Albany Times Union

Group sues state cannabis agencies

- By Maysoon Khan

ALBANY — A coalition that includes some of New York’s medical marijuana companies sued state cannabis regulators Thursday in an effort to open up licensing to all retail dispensary applicants immediatel­y.

The lawsuit, filed in state court in Albany, claims that state cannabis regulators exceeded their legal authority when they opened the initial applicatio­n pool in August only to people with past marijuana conviction­s or their relatives, instead of everyone. The lawsuit names as defendants the state’s Cannabis Control Board and Office of Cannabis Management, as well as top officials.

Offering first dibs to individual­s with past conviction­s or their relatives was an attempt to create opportunit­ies for those who have been most adversely affected by pot policing, which resulted in Black and Latino people being arrested at disproport­ionately high rates.

According to a memo filed with the lawsuit, the regulatory cannabis boards “oversteppe­d their rule-making authority,” and as a result it “indefinite­ly postponed the licensing of the hundreds of additional dispensari­es necessary to satisfy consumer demand and to displace the illicit markets.”

The lawsuit comes as New York tries to get its potentiall­y huge legal market into high gear almost two years after it legalized recreation­al marijuana for adult use. So far, 66 dispensary licenses have been awarded. The state’s fifth store, a dispensary in Ithaca, was set to open on Thursday.

The lawsuit was filed by Coalition for Access to Regulated & Safe Cannabis, a trade associatio­n that represents licensed registered medical cannabis providers, including Curaleaf, Green Thumb Industries, Acreage Holdings and Pharmacann.

This isn’t the first time that the state’s cannabis licensing process has been legally challenged. In November, a judge temporaril­y blocked New York from issuing marijuana dispensary licenses in Brooklyn and parts of upstate New York after Variscite NY One claimed the state’s selection process improperly favors in-state residents over out-of-state residents. That case is ongoing.

Meanwhile, unauthoriz­ed pot shops and trucks have popped up throughout the state. The lawsuit contends that if licensing had been opened to all applicants, it would have curtailed illicit storefront­s and generated enough tax revenue to reinvest in local communitie­s, which are key provisions of the law that legalized recreation­al marijuana.

A spokespers­on for the Office of Cannabis Management said he had no comment on the lawsuit.

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