Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Judge to decide Nevada pot distribution
CARSON CITY, Nev. — Nevada’s marijuana regulators are working toward the start of recreational sales on July 1, a date that depends on a court deciding whether the liquor industry should be guaranteed distribution licenses.
Lawyers for the liquor industry, marijuana retailers and the state faced a judge Monday to argue whether Nevada has the authority to issue marijuana distribution licenses to anyone besides alcohol distributors.
The state said it has the power to temporarily license some existing medical marijuana cultivators and retailers to serve as their own middlemen. It wants to get a head-start on collecting millions of dollars in tax revenue devoted to education before permanent rules are required by Jan. 1.
The liquor lobby sued, saying the state didn’t give it the first shot at distribution licenses as called for in the ballot measure approved by voters in November, the only legal pot state with that arrangement.
Carson City District Judge James Wilson blocked all licensing until the matter is resolved. .
It was not clear when Wilson would rule after Monday’s hearing. But he told lawyers last week that it’s “an important issue that needs to be resolved quickly.”
In the meantime, state tax officials are doing everything they can to have the licenses ready to go as soon as they get the green light.
“We expect to issue licenses by July 1,” Department of Taxation spokesman Stephanie Klapstein said.
“We have a ‘ war room’ in Vegas where our staff are working long hours to move the applications through the review process,” she said. “We, of course, won’t be issuing any distributor licenses to applicants that aren’t liquor wholesalers while the restraining order is in place.”
The law says alcohol distributors have exclusive rights to marijuana distribution licenses, unless the state determines there isn’t enough interest to meet anticipated demand.
The tax department said there was “insufficient interest” among the liquor lobby when it published the proposed regulations.
Of the 93 applications for distribution licenses, five are from liquor wholesalers and 88 are from existing medical marijuana establishments, Klapstein said.
Kevin Benson, a lawyer representing the alcohol distributors, said the tax officials may be under the false impression that they need dozens of distributors for the maximum 132 recreational retail stores allowed in Nevada.