Dayton Daily News

Medical marijuana dispensary Harvest of Beavercree­k opens

- By London Bishop Staff Writer Contact this reporter at london.bishop@coxinc.com.

The owner BEAVERCREE­K — of medical marijuana dispensary Harvest of Beavercree­k praised her parents for giving her the skills to become a business owner.

Harvest of Beavercree­k, at 4370 Tonawanda Trail, opened its 2,936-square-foot medical marijuana dispensary Tuesday with a grand opening celebratio­n. The business sells cannabis flowers, topicals and edibles, among other products.

The company has a mission to “help people through the goodness of cannabis,” says Ariane Kirkpatric­k, CEO of Harvest of Ohio.

“Usually I am always talking, I have a lot to say. Today I am speechless,” said Kirkpatric­k, who grew emotional. “Today I just thank God, and I really praise my parents, for providing the audacity of hope, the audacity of faith, the audacity of ability to be able to do this. Without that foundation, I wouldn’t have been able to. I’m very proud to bring my business here, and we want to implant ourselves as part of the community.”

A serial entreprene­ur, Kirkpatric­k is also owner and president of the AKA Team, a constructi­on firm in Cleveland.

“I’m in constructi­on, and I build buildings. I’m in medical marijuana and I build people. I build people’s quality of life, and I look at it the same way,” she said.

Kirkpatric­k is the first owner of a vertically-integrated cannabis company in Ohio, and is the first Black woman licensed to grow and dispense medical marijuana by the Ohio Board of Pharmacy. Kirkpatric­k is one of two Black dispensary owners in the state.

Harvest of Ohio is a vertically-integrated marijuana business, meaning it controls all aspects of production from cultivatio­n to sale. The company operates other locations in Athens and Columbus, and a cultivatin­g and processing center in Ironton that started growing cannabis crops in June.

“It’s a dream that I really did not think was going to actually happen,” Kirkpatric­k said. “But I decided not to give up, I decided to keep fighting, because I felt I had a place in this business and that I can bring a lot — a lot — to the patients in the community.”

Over 50% of Harvest of Ohio’s employees are minorities or people of color. Since opening first in Columbus in August, Harvest of Ohio has served over 3,000 patients.

Bringing the business to Beavercree­k was a threeyear process, Kirkpatric­k said. Harvest of Ohio’s three dispensary licenses are the last of 57 granted by the Ohio Board of Pharmacy and the company is the third medical marijuana dispensary in Greene County.

Beavercree­k mayor Bob Stone and vice mayor Don Adams congratula­ted Kirkpatric­k on her grand opening.

 ?? ?? CEO Ariane Kirkpatric­k cuts the ribbon of medical marijuana dispensary Harvest of Beavercree­k as Beavercree­k mayor Bob Stone (right) looks on.
CEO Ariane Kirkpatric­k cuts the ribbon of medical marijuana dispensary Harvest of Beavercree­k as Beavercree­k mayor Bob Stone (right) looks on.

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