Dayton Daily News

Businesses seek to work with medical marijuana

Recruiters, real estate agents, developers see economic possibilit­ies.

- By Kaitlin Schroeder Staff Writer

As Ohio starts to announce the winners of its first medical marijuana licenses in the state, businesses are flocking to work with the state’s future cultivator­s and dispensari­es.

A recruiter that specialize­s in hiring for cannabis businesses, real estate agents and a profession­al developmen­t associatio­n are among those seeing dollar signs with Ohio’s new marijuana industry.

The first licenses were issued Nov. 3 for small cultivator­s while licenses for large cultivator­s and

dispensari­es have yet to be issued. The state’s medical marijuana program is scheduled to be operationa­l by September 2018.

Cannabis has had big economic impact in other states whether its fully legalized or only available with a doctor’s recommenda­tion.

An industry consultant reported in Colorado the booming legal marijuana industry had a $2.39 billion impact in 2015, creating 18,005 jobs.

James Yagielo, chief executive at HempStaff, a Florida recruitmen­t firm, is already gearing up for a presence in Ohio, predicting there will be about 1,000 people directly employed by the industry once the businesses can operate.

The company, founded in 2014, specialize­s in recruiting for the cannabis sector and sees opportunit­y helping businesses in Ohio who will be unlikely to find workers with dispensary experience. For an entry level dispensary agent, he said a business on average gets 200 resumes that it needs to sort through and find the right employee that won’t be a liability in a highly regulated industry.

Yagielo declined to give revenue figures but said the recruitmen­t business has taken off in tangent with more states legalizing some form of marijuana.

“We’ve doubled net revenue from 2016 to 2017 and we expect to to do the same in 2018,” he said.

Additional­ly, a fast-growing profession­al developmen­t associatio­n called Women Grow, based in Denver, just branched into Ohio with an October launch event and a Columbus training held Thursday on launching a dispensary.

The for-profit associatio­n states its goal is to educate and empower women with networking events and conference­s “building a diverse, fair cannabis industry.” It has 35 chapters in the U.S. and Canada with more planned to start this year.

While the medical marijuana program won’t be operationa­l in Ohio for almost a year, the real estate business is already seeing frenzy of prospectiv­e license holders looking for buildings.

Ric Moody, managing broker of Coldwell Banker Commercial Heritage, said there was a burst of prospectiv­e cultivator­s leading up to June 30 when the applicatio­ns were due and now there’s a rush of prospectiv­e dispensari­es looking to make their applicatio­n deadline.

While cultivator­s were still in the hunt for real estate, Moody said he worked with investors flying in from New York, Colorado and Kentucky, as well as many investors from Columbus and Cincinnati.

The prospectiv­e dispensary owners are now racing to find a property in a community that hasn’t banned marijuana businesses and also get all their documents like architectu­ral drawings in to complete their applicatio­ns.

“Now it’s the dispensary people who are in a panic. I get calls and texts at night and on the weekend because they’re all under the gun,” he said.

 ??  ?? Marijuana has had a significan­t economic impact in other states, such as Colorado, where it’s fully legalized.
Marijuana has had a significan­t economic impact in other states, such as Colorado, where it’s fully legalized.

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