Chicago Sun-Times

Recreation­al pot sales topped $44 million in May, most since weed was legalized in Illinois

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Illinois dispensari­es unloaded over $44 million in recreation­al weed in May, marking the most successful month of sales since the drug was fully legalized at the start of the year.

Despite facing strict social distancing guidelines aimed at limiting the spread of COVID-19, pot shops tallied $44.3 million in total sales last month, according to figures released Thursday by the Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation. Illinois residents bought up over $34 million in recreation­al pot products, while out-of-staters purchased the rest.

The previous monthly high was recorded in January, when $39.2 million in recreation­al cannabis was sold as pot users flooded dispensari­es to get their first taste of legal weed in Illinois.

Andy Seeger, a pot industry analyst at the Loop-based Brightfiel­d Group, said the demand for legal pot has remained strong even as much of the economy has come to a halt. For consumers, pot, like alcohol, appears to be “one of the last purchases to cut if necessary” but is “quickly picked back up upon employment.”

He said sales could be higher if not for supply limitation­s and a growing demand for medical cannabis. With the issuance of new recreation­al licenses delayed in the wake of the pandemic, Seeger said there aren’t currently enough cultivatio­n centers and dispensari­es for recreation­al sales to grow significan­tly higher.

Meanwhile, a handful of weed stores were forced to temporaril­y close after being targeted in a wave of looting that gripped the city when a protest over the officer-involved killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s devolved into chaos on May 30.

Two dispensari­es in Chicago, The Herbal Care Center on the Near West Side and Mission in South Chicago, will likely remain closed for weeks after being hit particular­ly hard. On Thursday, NuMed in West Town also remained closed due to the “ongoing protests” in the area, according to a phone recording.

Dispensary 33 in Uptown and Cresco Labs’ new Sunnyside dispensary in River North were also targeted late last month, but nothing was reported stolen and the stores have since reopened.

Given the limited number of retail options across the state, Seeger noted that stores shutting down temporaril­y for repairs will inevitably “constrain sales” further.

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