The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lamont names 1st members of marijuana oversight panel

- By Ken Dixon

Gov. Ned Lamont on Thursday appointed the first five members of the state’s new Social Equity Council for marijuana that will help encourage people in communitie­s historical­ly targeted in the failed war on drugs to participat­e in the legalized industry.

The appointmen­ts were the first major steps taken toward a legal cannabis marketplac­e since the full legalizati­on of marijuana took effect on July 1. In all, there will be 15 members of the committee appointed by the governor and legislativ­e leaders, including the Black and Puerto Rican Caucus.

The council will have a

major role in awarding cannabis licenses and allocating revenue to impacted communitie­s.

The appointees, who will be prohibited from participat­ing in the cannabis business during their four-year terms, include Joseph Williams of Hartford, an internatio­nal trade specialist at UConn’s School of Business; and Kelli Vallieres, executive director of the Connecticu­t Office of Workforce Strategies.

Ex-officio appointees of Lamont made include Andrea Comer, interim deputy commission­er at the Department of Consumer Protection, which runs the medical marijuana program and will administer the adult-use cannabis program; David Lehman, commission­er of the state Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t, a Greenwich resident; and Melissa McCaw, who as secretary of the state Office of Policy and Management is Lamont’s budget chief.

“I’m proud that the cannabis law includes provisions requiring the state to establish a marketplac­e that is fair, well-regulated, and places a priority on social equity, particular­ly when it comes to righting some of the wrongs of recent decades,” Lamont said in a statement. “The so-called war on drugs, which was really a war on Black and brown people, caused severe injustices and disparitie­s within certain communitie­s while doing little to protect public health and safety.”

Lamont has two more appointmen­ts to make to the panel, including a chairman or chairwoman.

“The carefully selected and well-qualified Social Equity Council will play an important role as Connecticu­t’s cannabis marketplac­e transition­s from one that has been dangerous and unregulate­d, to one that will support a new equitable sector of our economy,”

Lamont said. “In the coming years, it will play a crucial role in reinvestin­g broadly into the most impacted communitie­s.”

The council will screen applicants seeking licenses under social equity provisions of the law, including cannabis growing, distributi­on and delivery. It will also supervise the budget for the channeling of tax revenues that are are targeted at $74 million as early as 2023. While initial projection­s targeted next spring for retail sales of adult-use cannabis, updated estimates set a time frame in the fall of 2022.

Further informatio­n about the state’s adult-use cannabis program is available at ct.gov/cannabis.

 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? Gov. Ned Lamont
Jessica Hill / Associated Press Gov. Ned Lamont
 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? A marijuana flower
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle A marijuana flower

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