Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Pot lottery a mess, and gov is to blame

- RICH MILLER @capitolfax Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and capitolfax.com.

There’s been much gnashing of teeth since the state announced that just 21 social equity applicants had qualified for regional lotteries that will award 75 cannabis dispensary store licenses.

The 21 winning entities submitted well over 300 applicatio­ns for those 75 licenses, which has forced a tie-breaking round.

In total, 937 entities submitted 4,518 dispensary site applicatio­ns, so that’s a whole lot of unhappy people, many of whom have friends in the General Assembly. It really doesn’t matter that 13 of the 21 companies are “majority owned and controlled by people of color and 17 have at least one owner who is a person of color,” as the administra­tion claims. A lot of folks were unexpected­ly shut out and people are downright furious.

Even so, the same legislator­s who are now complainin­g also voted for the bill, which lays out what applicants had to do to qualify for a license.

The legislatio­n awarded up to 250 points for things like status as a social equity candidate (50 points), labor-friendly employment practices (5 points), an environmen­tal plan to limit carbon footprints (5 points), an Illinois owner (5 points), a diversity plan (5 points), security and record-keeping (65 points) and 51% ownership by military veterans (5 points), etc.

Now, here’s where the unexpected problem comes in. According to the Pritzker administra­tion, all 21 of the successful applicants scored a perfect 250, plus they all earned two extra bonus points for having what the statute calls “a plan to engage with the community.”

That many perfect scores for that many entities and their respective applicatio­ns absolutely shocked most applicants and the administra­tion.

The 51% veterans requiremen­t, which was added late in the 2019 negotiatio­ns after demands by veteran-friendly state Sen. Tony Munoz, D-Chicago, and others, turned out to be a major stumbling block for several applicants.

But hey, it was in the bill, plain as day. Lots of applicants just didn’t think it was necessary to have a perfect score to make it into the tiebreaker round. Oops.

And now all heck is breaking loose. “It’s a knife through the heart of the Black and Brown community,” said former state Sen. Rickey Hendon at a press conference, according to WGN News. The Legislativ­e Black Caucus and the Latino Caucus want the governor to stop the program in its tracks.

Democratic state Reps. La Shawn Ford and Kathleen Willis wrote Pritzker a letter calling the whole system into question.

The state will eventually award 500 dispensary licenses, so this round was “only a test,” as one Pritzker administra­tion official put it. And even the governor admitted that there is significan­t room for improvemen­t.

Gov. Pritzker told reporters last week that he wants to look at limiting the number of dispensary site applicatio­ns which can be submitted by each entity. By law, companies can hold only 10 dispensary licenses at once, but a few legally applied for dozens. Some legislator­s and others say they foresaw this problem and claim the administra­tion flatly rejected the idea on multiple occasions.

This particular issue was preventabl­e, and the governor does deserve blame for not listening to those warnings until it was too late, even though members of his administra­tion deny the claims.

Another change being discussed is allowing applicants to automatica­lly qualify for the lottery if they score, say, at least 90% of the 252 total points.

But even that may not work. Some of the points are won under clearly objective standards (veterans ownership, for instance). But some are subjective, and multiple applicants have claimed that the no-bid contractor that graded their applicatio­ns for the state, KPMG, inexplicab­ly denied them points that they believe they were entitled to. Unfortunat­ely for them, there is no appeals process — yet another glaring statutory omission that will likely lead to lawsuits.

The fact that a KPMG consultant was part of a successful team that will seek six licenses in the tie-breaking lottery just makes matters worse.

The “test” clearly did not succeed as hoped. But the administra­tion claims it needs to get this part of the process behind it so the state can conduct a “disparity study” to allow it to legally use race in awarding many of the rest of the 500 licenses. Lawsuits, however, could delay this process for years if the lottery doesn’t proceed.

Bottom line: It’s a big freaking mess. And even though lots of legislator­s are not being completely forthcomin­g about their own roles, governors own messes.

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