Some look to streamline Illinois’ cannabis regulations with statewide
commission
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[August 04, 2022]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – To simplify the
state’s regulation of the legal cannabis industry while working to
reduce litigation and the specter of politics, some in Illinois are
looking to create a statewide cannabis commission.
As it is right now, entrepreneurs in the adult-use and medical cannabis
industry in Illinois have multiple state agencies they have to work
through to get licensed and regulated. Application fees can be expensive
and meeting various other requirements like being an social equity
applicant can add more burdens.
State Rep. Marcus Evans, D-Chicago, wants to reduce the touch points by
creating a cannabis commission similar to the state’s liquor or gaming
commissions.
“It’s about centralizing things and time management,” Evans told The
Center Square. “Business folks don’t need the confusion. Even some of us
are confused because I don’t know which agency is which. I’ve got to try
to answer folks and bring out a flowchart. Why make government difficult
when it can be easy.”
Cannabis Business Association of Illinois Executive Director Pam Althoff
said for the state to really achieve policy goals for the industry,
things need to be streamlined.
“You just have too many agencies with small responsibilities that just
confuse stakeholders on who they’re supposed to talk to,” Althoff said.
Last week, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Financial
and Professional Regulation issued 28 additional cannabis dispensing
licenses that were selected from three lotteries. The total number of
dispensaries issued licenses to date since adult-use sales became legal
in January 2020 is 177.
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Depending on the cannabis business, be it craft growers, manufacturers,
distributors, transporters or even medicinal cannabis users and their
caregivers, the state agencies involved include the Department of
Agriculture, IDFPR, State Police, Department of Revenue and the
Department of Public Health.
Evans plans to file a standalone bill to bring about a state cannabis
commission consisting of seven members – including gubernatorial
appointees and equal representation from General Assembly leaders – as
well as a dedicated Executive Director.
“Politics shouldn’t play a role in this,” Evans said. “We haven’t seen
it now, but if we ever get a new administration, we don’t want new
department heads with new ideas. A commission is more stable for the
long term. That’s why we use it for the liquor commission and we use it
for gaming. Because you just don’t want the sways of politics really to
impact certain industries.”
Evans also said a more streamlined approach can cut down on confusion
which sometimes litigants capitalize on. His commission idea is
supported by the Cannabis Business Association of Illinois.
Total sales in the fiscal year 2022 were $1.5 billion. Of that, the
state captured $445 million in tax revenue that’s split several ways.
More than a third of the revenue goes to the state’s general revenue
fund. Ten percent goes to the state’s backlog of unpaid bills. Eight
percent goes to law enforcement and two percent goes to cannabis public
safety campaigns. A quarter of every cannabis tax dollar collected goes
to the grants for community groups in areas negatively impacted by past
drug enforcement policies.
Local governments can also tack on up to 3% additional sales tax.
Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and other
issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of award-winning
broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning Newsfeed out of
Springfield. |