Chicago Sun-Times

Illinois far from social equity in cannabis market

- BY KIANA HUGHES AND DOUG KELLY

In 2020, Illinois passed a widely anticipate­d cannabis social equity program. The Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act was drafted “in the interest of remedying the harms resulting from the disproport­ionate enforcemen­t of cannabis-related laws,” offering “financial assistance and license applicatio­n benefits” to social equity applicants.

Two years later, Black and Brown cannabis licensees are not able to use their licenses due to court-related litigation. Aside from correcting the state’s faulty execution of the licensing applicatio­n process, there has been no substantiv­e cannabis legislatio­n enacted since 2019, leaving the promises of equity and justice unfulfille­d.

In 2021, our alliance (including Cannabis Equity IL Coalition, Chicago NORML — National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws — former state senator Rickey Hendon and several ancillary small businesses) drafted cannabis policies to create a healthy environmen­t for social equity businesses.

We uncovered additional barriers for cannabis industry hopefuls at all levels.

Throughout the summer, we sponsored webinars to educate Illinois legislator­s, creating presentati­ons, securing subject matter experts, and contacting legislator­s. Unfortunat­ely, the legislator­s have not made progress on legislatio­n necessary to support social equity and diversity in the industry.

We hope legislator­s will work to open new businesses, create jobs and generate millions of dollars of revenue by supporting the expansion of cannabis equity and justice. We call for lawmakers to commit to a long-term solution for the Illinois cannabis program, including legislatio­n related to social consumptio­n; entreprene­urial support; employee badging; and transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, and authority.

Social consumptio­n

Illinoisan­s are still criminaliz­ed for cannabis consumptio­n simply because there are few places to legally consume. We drafted HB5570 so entreprene­urs can obtain state-approved cannabis consumptio­n lounges and special event permits. This will create spaces to legally consume cannabis, reduce criminaliz­ation, empower entreprene­urs, create jobs, and increase tax revenue.

Entreprene­ur support

Newly licensed craft growers and transporte­rs are unable to scale their businesses to compete in the current and establishe­d all-white-dominated marketplac­e.

We supported HB4097, which allows craft grow licensees to immediatel­y expand their growing capacity to be more competitiv­e. We also supported an amendment to HB3799 to ensure fair contracts for new transporta­tion licensees.

Employee badging

Cannabis employment candidates do not have a standardiz­ed and expedited badging process or an appeals process if they are denied the Agent ID badge necessary to work in the industry. We drafted HB5457 to address the inconsiste­ncies of the current unfair hiring practices.

Transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, authority

There is limited accountabi­lity and transparen­cy because the cannabis program is managed by disparate personnel from 13 state agencies. To increase transparen­cy in cannabis-related decision-making and provide greater support for entreprene­urs, patients, and employees, we supported HB5710 to create a centralize­d cannabis authority.

None of these bills was advanced in the shortened 2022 legislativ­e session. Lawmakers felt unprepared to vote on cannabis legislatio­n, despite our efforts to educate them on the important issues. We are overwhelmi­ngly disappoint­ed, but not surprised that the Cannabis Business Industry Associatio­n of Illinois was not supportive of new cannabis legislatio­n, and their leadership’s ties to Springfiel­d are a major cause for concern.

If meaningful cannabis legislatio­n does not pass in 2022, Illinois’ “gold standard cannabis program” will fall even further behind in its goals to support the very communitie­s it was supposed to benefit, and lawmakers will continue to break their promises from 2019.

Passing meaningful cannabis legislatio­n in 2022 is a critical component for creating a healthier marketplac­e where minority business owners can thrive. If you are a community member who cares about cannabis justice, call your state senator and representa­tive and demand their support for comprehens­ive cannabis legislatio­n this year. If you are a legislator, there are several things you can do:

Meet with our organizati­ons to shape a long-term vision for Illinois’ cannabis program.

Call a special session this summer to address cannabis legislatio­n.

Commit to devoting meaningful time to cannabis throughout the summer and during veto session in the fall.

If legislator­s give social equity legislatio­n the attention it deserves, Illinois can begin to fulfill the promises of equity and justice. We call on the governor and Illinois legislator­s to prioritize equity in cannabis and pass legislatio­n on social consumptio­n, entreprene­ur support, employee badging, and transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, and authority legislatio­n.

Kiana Hughes is the executive director of Chicago NORML (the National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws). Doug Kelly is the executive director of Cannabis Equity IL Coalition

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Preparatio­n for rolling a cannabis joint.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES Preparatio­n for rolling a cannabis joint.

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