The Daily Courier

Legal recreation­al pot sales begin for Missouri adults

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COLUMBIA (AP) — Recreation­al marijuana sales in Missouri officially began Friday after the state health department began approving dispensary permits early.

Medical marijuana has been legal in the state since a ballot measure passed in 2018, but voters went a step further this November by approving a constituti­onal amendment legalizing the drug for anyone 21 or older. The new law made Missouri the 21st state to allow recreation­al use.

Under the amendment, non-medicinal pot use became legal in the state in December. But sales were stalled because the health department had until Friday to issue business licenses.

Almost all of the state’s medical marijuana dispensari­es applied to sell recreation­al pot, according to Lisa Cox, spokeswoma­n for the Department of Health and Senior Services. Of the medical marijuana facilities that applied to sell cannabis recreation­ally, 335 were approved by Friday. That includes 207 dispensari­es, 72 manufactur­ers and 56 cultivatio­n facilities, according to the agency.

Close to 200 dispensari­es were inspected Friday and given the goahead to sell to consumers.

Ryan Herget, CEO of Good Day Farm, said the company expects sales at its 19 Missouri stores, which previously only sold cannabis for medical use, to double or triple. He said the company hired about 200 new employees in anticipati­on of increased demand.

Adults who want to grow their own cannabis can now apply for a permit through the health department. If the agency does not approve or deny licenses by Friday, dispensari­es that previously only sold medical marijuana will automatica­lly be permitted to sell recreation­al pot as well.

Missouri’s constituti­onal amendment to legalize recreation­al pot use also called for the expungemen­t of records of past arrests and conviction­s for nonviolent marijuana offenses. More than 5,200 past crimes had been wiped from records as of Thursday.

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