1st NY Pot Sales Permits Will Go To People With Convictions

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FILE - Dried hemp plants are sorted and trimmed at Hepworth Farms in Milton, N.Y., Monday, April 12, 2021. New York's first 100 to 200 retail cannabis licenses will be solely for people with marijuana-related convictions or their immediate family, state officials said Wednesday, March 9, 2022, in an effort to redress the inequities of a system that has locked up people of color for marijuana offenses at disproportionate rates. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — The first licenses to sell recreational marijuana in New York will go to people who were casualties of the war on drugs, state officials said Wednesday.

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People with marijuana-related convictions will get dibs on the first 100 to 200 retail cannabis licenses awarded by the state in an effort to redress the inequities of a justice system that locked up a disproportionate number of people of color for drug crimes.

Some licenses will go to nonprofits or businesses who have a leader linked to a marijuana conviction. Priority also will be given to people with a parent, legal guardian, child or spouse convicted of a marijuana-related offense.

Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, is set to announce the planned regulations for “social equity” applicants Thursday.

The regulations will get the green light from the state cannabis control board later that day, said Office of Cannabis Management spokesperson Freeman Klopott.

Convictions must have occurred before March 31, 2021, when the state’s legalization bill was signed by former Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

The plans were first reported by The New York Times. The regulations were posted on the state’s website Wednesday.

It’s unclear how many retail licenses will be issued in New York, the second-most populous state after California to legalize possession and use of marijuana for adults over age 21.

Social equity emerged as a key theme in marijuana legalization in recent years.

States where marijuana is legal have increasingly tried in recent years to ensure there’s a place in the market for people who were prosecuted because of a now-allowed drug. But the efforts have been slow-moving in many states.

New York “is taking a big swing,” said Kassandra Frederique, the executive director of the pro-legalization Drug Policy Alliance.

“We don’t know what’s going to work,” she said, but “the thing that New York is showing here is that they’re willing to try and they’re willing to do things differently. … This is a real try towards achieving equity.”

The licensing plan follows other New York initiatives, such as a proposed $200 million startup grants and loans fund for marijuana entrepreneurs who are women or minorities, struggling farmers, disabled veterans and people from communities that endured heavy pot policing.

New York aims to provide 50% of licenses to such applicants.

“It’s really encouraging to see that New York is taking the lessons learned from other states,” said Melissa Moore, another Drug Policy Alliance leader.

New York’s regulations also will lay out rules for other retail license applicants. Individual applicants must prove their presence in New York and that they have at least a 10% ownership interest in a business that ran a net profit for two years.

“We want to see an industry that’s big enough and broad enough for everyone to be involved,” said Steve Hawkins, CEO of the U.S. Cannabis Council, an industry group. “This effort is one that we certainly embrace and see as very meaningful, in terms of giving those individuals impacted by the war on drugs an opportunity to get started in what’s going to be a very significant market in New York state.”

Hochul’s administration has vowed to create “the most diverse and inclusive” marijuana industry in the nation, and provide opportunities for people who bore the brunt of the decades-long U.S. war on drugs.


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11 Comments
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Savta
Savta
2 years ago

Just in time for Purim

dumdems
dumdems
2 years ago

how about victims of drug addicts?
na!

My Opinion
My Opinion
2 years ago

Stupidest thing ever!
It’s like saying “I get to cut the line and get free liquor on my 21st birthday cause of the injustice done to me for the past 21 years”??! Lol. It’s insanity!

Eli
Eli
2 years ago

Time for a new New York State motto:

Crime Pays

triumphinwhitehouse
triumphinwhitehouse
2 years ago

by the way this is not an onion headline this is brought to you by an unelected though Aguda supported governor named Hochul.

Comeinman2022
Comeinman2022
2 years ago

Criminals are not called “casualties”. The Liberal Left really hates regular law abiding citizens

lazerx
lazerx
2 years ago

sounds reasonable, they are used to drug wars, killing, etc…..

S w
S w
2 years ago

Wow. Such great and smart leaders. You broke the law. I’m so sorry for punishing you!

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
2 years ago

I do not see why we are going this way. Why bother with licenses and taxation at all? Presently, people are growing their own and selling to friends. This model seems to work.

A few million in taxes is nothing compared to a state budget in the billions.

Me123
Me123
2 years ago

Colordo has found that sales of illegal weed surged higher than the sales of legal weed because legal weed is more expensive due to taxes. I don’t think the government will engage in sting operations to shut down small lillegal growers and sellers so these ex convicts will have to make moral judgements whether to sell legal pot which is probably more expensive than the stuff sold on the street corner from your local small time pot dealer.

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
2 years ago

Give it to addicts in the name of social equity. Wow