Daily Southtown

Illinois set to more than double number of marijuana shops

- By Robert McCoppin

The number of recreation­al marijuana shops in Illinois is due to more than double after the state Friday announced its plans to issue 185 new dispensary licenses.

The action comes after courts lifted bans on issuing the licenses while litigation continues.

Applicants who won rights to licenses last year must finalize compliance checks before their conditiona­l licenses can be issued.

Beginning Thursday, the state plans to issue licenses in three waves. The first wave, for the Naperville-Chicago-Elgin region, is to be issued by July 22. The next wave, for other regions with multiple licenses, is due by Aug. 5, with the third wave, for districts with one license, due by Aug. 19.

The pace of licensing will be determined by how quickly applicants’ compliance checks can be verified.

“Today marks the beginning of the next chapter of the most equitable adultuse cannabis program in the country,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker said. “This means countless

more opportunit­ies for communitie­s that have suffered from historic disinvestm­ent to join this growing industry and ensure its makeup reflects the diversity of our state.”

All principal officers, or owners, will have 60 days after notificati­on to pay any taxes or other debts to the state. In addition, the Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation must verify that no principal officers have a financial interest in more than 10 adult-use dispensary licenses.

After issuing the conditiona­l licenses, the agency will conduct background checks of principal officers.

Licensees will have 180 days to select a physical storefront location and obtain the operating license, or may request a 180-day extension if necessary.

The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunit­y offers low-interest loans to qualified licensed companies through its Social Equity Cannabis Loan Program. The first round of applicants is expected to finalize loan agreements with the agency’s partner lending institutio­ns in the coming weeks. The next phase of the loan program is to be launched in the near future, state officials said.

The state also funds free licensing technical assistance through Oakton Community College in Des Plaines, The Trep School in Danville, the Women’s Business Developmen­t Center in Chicago, and the University of Illinois at Chicago Law School.

The announceme­nt comes a day after U.S. Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer declined to issue a temporary restrainin­g order against the new licenses in a lawsuit by two plaintiffs claiming the state’s residency requiremen­ts violate federal law. The judge said the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the previously allotted licenses, and that it was premature to rule on the issuance of new licenses, since state officials have proposed alternativ­es to state residency.

The judge freed the state to issue the 185 licenses previously allotted, but said it must hold off on additional dispensary licenses until she makes further rulings.

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