Chicago Sun-Times

Weed a clear winner as 6 suburbs vote to allow recreation­al sales, 5 states legalize pot

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

As officials continue to tally votes in the contentiou­s presidenti­al race, one clear winner has already emerged from Tuesday’s election: Legal weed.

Voters in six Chicago suburbs approved ballot initiative­s allowing the sale of recreation­al cannabis, and five states across the country voted to legalize marijuana in some form.

With all precincts reporting in Cook County, a majority of voters in Elk Grove Village ( 63%), Mount Prospect ( 63%), Park Ridge ( 59%) and Wilmette ( 55%) all backed ballot measures paving the way for dispensari­es to sell recreation­al pot. Another initiative in Western Springs fell short, with less than 40% of residents approving those sales.

Nearly 63% of voters in Batavia in Kane County also supported a similar referendum, while just over 51% of Glen Ellyn residents in DuPage County voted in favor of a ballot initiative there. All precincts were reporting in both suburbs, according to results maintained by county clerks’ offices.

Cannabis consultant Andy Seeger said more suburbs will likely be encouraged to follow suit, noting that affluent areas with older population­s are increasing­ly starting to treat cannabis like wine or craft beer.

“There’s definitely going to be boutique, almost Starbucks- like experience­s in downtown Wilmette,” Seeger predicted.

Just over 10 months into Illinois’ experiment with recreation­al weed, sales are surging. Over $ 500 million worth of recreation­al pot was sold through October, when a new monthly record of $ 75 million in sales was recorded.

With over 100 recreation­al cannabis licenses still outstandin­g, pot firms will now have more places to potentiall­y set up shop. The suburbs that approved recreation­al sales can now impose the maximum 3% tax on them.

Kay Tamillow, research director at the Brightfiel­d Group, a Loop-based firm that studies the cannabis industry, said amid the ongoing trend of liberaliza­tion and destigmati­zation there’s also been “a distinct turn towards revenue generation” that likely contribute­d to the groundswel­l of support. Illinoisan­s who may have been reticent of their town going to pot are now seeing that cannabis businesses can rake in tax dollars while posing few problems, she added.

4 states join Illinois in legalizing recreation­al sales

Meanwhile, weed also proved popular with voters across the country on Tuesday.

New Jersey, Arizona and Montana voted to legalize recreation­al cannabis, while South Dakota became the first state to approve recreation­al and medical pot sales in the same election. Mississipp­i voters also backed an initiative legalizing cannabis for medical use.

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