not only to MEC students but to all students at the other 24 CUNY campuses via e-permits. Exemplifying its core mission to provide educational workforce development and opportunities for economic expansion, MEC’s cannabis minor and forthcoming adult education program will feature the skill-building instructional support needed to foster new cannabis leaders in the areas of testing, cultivation, business, and health. Read more…


Westchester Communities Opting Out of Marijuana Lounges and Retail Dispensaries

Several Westchester communities have made affirmative decisions to opt out of allowing cannabis lounges and dispensaries within their borders, including Eastchester, Yorktown, Larchmont, Ardsley, Somers, North Castle, Mt. Kisco, North Salem, Lewisboro and Bronxville.

Dobbs Ferry and the Village of Mamaroneck have plans to review opting out this fall.

Both the Town of Mamaroneck and the City of Rye are having public meetings on September 22, 2021 to consider opting out.

To  hold a public referendum in opposition to opting out, 20-25% of each community will have to sign a petition requesting a referendum. Thereafter a simple majority can reverse the governing body’s decision to opt out. For supporters of opting out, there is nothing they need to do but wait and vote on the public referendum, if one is required.


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