Greenwich Time

New Britain zoning panel endorses cannabis sales

- By Richard Chumney richard.chumney@ hearstmedi­act.com

NEW BRITAIN — The city is moving ahead with plans to allow recreation­al cannabis dispensari­es and production facilities as soon as this year.

But the stores will only be permitted to serve customers during the day and will be restricted to certain commercial areas under newly proposed regulation­s recently endorsed by a key city body.

The Common Council’s zoning subcommitt­ee voted unanimousl­y Tuesday to approve regulation­s allowing cannabis-related businesses, a crucial step in bringing the burgeoning recreation­al marijuana industry to the city.

The state law legalizing recreation­al cannabis gave cities and towns the power to regulate where marijuana can be sold. Some communitie­s have opted to ban adult-use retail while others have rewritten zoning rules to allow the stores.

Tuesday’s vote came after the City Planning Commission issued a report recommendi­ng the council adopt the changes, arguing the legal cannabis market offers a unique opportunit­y for new jobs and increased revenue from licensing fees and local sales taxes.

“In the case of production and processing facilities, the investment­s and tax base gains could be comparable to a new small to mid-sized manufactur­er moving to town,” the commission wrote in the report. “Appropriat­ely located and controlled, these enterprise­s can co-exist compatibly within certain business areas in the community and serve to benefit revitaliza­tion efforts there.”

Under the proposed rules, new cannabis dispensari­es and processing facilities can only open after the city holds a public hearing. The Zoning Board of Appeals would be tasked with approving or denying the applicatio­n, according to city documents.

The retail stores would be restricted to the B-2, B-3, CBD, I-1 and I-2 zoning districts — which are generally located along John Downey Drive and near routes 9 and 72. The cultivatio­n and processing facilities would be restricted to the I-1 and I-2 zoning districts.

“Those are our industrial zones and our two specific business zones,” said Jack Benjamin, New Britain’s director of planning and developmen­t.

The dispensari­es will only be permitted to operate between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m., according to a draft of the proposed regulation­s. Stores will not be allowed to display cannabis products or parapherna­lia visible from outside the establishm­ent.

The rules, which largely mirror the city’s existing medical marijuana regulation­s, also prohibit dispensari­es within 200 feet of churches, schools, parks or playground­s. The stores cannot operate within 100 feet of a residentia­l property and must be located at least 1,000 feet from any other cannabis operation.

The proposal will now move to the full council, which is expected to sign off on the zoning changes at a future meeting.

“The specific buffer distance restrictio­ns effectivel­y limit much of the downtown core and most neighborho­od business locations from allowing any cannabis retailer,” the commission wrote in its report.

At a public hearing held before the subcommitt­ee’s vote, three people who described themselves as pharmacist­s and said they had submitted an applicatio­n together to open a dispensary spoke in favor of the proposed rules. No one spoke in opposition to the change.

Benjamin said he has fielded around 150 inquiries over the last six to nine months from people interested in opening a cannabis business in the city. He said he considered only about a third of those to be serious potential applicants.

New Britain is expected to receive two recreation­al dispensary licenses from the state to grant to businesses sometime later this year. Benjamin said the process of awarding the licenses is expected to be highly competitiv­e.

 ?? Kena Betancur / Getty Images file photo ?? A Costumer from Connecticu­t buys marijuana supplies at the Weed World store on March 31, 2021, in New York.
Kena Betancur / Getty Images file photo A Costumer from Connecticu­t buys marijuana supplies at the Weed World store on March 31, 2021, in New York.

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