Porterville Recorder

Los Angeles moves to license pot growers after long delay

- By MICHAEL R. BLOOD

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles began accepting license applicatio­ns from marijuana growers, manufactur­ers and testing companies Wednesday, after months of delays that left many businesses in the state's largest legal marketplac­e struggling to survive.

The start of the process arrived with a mix of relief and anxiety from businesses that have been waiting since Jan. 1, when California broadly legalized cannabis for adults, to enter the legal economy.

"We've been hanging on by the skin of our teeth," said retailer and cultivator Donnie Anderson, who has been paying thousands of dollars of rent for months on commercial space he hasn't been able to use without a cultivatio­n license.

Los Angeles was once expected to be a showcase for the state's legal pot economy, but it has moved cautiously with licensing and its market has developed more slowly than in San Diego, Oakland and other major cities.

So far, LA has only licensed about 150 retail shops, with the rest of the supply chain in limbo.

Across the state, the effort to transform the long-establishe­d pot industry, much of it illegal, into a multibilli­on-dollar, regulated marketplac­e has been uneven at best. Illegal sales continue to flourish, undercutti­ng legal shops, while there are widespread complaints about hefty taxes on purchases and growing.

Local government­s are permitted to outlaw commercial cannabis activity, so the availabili­ty of legal pot depends on where a customer is trying to make a purchase. Initial tax collection­s by the state fell far short of initial projection­s.

It's also not clear when the first cultivatio­n licenses for recreation­al pot will be issued by the city. LA'S top pot regulator, Cat Packer, said last month the city didn't want to commit to a timeline because rules continue to change as the new system is refined.

Industry insiders have warned that delays in licensing threaten the marijuana supply chain, which could collapse and leave store shelves depleted.

Cannabis industry attorney Aaron Lachant said the slow pace of licensing has crimped supplies, leaving a relatively small number of cultivator­s and manufactur­ers supplying storefront­s across the state.

In Los Angeles, retailers have turned to Northern and Central California to bring in products from licensed operators. Under state law, licensed retailers can only do business with other licensed companies.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY RICHARD VOGEL ?? In this 2017 photo, caretakers oversee a grow room for medical marijuana at Showgrow, a medical marijuana dispensary in Los Angeles.
AP FILE PHOTO BY RICHARD VOGEL In this 2017 photo, caretakers oversee a grow room for medical marijuana at Showgrow, a medical marijuana dispensary in Los Angeles.

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