Albuquerque Journal

Mich., Ill. set to begin recreation­al pot sales

Companies rushing to renovate, expand growing facilities, and train staff

- BY DAVID EGGERT AND KATHLEEN FOODY

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — James Daly is eager to make marijuana history on Sunday, when he plans to open the doors to Arbors Wellness, beckon a lengthy line outside and legally start selling recreation­al pot for the first time in the Midwest.

“We’ve worked very hard to be prepared,” said Daly, who owns the medical dispensary that, for now, is among just six shops in Michigan — mostly in Ann Arbor — also approved to start selling for adult use in December. The business is doubling staff and has fielded calls from potential customers across the state along with neighborin­g Ohio and Indiana.

“The end of prohibitio­n is historic,” he said. “We wanted to rip the Band-Aid off.”

Both Michigan and Illinois, which allows sales starting on

Jan. 1, are officially joining nine other states that broadly allow marijuana sales. Companies are rushing to complete renovation­s at dispensari­es, expand their growing facilities, and get staff hired and trained.

The Midwestern states’ launch into the potentiall­y lucrative recreation­al market comes at a turbulent time for the industry, which has been rocked by layoffs, the vaping health scare and investor disappoint­ment with Canada’s marijuana program.

In both states, a limited number of businesses have received state licenses letting them sell recreation­al products initially. But those same retailers must keep enough product on hand to supply people certified as patients under medical marijuana laws.

The conditions are “almost a guarantee” that Illinois and Michigan customers will experience long lines, product shortages and potentiall­y high prices in the early stages, said Adam Orens, cofounder of the Marijuana Policy Group.

“They’ve got to get through the growing pains to get a system implemente­d,” he said.

Taking marijuana from a small cutting to dried flower ready to be sold or transforme­d into edible gummies or oils takes months.

In Michigan, where voters legalized recreation­al pot just over a year ago, regulators who began accepting license applicatio­ns Nov. 1 are aiding the transition by letting medical growers, processors and dispensari­es transfer up to half their products to the recreation­al side under certain conditions.

But marijuana is unlikely to be more broadly available until more businesses become licensed and additional communitie­s authorize sales.

More than 1,400 of Michigan’s nearly 1,800 cities, townships and villages are not allowing recreation­al businesses. Even Detroit, home to the most medical dispensari­es in the state, has delayed recreation­al sales until at least Jan. 31.

“This is brand new for a lot of municipali­ties. I think it’s important that they are doing their due diligence and taking an approach that honors the will of their people,” said Andrew Brisbo, executive director of the Marijuana Regulatory Agency, which has awarded 18 licenses and approved 78 pre-qualificat­ion applicatio­ns.

He said he expects adult sales to occur in “some consistent form” at a greater number of Michigan locations by the end of March.

In Illinois, seven months will have separated Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s signing of legislatio­n permitting people 21 and older to buy and possess marijuana and the start of sales in January.

 ?? DAVID EGGERT /ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marijuana on display at Arbors Wellness in the medical marijuana shop in Ann Arbor, Michigan, last week. Adults age 21 and over will be able to buy marijuana for recreation­al use, starting December 1.
DAVID EGGERT /ASSOCIATED PRESS Marijuana on display at Arbors Wellness in the medical marijuana shop in Ann Arbor, Michigan, last week. Adults age 21 and over will be able to buy marijuana for recreation­al use, starting December 1.

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