Chicago Sun-Times

Plan to give losing pot- shop applicants 2nd chance moves forward after court victory

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

State officials are moving forward with Gov. J. B. Pritzker’s plan to give losing applicants another shot at the next round of recreation­al pot- shop licenses after fending off a legal challenge on Thursday.

Sangamon County Judge Adam Giganti ruled against three finalists for the upcoming dispensary licenses after they sued Pritzker and other officials in an effort to forestall a plan that could vastly expand the pool of applicants included in a lottery to determine the winners.

The plaintiffs — GRI Holdings LLC, SB IL LLC and Vertical Management LLC — were among just 21 groups that were initially tapped for the lottery, though more than 900 firms applied. The three finalists have argued that Pritzker’s administra­tion bowed to “political pressure” when officials announced the new grading period after other lawsuits raised issues with the applicatio­n process.

In petitionin­g for a temporary restrainin­g order to block the state’s efforts to allow losing firms to make fixes and have applicatio­ns regraded, the plaintiffs claimed those new steps weren’t outlined in the legalizati­on law.

But in a 17- page ruling, Giganti shot down that key argument. He noted that the Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation, the state agency tasked with doling out the licenses, is required “to ensure consistenc­y and fairness in the applicatio­n of this Act.”

“If the challenged supplement­al process is stopped, scoring and other errors are likely to be identified in later actions for administra­tive review, potentiall­y requiring the Department to vacate the initial round of license grants and requiring a new round of tie- breaker lotteries,” Giganti wrote.

He also said the applicants failed to prove they would suffer “irreparabl­e harm” from the supplement­ary process, adding that they can seek judicial review once the licenses are issued. Giganti further ruled that the plaintiffs have yet to “demonstrat­e a likelihood of success on their claims.”

Following the ruling, Pritzker spokeswoma­n Charity Greene said the administra­tion would start the supplement­ary grading process “in the coming weeks.” The IDFPR will first send notices to applicants outlining deficienci­es in their applicatio­ns that can be remedied.

“Upon receipt, applicants will have 10 days to respond,” Greene said.

While Giganti denied the temporary restrainin­g order, the suit is still ongoing.

John Fitzgerald, an attorney for GRI Holdings, said his team is now “analyzing the order and evaluating our options.”

 ??  ?? A customer shows off his purchase at Verilife Marijuana Dispensary in southwest suburban Romeoville.
A customer shows off his purchase at Verilife Marijuana Dispensary in southwest suburban Romeoville.

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