Lodi News-Sentinel

Cannabis companies pack their boards with political and corporate heavyweigh­ts

- By Sam Wood

As Big Marijuana seeks legitimacy in the national marketplac­e, the cannabis industry’s top companies are packing their boards with stars.

Some of the world’s best-known — if not best-loved — politician­s and corporate leaders are now paid advisers to major cannabis concerns.

“This is a really savvy move,” said Michael Useem, professor of management at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School of Business. “You want a mix of people with a range of skill sets on a board, including someone who knows how Washington works and how voters may vote when it comes to legalizing whatever you’re doing. And John Boehner no doubt is as good an adviser as you can find on how to navigate Capitol Hill.”

While in office, Boehner and Mulroney were openly hostile to marijuana.

Boehner once said he was “unalterabl­y opposed” to legalizing marijuana. But last week, he starred in an infomercia­l touting cannabis stocks. “My thinking on cannabis has evolved,” Boehner said on Twitter upon joining Acreage in April. Now he’s “all in on cannabis,” he said last week.

Mulroney’s government tried to keep marijuana in the same legal category as heroin. He told CBC this month that since he left politics there has been a “sea change in attitudes in the reality of the use of cannabis.”

The Acreage board also includes the former chair and chief executive of Time Warner Telecom, Larissa Herda, and the former chief financial officer of IBM, Douglas Maine. Herda also was chair and director of the Denver branch of the Federal Reserve of Kansas City. With banking a major stumbling block to cannabis industry expansion, Herda’s experience could be invaluable.

“Running AT&T is not the same as growing marijuana,” Useem said. “But the running of the companies is similar. It’s about strategy. You know John Walter will provide wise counsel.”

The traditiona­l function of a board is to protect a company’s investors. In the realm of cannabis, the boards provide an air of gravitas and legitimacy. Both qualities have been difficult to establish given marijuana’s pre-medical history — populated by cliched images of glassy-eyed hippies and hipsters. And the federal government still considers nearly all traffic in marijuana to be illegal.

“The boards show the seriousnes­s of the industry,” said Philadelph­ia cannabis entreprene­ur-investor Lindy Snider. “The fact they can attract that kind of talent is very telling. They’re not going to take these positions frivolousl­y It’s a great indicator of where we’re headed.”

Other former heads of state who advise marijuana concerns include former Mexican President (and former CEO of Coca Cola Latin America) Vincente Fox and former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak.

The symbolism of corporate giants advising these companies can’t be underestim­ated, Useem said. “You want directors that institutio­nal investors — the Fidelitys, the Vanguards and the BlackRocks — can trust and have confidence in.”

The board members, who also attract investment capital, are usually paid more than six figures a year, Useem said. They also get an equity stake in the companies.

“They’re attaching their reputation­s to the cannabis industry, which is risky still,” said Chris Walsh, founding editor and vice president of Marijuana Business Daily. “They’re probably getting a handsome payout, but they also may be realizing that this is truly one of the next big American and global industries and they want to ride that train.”

Brian McCormack, a director and co-founder of Cresco, said the board members are available seven days a week to advise Cresco’s executives. “We can have a board meeting in 24 hours,” he said. “That happens. We’re not just dialing it in once a quarter.”

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