Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

THE POT THICKENS IN RIVER NORTH

In area packed with weed shops, zoning board approves dispensary at old Rainforest Cafe site despite resident’s plea

- BY KADE HEATHER, CST WIRE REPORTER kheather@suntimes.com | @KadeHeathe­r

Plans for a cannabis dispensary at the former Rainforest Cafe in River North got a green light from the Chicago Zoning Board of Appeals early Saturday.

The board heard the case for four hours, then voted 3-1 in favor of the applicatio­n after reconvenin­g around 12:45 a.m. Saturday following a closed session.

Robert Brown, a neighborho­od resident, had asked the board to reject the dispensary’s applicatio­n, questionin­g Progressiv­e Treatment Solutions’ role in its partnershi­p with BioPharm to take over the former restaurant site at 605 N. Clark St.

Brown questioned the partners’ eligibilit­y under state law as a social equity firm — the qualifying factor allowing the companies to open a Consume brand dispensary in River North, an area that’s already packed with weed shops.

Illinois law bars dispensari­es from opening within 1,500 feet of an existing weed shop except in the case of ownership by a social equity applicant, a legislativ­e effort to increase minority ownership in the booming industry. Four dispensari­es are now operating within 1,500 feet of the proposed shop, and PTS, which initially proposed the plan on its own, without partners, didn’t qualify as a social equity firm.

The company eventually teamed up with BioPharm, a social equity firm that was awarded a conditiona­l license in a state-run lottery. BioPharm qualifies as a social equity firm because chief operating officer Kevin Munroe’s father, Michael Munroe, who did not attend Friday’s meeting, had a misdemeano­r marijuana conviction in the 1970s.

Brown argued that it would set an “incredibly dangerous precedent” for non-social equity applicants to “try and find loopholes in the state and city rules to qualify them as social equity licensees.”

Mara Georges, the former top City Hall lawyer who is representi­ng both cannabis companies, pointed to an Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation advisory notice earlier this year that said social equity applicants can have a conditiona­l management agreement with a nonsocial equity applicant.

Three other people who live near the Rainforest Cafe site also objected to the proposal largely on the grounds that there are “too many” dispensari­es already in River North and also expressing concerns about crime in the affluent neighborho­od.

Terry Peterson, the chief executive officer of PTS, said $7 million to $10 million will be put into renovation­s of the building and that the dispensary will have 36 full-time employees and 19 part-timers, plus four security guards, including having one present around the clock.

 ?? ??
 ?? ABOVE: CHICAGO ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS; BELOW: SUN-TIMES FILES ?? An artist’s rendering of a proposed cannabis dispensary (left) at the site of the old Rainforest Cafe (below), located at 605 N. Clark St.
ABOVE: CHICAGO ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS; BELOW: SUN-TIMES FILES An artist’s rendering of a proposed cannabis dispensary (left) at the site of the old Rainforest Cafe (below), located at 605 N. Clark St.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States