Calgary Herald

Glut of marijuana in Oregon a cautionary tale, experts say

- GILLIAN FLACCUS Associated Press writers Gene Johnson in Seattle, Michael R. Blood in Los Angeles and Kathleen Foody in Denver contribute­d to this report.

PORTLAND, ORE. When Oregon lawmakers created the state’s legal marijuana program, they had one goal in mind above all else: to convince illicit pot growers to leave the black market.

That meant low barriers for entering the industry that also targeted long-standing medical marijuana growers, whose product is not taxed. As a result, weed production boomed — with a bitter consequenc­e.

Now, marijuana prices here are in free fall, and the craft cannabis farmers who put Oregon on the map decades before broad legalizati­on say they are in peril of losing their now-legal businesses as the market adjusts.

Oregon regulators on Wednesday announced they will stop processing new applicatio­ns for marijuana licences in two weeks to address a severe backlog and ask state lawmakers to take up the issue next year.

Experts say the dizzying evolution of Oregon’s marijuana industry may well be a cautionary tale for California, where a similar regulatory structure could mean an oversupply on a much larger scale.

“For the way the program is set up, the state (California) just wants to get as many people in as possible, and they make no bones about it,” said Hilary Bricken, a Los Angeles-based attorney specializi­ng in marijuana business law. “Most of these companies will fail as a result of oversatura­tion.”

Oregon has nearly a million pounds (453,600 kilograms) of marijuana flower — commonly called bud — in its inventory, a staggering amount for a state with about four million people. Producers told The Associated Press wholesale prices fell more than 50 per cent in the past year; a study by the state’s Office of Economic Analysis found the retail cost of a gram of marijuana fell from $14 in 2015 to $7 in 2017.

The oversupply can be traced largely to state lawmakers’ and regulators’ earliest decisions to shape the industry.

They were acutely aware of Oregon’s entrenched history of providing top-drawer pot to the black market nationwide, as well as a concentrat­ion of small farmers who had years of cultivatio­n experience in the legal, but largely unregulate­d, medical pot program.

Getting those growers into the system was critical if a legitimate industry was to flourish, said Sen. Ginny Burdick, a Portland Democrat who co-chaired a committee created to implement the voterappro­ved legalizati­on measure.

Lawmakers decided not to cap licences; to allow businesses to apply for multiple licences; and to implement relatively inexpensiv­e licensing fees.

Oregon’s Liquor Control Commission announced Wednesday it will put aside applicatio­ns for new licences received after June 15 until a backlog of pending applicatio­ns is cleared. The decision comes after U.S. Attorney Billy Williams challenged state officials to address the oversupply.

“In my view, and frankly in the view of those in the industry that I’ve heard from, it’s a failing of the state for not stepping back and taking a look at where this industry is at following legalizati­on,” Williams told the AP in a phone interview.

But those in the industry supported the initial decisions that led to the oversupply, Burdick said.

“We really tried to focus on policies that would rein in the medical industry and snuff out the black market as much as possible,” Burdick said.

Lawmakers also quickly backtracke­d on a rule requiring marijuana businesses have a majority ownership by someone with Oregon residency after entreprene­urs complained it was hard to secure startup money.

That change opened the door to deep-pocketed, out-of-state companies that could begin consolidat­ing the industry.

The state has granted 1,001 producer licences and had another 950 in process as of last week. State officials worry if they cut off licensing or turn away those already in the applicatio­n process, they’ll get sued or encourage illegal trade.

A company called Nectar has 13 stores in Oregon — with three more on tap — and says on its website it is buying up for-sale dispensari­es too.

Canada-based Golden Leaf Holdings bought the successful Oregon startup Chalice and has six stores around Portland, with another slated to open.

William Simpson, Chalice’s founder and Golden Leaf Holdings CEO, is expanding into Northern California, Nevada and Canada. Simpson welcomes criticism that his business is to cannabis what Starbucks is to mass-market coffee.

“If you take Chalice like Starbucks, it’s a known quantity, it’s a brand that people know and trust,” he said.

Amy Margolis, the Oregon Cannabis Associatio­n’s executive director, says capping licences would only spur more consolidat­ion in the long term.

The state is working on a study that should provide data and insight into what lies ahead.

“I don’t think that everything in this state is motivated by struggle and failure,” she said. “I’m very interested to see ... how this market settles itself and (in) being able to do that from a little less of a reactionar­y place.”

 ?? RYAN KANG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? Customers buy recreation­al marijuana at Amazon Organics in Eugene, Ore., in 2015, the year marijuana sales in the state were broadly legalized. Three years on, prices are in free fall.
RYAN KANG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES Customers buy recreation­al marijuana at Amazon Organics in Eugene, Ore., in 2015, the year marijuana sales in the state were broadly legalized. Three years on, prices are in free fall.

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