Chicago Sun-Times

Nation’s 1st African American pot shop owner laments: ‘We still need more ownership by black and brown people’

Wanda James keynotes Chicago’s first-ever Cannabis Resource Fair on Saturday

- BY MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA, STAFF REPORTER mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

After serving in the U.S. Navy, then working in marketing and sales for Fortune 100 companies — followed by managing political campaigns — Wanda James had no idea the cannabis industry was where she’d make her mark.

But it was. She’s entered the annals of black history as co-founder of the nation’s first African American-owned cannabis dispensary, Simply Pure Edibles, in Denver, which she launched with her husband in 2010.

On Saturday, she keynotes Chicago’s firstever Cannabis Resource Fair.

“I don’t take pride in being the first anything in 2019. Things like ‘first’ and ‘only’ just motivate me to want to open up the floodgates. I mean, it shouldn’t be that way,” said James, who was named one of the 100 Most Influentia­l People in Cannabis by High Times magazine in 2018.

“But if it’s the thing that gets people talking, and if it lets me tell the story of how the cannabis industry has been built on the backs of black and brown people, if that’s what it takes to get people talking about issues with social equity in the cannabis space right now — the fact that we don’t have cannabis ownership — then it’s very empowering.”

James, 56, will be “In Conversati­on” with Mayor Lori Lightfoot and state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, who sponsored the Cannabis

Regulation & Tax Act in the Illinois House, from 10:15 to 11 a.m. at the fair, which runs 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the UIC Forum, 725 W. Roosevelt Road.

Colorado and Washington became the first states to legalize recreation­al marijuana via ballot on Nov. 6, 2012. It took effect in Colorado on Jan. 1, 2014. Illinois became the 11th state to allow it on Jan. 1.

James’ path into the cannabis space was through divergent careers for both her0 and her husband, Scott Durrah, a former U.S. Marine and chef.

James was born in Seattle, but with a father in the U.S. Air Force, she was raised abroad. She studied military science at the

University of Colorado, then spent four years with the Navy’s Integrated Undersea Surveillan­ce System.

She moved to LA and spent several years in corporate America, before meeting Durrah in 1993. In the late ’90s, she moved into politics, managing several election campaigns and running for U.S. Congress herself, albeit unsuccessf­ully.

The 2000s saw her managing communicat­ions for politician­s and groups for causes she believed in — serving on former President Barack Obama’s national finance committee in 2007. The couple returned to Colorado in 2008.

After operating five restaurant­s over the years, they saw a business opportunit­y when the debate over legalizati­on of medical marijuana, its decriminal­ization and role in mass incarcerat­ion, rose to the forefront. But it wasn’t just the business opportunit­y that drew them.

“In 1999, I learned my younger brother had been sentenced to 10 years in prison, in Texas, for 4 ounces of pot. For four years, he picked cotton, before being paroled. And what I learned was that 800,000 people a year are arrested for simple possession — 85% of them black and brown boys between the ages of 17 and 24,” James said.

“It’s because of a privatized prison system. This is America’s new slave platform. I became very angry, and we felt very strongly about opening up a dispensary and putting a political spin with a black face on it. We wanted to be able to draw light to this injustice,” she said.

In 2010, she opened Simply Pure Edibles. In 2015, newly licensed for recreation­al marijuana, they opened Simply Pure Dispensary. In 2016, they opened their first cultivatio­n site. The same year, James was named one of the 50 Most Important Women in the Cannabis Industry by Cannabis Business Executive magazine.

Last year, the couple, who’ve been featured everywhere from the BBC to “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” opened a second cultivatio­n facility and a new medical marijuana dispensary.

James empathizes with the controvers­y in Chicago over the lack of people of color among initial licensees. She says it’s a natural byproduct of people of color coming late to the game — not being exposed to opportunit­ies when medical marijuana became legal.

“The unfortunat­e thing is if you’re not involved in medical marijuana, the adult-use market is harder to get into,” James said.

“A medical marijuana dispensary might cost about $200,000; an adult-use dispensary, anywhere from $2 million to $20 million. So what you see right now in Illinois and Chicago is those adult-use licenses going to medical dispensary owners,” she said. “Getting involved early is important, but we still need more ownership by black and brown people.”

 ?? PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Wanda James and her husband founded Simply Pure in 2010 in Denver.
PROVIDED PHOTO Wanda James and her husband founded Simply Pure in 2010 in Denver.

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