The Day

Crowds line up in Massachuse­tts as first East Coast pot shops open.

State viewed to have potential for market of $1.5 billion a year

- By STEVEN SENNE and BOB SALSBERG Salsberg reported from Boston. Associated Press writer Mark Pratt in Boston contribute­d to this report.

Leicester, Mass. — Customers waited in long lines, sometimes for hours, on a cold and rainy New England day to be among the first people to legally buy recreation­al marijuana on the U.S. East Coast.

More than two years after Massachuse­tts voters approved of legalizing marijuana for adults, the state’s first two fully licensed pot shops opened Tuesday in Leicester and Northampto­n, selling strains of the part of the plant that can be smoked; pre-rolled joints; and edibles such as brownies and chocolate bars.

Marijuana is already sold legally in six Western states, but the long-awaited opening of recreation­al outlets in the East was hailed as a major milestone for the cannabis industry in the U.S., with Massachuse­tts viewed as a potential $1.5 billion-a-year market. Canada began legal sales last month as well.

A celebrator­y atmosphere ruled outside the shops, with buyers undaunted by the grim weather. Cheers went up when the stores opened at 8 a.m. sharp. One man, who dubbed himself “Potsquatch,” arrived at the Northampto­n store adorned from head to toe in a leafy marijuana costume.

Customers were shuttled to Cultivate, the Leicester store, from a parking lot about a mile away as police kept a visible but low-key presence outside. Customers perused offerings kept behind counters and under glass.

Kenny Boisvert, a 33-yearold Blackstone resident, was pleasantly surprised by his purchasing experience.

“It’s a very nice place. It’s way more than I expected,” he said as he waited to pick up edibles and buds.

There were no immediate reports of product shortages at the stores, something that has plagued the initial start of recreation­al pot sales in some other states. Massachuse­tts’ top marijuana regulator said the crowds appeared orderly and praised operators for doing a thorough job of preparing for the first sales.

“It’s only two stores but it represents, I think, a formidable accomplish­ment,” said Steven Hoffman, chairman of the Cannabis Control Commission, noting the panel started meeting only 14 months ago.

Some legalizati­on advocates have been critical of the slow pace of regulation and licensing by the state, while others have faulted cities and towns for throwing up roadblocks to marijuana businesses, or in some cases banning them altogether.

The commission issued final licenses Tuesday to two more retail stores, in Salem and Easthampto­n, which could open in the coming weeks. But as yet there are no pot shops in the greater Boston area, where more than half the state’s population resides.

George Graham, of Shelton, Conn., told Masslive.com he drove up Monday and got in line early at the Northampto­n store after spending the night at a nearby motel.

“Everybody is happy to celebrate. I think it’s going to open the door to freedom for a lot of people in surroundin­g states,” said Graham, who is registered to use medical marijuana in Connecticu­t but is hoping his state will legalize recreation­al pot.

Democratic Gov.-elect Ned Lamont of Connecticu­t supports legalizati­on and hopes it will be a priority for state lawmakers next year. Rhode Island Democratic Gov. Gina Raimondo has also said she is open to legalizati­on.

Daquaan Hamilton, a 22-year-old student at nearby University of Massachuse­tts-Amherst, was among the first inside the Northampto­n store after beginning his wait shortly after midnight.

“There are a lot of people throughout our history who have done prison time for such minor offenses — like having weed parapherna­lia, or having small amounts on them — and the fact that I can walk out of the store right now with this and not be afraid of anything that can happen to me, it’s pretty great,” Hamilton told The Boston Globe.

As the first stores opened in his state, Democratic U.S. Rep. Joe Kennedy announced he had changed his perspectiv­e on marijuana and would now push to have the federal government legalize and regulate the drug nationally.

Kennedy said he had been skeptical of legalizati­on in the past because of concerns that marijuana could be addictive, especially for adolescent­s.

“At the same time, I’ve heard from others who see marijuana quite differentl­y. The parent whose epileptic child needs marijuana to calm her seizures. The veteran whose trauma it eases. The black teen arrested for smoking a joint while his white friends did the same with impunity,” Kennedy wrote in an opinion piece in STAT, a health and medical publicatio­n.

 ?? LEON NGUYEN THE REPUBLICAN VIA AP ?? Above, a man wearing a costume of “Potsquatch” poses with customers outside the New England Treatment Access cannabis dispensary on the first day of legal recreation­al marijuana sales on Tuesday in Northampto­n, Mass.Left, cannabis products are displayed at the Cultivate dispensary.
LEON NGUYEN THE REPUBLICAN VIA AP Above, a man wearing a costume of “Potsquatch” poses with customers outside the New England Treatment Access cannabis dispensary on the first day of legal recreation­al marijuana sales on Tuesday in Northampto­n, Mass.Left, cannabis products are displayed at the Cultivate dispensary.
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