USA TODAY US Edition

HELP WANTED

Green rush for cannabis dollars puts budtenders, edibles chefs among the fastest-growing jobs

- Randy Tucker

Help wanted: budtenders, cannabis chefs, flavor scientists, extraction technician­s.

Those are just a few of the new job categories opening up in the budding legal cannabis industry in more than two dozen states where the drug is legal for medical or recreation­al use or both.

A quick scan of online help-wanted ads shows cannabis companies are seeking a slew of new employees with all skill types, ranging from office managers to accountant­s to CEOs.

But many of the positions posted on job sites such as Indeed.com and Vangsters.com – billed as the cannabis industry’s largest hiring platform – require cannabis-specific skill sets.

Those jobs include “budtenders,” the industry term for salespeopl­e who, like bartenders, greet customers from across the counter at retail dispensari­es.

In Ohio, for example, 56 licensed dispensari­es are looking to hire budtenders to help medical cannabis patients select the best strains to treat each of 21 conditions that qualify for cannabis therapy in the state.

Otherwise known as patient care representa­tives, budtenders must be able to articulate the characteri­stics and properties of each strain of cannabis they sell.

While familiarit­y with the product is essential, stoners need not apply, according to Tom Adams, principal analyst at BDS Analytics, which tracks the cannabis industry.

“In Ohio, you’re basically talking about providing medical services,”

Adams said. “Even at the budtender level, cannabis companies are looking for smart people who can learn a lot in a hurry about cannabis’ uses as medicine and can effectivel­y communicat­e that to their customers.” Compensati­on? Budtenders start at about $12 to $15 an hour, depending on location and experience. But the job is typically the first step toward becoming dispensary store managers who can earn salaries starting at about $40,000 a year.

Budtender pay is comparable to most entry-level employees, including bud trimmers, who manicure cannabis plants by hand to remove excess foliage, and greenhouse workers, who maintain the planting area.

In demand: ‘Master growers’

At the higher end of the pay scale, the most lucrative cannabis jobs pay up to $100,000 a year or more, according to a list of the highest-paying jobs in the cannabis industry posted by online industry magazine Civilized.

Unlike entry-level positions that typically require no formal education or training, the six-figure gigs are typically reserved for those with science and technology degrees.

For example, master extractors who take cannabis plants and turn them into oils and other concentrat­es allowed for consumptio­n in Ohio and other states are often required to have advanced degrees in biochemist­ry and engineerin­g.

Perhaps the most sought-after profession­als in the legal cannabis industry are head growers who have the experience and training to mass produce cannabis on a commercial scale.

The best grow masters have degrees in horticultu­re, plant health or closely related fields, plus years of experience working in the industry. Not only do they earn well more than $100,000 a year, on average, they commonly share a percentage of the cultivator’s profits.

The green rush for cannabis dollars has also created high-paying jobs for profession­als with more creative or artistic dispositio­ns.

Chefs, for example, have secured a strong foothold in the medical cannabis industry by making the medicine easier to swallow.

Cannabis chefs infuse edibles such as cakes and candies – even savory dishes such as wing sauces and dips – with specific doses of cannabis oils and concentrat­es that comply with state laws. They also use their culinary skills to mask the sharp taste of THC – the main mind-altering ingredient in cannabis that gave old-school pot brownies an earthy taste.

The market for cannabis chefs has exploded in recent years, with salaries for both topping out well above six figures.

Where to get training?

As with most cannabis jobs, however, qualified candidates are hard to find, said Jacob Wagner, dean of student services at the Cleveland School of Cannabis.

“There’s a real lack of skilled labor in the cannabis industry, particular­ly in emerging markets like Ohio, where people haven’t had a chance to work in the industry before,” Wagner said. “It’s imperative that people go out and get the proper training from us or some other profession­al program if they want to land a good job in this business.”

The school, which launched in January 2017 in suburban Cleveland, offers a variety of cannabis certificat­e programs that have been approved by the Ohio Board of Career Colleges and Schools. Prices range from about $6,500 for a single major to $12,500 for the “executive package,” which includes a business component and instructio­n on how to start your own cannabis business.

Nationwide, the cannabis industry is expected to create more than 400,000 jobs by 2021 and generate $40 billion in annual sales, according to BDS.

But employment in Ohio will be tame compared to states that have legalized marijuana for both medical and recreation­al use.

For example, Colorado, which was the first state to legalize cannabis for recreation­al use in 2012, has more than 20,000 workers in the cannabis industry.

They support a medical and recreation­al cannabis market in which sales totaled more than $742 million in just the first six months of this year, with recreation­al sales accounting for more than two-thirds of the total, according to the state’s department of revenue.

“You won’t see employment (in Ohio) at the level that it is in California or Colorado because the medical side of the market is a lot smaller than recreation­al,” Adams said. “But there’s still a lot of opportunit­y in Ohio because you’re talking about establishi­ng a whole new industry.”

 ?? TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY ?? “Budtender” Jason Coleman talks to a customer in the Medicine Man cannabis dispensary in Denver last year.
TREVOR HUGHES/USA TODAY “Budtender” Jason Coleman talks to a customer in the Medicine Man cannabis dispensary in Denver last year.
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 ?? RICHARD LUI/THE DESERT SUN ?? Cannabis grand master grower Patrick Kelly is at one of his grow houses.
RICHARD LUI/THE DESERT SUN Cannabis grand master grower Patrick Kelly is at one of his grow houses.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A scientist takes care of cannabis plants.
GETTY IMAGES A scientist takes care of cannabis plants.

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