New York's first legal recreational marijuana shop opens
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[December 30, 2022]
By Dan Fastenberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The first licensed marijuana store in New York
opened on Thursday, more than a year after the state legalized the drug
and during delays in setting up the legal market to benefit people
previously arrested for marijuana crimes.
The dispensary was opened in New York City's East Village by Housing
Works, a non-profit organization that fights homelessness and AIDS. The
non-profit was among the first 36 groups or individuals that the state
awarded with a marijuana retail license last month.
"We're prioritizing repairing harm, harm that's been done even by the
state's own policies," Chris Alexander, the inaugural executive director
of the New York State Office of Cannabis Management, told a crowded news
conference at the store. "It's no accident that disproportionately
people who are incarcerated for possession and sale of drugs are people
who are Black, Latino or Latina."
In legalizing marijuana in March 2021, New York lawmakers required that
it could only be sold by licensed retailers to adults over 21 years old,
and that the first licenses would be awarded to entrepreneurs with prior
marijuana-related arrests or convictions, giving them a toe-hold ahead
of corporate retailers in the lucrative market. Retailers can also only
sell marijuana that licensed New York producers grew and processed.
New York initially promised it would find ready-to-open storefronts and
business loans for the first licensees, and that non-profit groups that
work with previously incarcerated people, such as Housing Works, may
qualify for some licenses. But the process has taken longer than
expected.
A gray market has flourished in the interim, with unlicensed retailers
illegally selling cannabis out of stores and slickly branded vans across
New York City.
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A worker organizes cannabis flowers
before the opening of the first legal recreational marijuana
dispensary located in the East Village in the Manhattan borough of
New York City, U.S., December 29, 2022. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, has said unlicensed retailers will not
be tolerated. Alexander, the state marijuana director, said local
and state law enforcement have been educating gray-market vendors on
the licensing rules, following up with cease-and-desist letters and,
more recently, seizing merchandise.
Marijuana has been fully legalized by 20 other states, but remains
illegal under federal law, which can make it difficult for vendors
to access business loans and other banking services.
At Housing Works, some of the smokable flower, which sells for
between $20 and $30 for an eighth of an ounce (about 3.5g), and the
pre-rolled joints are from marijuana that Florist Farms in Cortland
produced in upstate New York.
"This is a game changer for our company," said Karli Miller-Hornick,
the farm's co-founder. "We're going to be able to hire more people."
New York's marijuana sales will be taxed at 13.5%, revenue that will
go to schools, public housing, addiction services and mental health
services.
Peggy Pliscott, a 50-year-old hair stylist in the East Village,
welcomed the dispensary's arrival on Thursday.
"People can make a living," she said. "People can buy what they need
legally. Seems a win-win."
(Writing and additional reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by
Colleen Jenkins and Josie Kao)
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