Chicago Sun-Times

LOSING POT SHOP HOPEFULS CAN REVISE APPLICATIO­NS, CHALLENGE SCORES: GOV

Gov: Hopefuls who came up short will be able to revise applicatio­ns, challenge scores

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

Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office announced Monday that losing pot shop applicants will now be given the opportunit­y to revise their applicatio­ns and challenge their scores before the state holds a lottery to determine the winners of the highly sought after licenses.

While the 21 firms that were initially selected for the lottery all received perfect scores, over 900 applicants who didn’t make the grade will now be provided their scoring along with a notice outlining any deficienci­es, according to a statement from the governor’s office.

The losing firms will then be able to amend their applicatio­ns or petition the Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation to reevaluate their original submission­s if they suspect there were errors or inconsiste­ncies.

“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,” Pritzker said in a statement.

“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 review will be conducted by IDFPR officials and not KPMG, the global accounting firm that was awarded nearly $7 million in no-bid contracts to grade all the upcoming pot licenses, including those for cannabis craft cultivatio­n, infusion and transporta­tion.

The news comes after weeks of outcry from so-called social equity applicants whose dreams of becoming pot shop operators went up in smoke when the state announced the finalists for the 75 dispensary licenses on Sept. 3.

Though all the lottery contestant­s earned additional points by qualifying for social equity status, a designatio­n intended to bolster diversity in the overwhelmi­ngly white weed industry, reports have continued to emerge showing that many of those applicant groups include clouted and deep-pocketed individual­s.

Meanwhile, scorned applicants have filed a growing number of lawsuits seeking to halt the lottery.

The actions outlined Monday by Pritzker mirror a proposal Sept. 13 by state Reps. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, and Kathleen Willis, D-Northlake, who said the attorneys representi­ng dozens of losing firms would drop a federal lawsuit to hold up the lottery drawings.

“Gov. Pritzker made the right decision to stand on the side of fairness,” Ford said Monday. “All of the applicants deserve a fair chance at the process — it’s the equitable way. However, the applicants shouldn’t have been subjected to additional legal costs because of the negligence of the state.”

Attorney Jon Loevy said he now plans to drop the federal suit as he credited Pritzker and Ford. Loevy added that Justice Grown, the multi-state pot company tied to his law firm, would work with Ford to provide free assistance to social equity applicants looking to correct deficienci­es.

Multiple suits have also been filed in state court, but it’s unclear whether Pritzker’s plan will also appease those plaintiffs.

State Rep. Kelly Cassidy, a Chicago Democrat who led the legalizati­on push, raised concerns last week that a compromise could give way to another round of lawsuits from the initial finalists.

“There’s always another side,” Cassidy told the Sun-Times. “And that side can then take action.”

A ‘bitterswee­t’ second chance

Jermell Chavis, a former Marine from North Lawndale, fell just three points short of a perfect score on his only applicatio­n to open a dispensary in the Chicago area, one of the 17 regions outlined by the state. Though Chavis now has an opportunit­y to revise the floor plan in his applicatio­n, what’s unfolded so far has made him skeptical of the state officials overseeing the licensing.

“It’s kind of bitterswee­t because now you have to go into a lottery,” he said. “And who’s to say the lottery is going to be anything like fair?”

Chavis was granted extra points on his applicatio­n for his service, like all the groups that have veterans as majority owners. Still, he believes some of the licenses should have been allocated specifical­ly for those who served in the military — though he questioned whether some of the veterans included on applicatio­ns were merely “names on paper.”

Chavis said he uses cannabis to treat his diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, a byproduct of his two tours in Iraq. Now, he hopes to open his proposed Chi Arome dispensary somewhere on the South Side or West Side, where it can serve as “a foundation for economic developmen­t” and help attract other businesses.

“Through the revenue, we can then turn around and we can revitalize,” he said.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Demonstrat­ors protest against the selection process that led to denials for hundreds of applicants seeking pot shop licenses on Sept. 16.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Demonstrat­ors protest against the selection process that led to denials for hundreds of applicants seeking pot shop licenses on Sept. 16.

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