Pritzker Administration Announces
Additional Steps to Ensure Fairness in Awarding Conditional
Adult-Use Cannabis Dispensary Licenses
Applicants that Scored Below 252 Points to
Receive Supplemental Deficiency Notices and Opportunity to Submit
Amended Applications
Send a link to a friend
[September 24, 2020]
Following a careful examination of the process to award the first
round of conditional adult-use cannabis dispensary licenses after
receiving feedback from community leaders and stakeholders, Governor
JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation (IDFPR) announced additional steps to ensure
the process moves forward in a fair and equitable manner. These
steps will ensure applicants whose applications did not achieve the
maximum score of 252 points will receive a supplemental deficiency
notice and a score sheet identifying each exhibit to the application
on which they lost points. After receiving the supplemental
deficiency notice, applicants will have an opportunity to provide a
response that amends the application exhibits or to ask IDFPR to
conduct a rescore of their original application exhibits if they
believe there was an error or an inconsistency in the scoring.
“As we worked with the General Assembly, equity and fairness have
always been at the heart of our approach to legalizing cannabis, and
when we heard significant concerns from numerous stakeholders about
the process to award dispensary licenses, I said we needed to take a
pause to fix their concerns, within the bounds of our landmark law,”
said Governor JB Pritzker. “While this process remains a marathon
and not a sprint, we believe that these new steps will inject more
equity and fairness in the first round of license awards and provide
insight as we improve the process for future rounds.”
The supplemental deficiency notices and score sheet will notify
applicants which application exhibits did not receive a perfect
score. For each exhibit, an applicant can either submit additional
information, request a rescore of the exhibit, or do nothing and
keep the original score on that exhibit.
IDFPR will review all timely responses to the supplemental
deficiency notices and will issue a final score for each
application. The Department will then conduct the lottery for
Conditional Licenses in accordance with its tiebreaker rules. The
Department will provide detailed instructions for applicants,
including all deadlines, in the coming weeks.
“The Pritzker administration continues to work towards creating the
most equity-centric cannabis industry in the nation. From day one of
the administration’s work with the legislature, equity has been at
the center of this legislation from day one of negotiations as we
worked to create a system that prioritizes social equity applicants
and reinvests revenues in communities hardest hit by the war on
drugs,” said Toi Hutchinson, Senior Advisor to the Governor on
Cannabis Control. “Before awarding the next 110 dispensary licenses,
as the statute requires, the State will conduct a disparity study to
better understand how this new industry is working and correct any
structural challenges to equity as we move forward in implementing
the law.”
This supplemental process is designed to ensure the Cannabis
Regulation and Tax Act is implemented in a fair and equity-centric
manner as intended by both the administration and the General
Assembly and will be conducted in accordance with the Act.
[to top of second column] |
Applicants will not be permitted to change the owners or ownership percentages
identified on their original application in an attempt to qualify for social
equity status, Illinois resident ownership status, or veteran ownership status
if the original owner or group of majority owners on the application did not
fall into those categories. The points allocated for these categories are
outlined in the Act and, therefore, can only be changed through the legislative
process.
Following the awarding of the first 75 licenses, the Act provides that IDFPR
must conduct a disparity study, which will be a comprehensive evaluation of the
adult-use cannabis market. Based on the results of that study, additional
measures will be proposed to further improve equity and inclusion in the market.
The administration has already suggested steps for the General Assembly to take
to improve the process going forward, including providing that all applicants
who meet or exceed a cut-off score will advance to the lottery and limiting the
number of applications one entity can submit.
IDFPR received 2,588 cannabis dispensary applications from 937 applicants, more
than double the number of dispensary applications that have been submitted to
any other state awarding a limited number of dispensary licenses. The
applications also far surpass the 221 applications submitted to the state for
medical cannabis licenses in 2014. The vast increase in the number of applicants
reflects the significant steps taken in the Act to ensure a wide variety of
applicants were given an opportunity to participate in this new industry.
In 2019, Governor Pritzker signed the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act into law,
the most equity-centric cannabis legislation in the country. In addition to
committing to conduct a disparity study, the administration offered lower
application fees, low-interest loans, and informational workshops on
cannabis-related licenses to social equity applicants. The administration
remains committed to upholding the intent and language of the law and ensuring
the cannabis industry is equitable for all Illinois residents, regardless of
background.
Under this new law, 25% of revenues collected from recreational cannabis sales
are being directed to communities that have been disproportionately impacted by
the justice system through the Restore, Reinvest and Renew (R3) Program. The
innovative R3 program recently announced $31.5 million in grant opportunities to
organizations working in historically underserved communities across Illinois.
Governor Pritzker is also working with State’s Attorney Kim Foxx, the Prisoner
Review Board, and state’s attorneys across Illinois to expunge the records of
non-violent offenders with a cannabis related conviction, with over 11,000
Illinoisans already seeing their records expunged.
For more information on the adult-use legal cannabis industry, go to
https://www2.illinois.gov/cannabis/
Pages/default.aspx.
[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |