The statute allows 49% of a business to be owned by non-Maine residents, for example. The rules, though, prohibit any out-of-state person or entity from exerting “more than minimal influence, through direct or indirect financial interest, over decisions regarding the operation of a marijuana establishment.” Whoa. To spin this out a bit: If I’m from Delaware and I own 20 percent of a Maine marijuana business, I’m 100 percent in compliance with the law. But wouldn’t a 20 percent owner necessarily exert “more than minimal influence” over decisions of the business? These rules seem to prohibit what the law allows, which makes the legality of the rules questionable. (More on this in forthcoming blog posts.)
Finally, I’ll just note that the proposed rules give the Office of Marijuana Policy Department of Administrative and Financial Services broad authority to dig, deeply, into the corporate structure and dealings of any applicant or licensed business. Check out rule 2.5.1, which allows the Department to “require additional information to verify that business structures, loans, franchise agreements, royalty agreements and other legal arrangements or anything else regarding true parties of interest, parties of control or other interested parties are not being used to circumvent ownership requirements.” Depending on the Department’s motivation, it can keep digging and digging and withhold a license until its satisfied that residency requirements, etc., are met.
(I am trying not to bury too many legal citations in this blog, to make it digestible, but to spell out the residency requirements explained above, check out section 2.3.1(B)(2) on page 15 of the proposed rules, which states that “no person or entity shall create a party of control to a marijuana establishment license consisting of less than a majority of residents.” Now, check out the definition of "party of control" on page 9 of the rules. This definition is frighteningly broad, as quoted above.)
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