NY Opens Its First Legal Recreational Marijuana Dispensary

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Chris Alexander, center, executive director of New York State Office of Cannabis Management, shows off the first purchase of cannabis gummies bought at Housing Works—New York's first legal cannabis dispensary, during a press conference to kick-off its opening, Thursday Dec. 29, 2022, in New York. Housing Works, a minority-controlled nonprofit serving people with HIV and AIDS, as well as homeless and formerly incarcerated people, will be the first of 36 recently licensed dispensaries to begin selling cannabis to the general public. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

NEW YORK (AP) — The first legal dispensary for recreational marijuana in New York rung up its first sales on Thursday, opening up what is expected to be one of the country’s most lucrative markets for cannabis — underscored by the dozens of unauthorized shops that have operated in the open for years.
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The widely anticipated opening of the first state-sanctioned dispensary, which is operated by the nonprofit Housing Works, paves the way for a string of openings expected in the coming months in New York. The state legalized recreational marijuana use in March 2021.

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“We’re absolutely thrilled to be the first and hopefully setting a model that other folks will have to follow,” said Charles King, the chief executive officer of Housing Works, a minority-controlled social-service agency that serves people with HIV and AIDS, as well as those who are homeless and formerly incarcerated.

The lower Manhattan store is the first of 36 recently licensed dispensaries to open, with an additional 139 licenses yet to be issued by the state Office of Cannabis Management and 900 applicants still awaiting word. Among the first round of licensees were eight nonprofits that included Housing Works.

The cannabis storefront abuts the sprawling urban campus of New York University.

“This location is a perfect location. We’re between the West Village, the East Village,” King said at a news conference Thursday morning. “Tourists can come by here easily. So we think we’re going to bring up a lot of sales here.”

Facing a cluster of cameras, Chris Alexander, the inaugural executive director of the state cannabis office, made the first purchase: watermelon-flavored gummies and a tin of marijuana flowers.

“It’s been a lot of work that’s come to get us to this point,” Alexander said. “We do have a lot more work to do, a lot more stores to open.”

Housing Works officials said that the dispensary has already received more than 2,000 reservations to make purchases.

Ben Gilbert, 38, a media specialist, smoked a marijuana cigarette just outside the new retail outlet and said he was looking forward to the store’s official opening at 4:20 p.m. Thursday.

“As a consumer, I’m glad to finally go to a store and buy New York-grown cannabis,” he said.

New York City Councilmember Carlina Rivera also bought gummies, and said she no longer needs to travel out of state for legal cannabis. She predicted that more openings will be a boon to the state and city economy.

“We are the financial center of the world, the greatest city on earth, and I think people will now come here to enjoy all types things,” she said.

New York joined nearly two dozen other states in the U.S. to legalize recreational marijuana. But unlike many other states, New York has reserved its first round of retail licenses for nonprofits, as well as applicants with marijuana convictions and their relatives — an acknowledgement of the inequities produced by the country’s war on drugs.

It also planned a $200 million public-private fund to aid what they called “social equity” applicants.

“We have seen firsthand the ravages of the war on drugs, on people who use drugs, particularly the most marginalized people, low income people,” King said.

King said that his nonprofit is hiring people who have been criminalized because of marijuana. Housing Works pursued getting a license because they wanted “to have the opportunity to ameliorate some of the harsh circumstances implicated in both the criminalization of cannabis as well as other drugs,” he said.

“Today marks a major milestone in our efforts to create the most equitable cannabis industry in the nation,” said New York City Mayor Eric Adams in a statement. “The opening of the first legal dispensary in our state right here in New York City is more than just a promising step for this budding industry — it represents a new chapter for those most harmed by the failed policies of the past.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul called the first legal sale of adult-use cannabis “a historic milestone in New York’s cannabis industry.”


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Oren
Oren
1 year ago

Filth is back on the streets our kids are at risk .

Fake Rabbi
Fake Rabbi
1 year ago

It’s illegal regardless of what the mayor says. He said he going to crack down on the dispensaries that don’t pay his exercise tax as they are dangerous. Can you please explain this. It’s outlawed by the Federal Government. You just need the and federal agents who want to enforce it or has a grudge on you.

Freefacer
Freefacer
1 year ago

LEGALIZATION: The New American Way.

It doesn’t matter if it’s immoral, illicit, perverse, socially harmful, unethical or worse, if you want to make IT (whatever that IT may be) just legalize it.

This is the danger of removing the founder’s intent from the constitution and the DOI, ‘they are endowed by their creator’!

When man becomes the arbiter of right and wrong, we become doomed to depravity.
And we, the G-d fearing people, will suffer the fate of such a society.

Sara
Sara
1 year ago

This is sickening
Our government celebrating the legal sale of mind altering drugs
And equity- ha- that’s the biggest joke of all
Does that mean most of the licenses were given to black people? Who have been previously incarcerated for drug dealing? What a strange world when the former criminals become the current pet projects. This whole thing feels quite high as a kite. Somebody smoking too much weed.

Paul Near Philadelphia
Paul Near Philadelphia
1 year ago

I suppose this will save the lives of many policemen and regular citizens too.

Someplace in Philly
Someplace in Philly
1 year ago

Get out of New York!

Mr.Me
Mr.Me
1 year ago

The reason NEW YORK STATE legalized this product is because it gives the politicians another way to collect tax money needed to buy votes in order to keep themselves and their cronies in power without being accountable for their lack of fulfilling their obligations to the taxpaying public

lazerx
lazerx
1 year ago

Disgusting! If you need drugs or even booze to be happy, you have a serious problem.