Showing posts with label medical marijuana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medical marijuana. Show all posts

Portland Considers Giving Some Preference to Minority Applicants for Marijuana Retail Licenses

Friday, January 17, 2020

The City of Portland is considering giving preference to minority applicants when distributing retail marijuana licenses. This came up at the City Council’s last committee meeting on the draft ordinance, and city staff cautioned that this could be difficult to administer. After this conversation, I thought it would be worth looking briefly at how this has played out in other jurisdictions. 

There is no question that America’s "war on drugs" and the crackdown on marijuana disproportionately impacted black Americans and other minorities. This sad history is the impetus for the proposal in Portland, and proposals/laws in other jurisdictions. Here are four examples of how this has played out:

  • In Maryland, there was no preference for minorities originally, but then nearly all of the licenses were awarded to white people and the state decided to try again. It increased the total number of licenses, and said it would give minority-owned businesses (and some other demographics) slight preference. That plan doesn’t seem to be playing out as envisioned; it is dragging on and on and on, amid multiple lawsuits alleging bias in the licensing process. 
  • The Ohio legislature created a racial quota requiring 15% of all licenses to grow, process, and sell marijuana to be awarded to minority-owned and -operated companies. But state judges have said that law is unconstitutional
  • In Massachusetts, the Cannabis Control Commission is limiting certain types of licenses to “economic empowerment and social equity applicants” along with "microbusinesses."  These include social consumption and delivery licenses. Exclusivity is planned for a period of years. These categories of licenses haven’t been awarded yet, so we will see how that process plays out. 
  • The marijuana legalization law in Illinois (for adult use) includes a variety of provisions meant to expand opportunities for people of color and those “disproportionately impacted” by the war on drugs. But some are questioning whether this law will meet its goals since the adult use market launches this month, and for at least the first half of 2020 the only participants will be existing medical marijuana dispensaries which are almost entirely white-owned. It is not yet clear how many of the 75 licenses awarded later this year will actually go to demographics disproportionately impacted by the war on drugs. 

Maine does not have any such law at the state level, so we will wait and see how the Portland City Council deals with this issue moving forward.

California Regulators Issue Cannabis Banking Guidance That’s Actually Useful

Thursday, October 17, 2019

On October 2, 2019, the California Department of Business Oversight issued some really helpful guidance aimed at California banks and credit unions that are currently or are planning to bank marijuana-related businesses (MRBs). The guidance document consists of an extensive questionnaire that is used by California state bank examiners when they audit a bank or credit union’s MRB compliance program. The guidance document is intended to help California financial institutions comply with Bank Secrecy Act and FinCEN guidance on cannabis banking. Although some of the guidance in the questionnaire is California-law specific, much of it is broadly applicable to any financial institution in any state that has legalized medical or recreational cannabis. We are encouraging all of our financial institution clients who have or are working on MRB compliance programs to take a look!

Maine Takes Another Step Toward Becoming a Marijuana Tourism Destination—But Are We Moving Fast Enough?

Friday, July 19, 2019

Maine’s cannabis tourism program might be hitting its stride. The Office of Marijuana Policy has reached “instant reciprocity” arrangements with 23 states which allow medical cannabis patients from those states to also use their patient cards in Maine. Here’s the announcement from the OMP. Consistent with state law, the visiting qualifying patient can purchase up to 2.5 oz of medical marijuana and marijuana products every 15 days while visiting Maine. 

Adult use tourism will obviously be of a different cloth, since the hope is that it will attract consumers who can’t legally purchase marijuana products in their home state. There is some evidence that Massachusetts’ rec program is attracting New Yorkers, and the hope is that Maine’s program will bring folks from New Hampshire and New York, etc. Of course, in an industry where there’s a massive "first mover" advantage, it’s not clear that Maine will really open the floodgates to adult use marijuana in time to reap many of the benefits that earlier states are seeing.

Federal Efforts to Relax, Just a Little Bit, About Marij(h)uana

Friday, May 17, 2019

Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions was famous for (among other things) his heavy opposition to marijuana legalization. His approach flew in the face of the dozens of states that have legalized medical and/or adult use marijuana, and seemed like it was leading toward a Wild West-style showdown. But Jeff Sessions is gone now, that excitement has dwindled for the time being, and Congress is even trying to take a baby step toward aligning federal law with legalization at the state level. 

The STATES (Strengthening the Tenth Amendment Through Entrusting States) Act is old news at this point, but it could be important and this is a new blog, so I’m going to briefly write about it anyway. This bill, currently before Congress, states that enforcement of the federal prohibition on marijuana “shall not apply to any person acting in compliance with State law relating to manufacture, production, possession, distribution, dispensation, administration, or delivery of marihuana.” (Side note: What’s up with the feds spelling "marijuana" with an "h"? If you know, please tell us!) 

The STATES Act is bipartisan, with co-sponsors including Senator Cory Gardner (R – Colorado) and Senator Elizabeth Warren (D – Massachusetts). And, in perhaps the most controversial moment of his short tenure as Attorney General, Bill Barr has offered at least tepid support for the legislation. So stay tuned.

Welcome to Our Blog (and, What We’re All About)

Monday, May 13, 2019

Welcome to the Cannabis Law and Policy Update! You can expect updates and commentary on a potpourri of marijuana and hemp happenings at the state and federal level. We will be primarily focused on the law (since we’re lawyers), but in the broadest sense. Think everything from court decisions to legislation to regulation to enforcement, with our reactions and some practical advice sprinkled throughout.

At the moment, every week seems to bring some significant development in the world of cannabis law and policy. Maine’s rulemaking process for adult use marijuana is heating up, which means that a (legal) adult use industry is just around the corner; the legality of hemp and CBD is a complete rollercoaster ride; the Legislature is continuing to fix and tinker with Maine’s medical and adult use marijuana laws; and the feds remain curmudgeons all around. We’ll be hitting on specific angles in this arena all the time, so check back frequently and subscribe.