New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Retail cannabis applicatio­ns surge in Connecticu­t before deadline

More than 15K submitted, up thousands from a week ago

- By Julia Bergman

Connecticu­t received a surge of applicatio­ns for retail cannabis operations before the deadline to apply for a license closed at midnight Wednesday.

Numbers from the state Department of Consumer Protection show 15,602 retail applicatio­ns were submitted to the state-run lottery — up from several thousand just a week ago.

Dispensari­es were expected to attract the most interest of the eight license types as Connecticu­t set up

its legal recreation­al-use cannabis market. But Andréa Comer, chairwoman of the cannabis Social Equity Council, said she was surprised by the number of applicatio­ns received.

“We were worried about particular­ly the number of social equity applicants that would apply, because we knew of the challenges involved,” Comer said. “Clearly, there’s an interest. There’s a recognitio­n of the potential in this industry.”

Slightly more than half of the total retail applicatio­ns — 8,357 — were submitted to the equity lottery compared with 7,245 nonequity applicatio­ns.

But the chance of getting one of the coveted licenses is slim. Only 12 retail cannabis licenses will be selected to start with half reserved for equity applicants, who live in areas disproport­ionately impacted by the failed war on

drugs.

All applicatio­ns will be sent to the third-party lottery vendor and winners will likely be announced in several weeks, Comer said. Selected applicants will receive provisiona­l licenses to start. The council will vet the winners from the equity lottery to ensure they meet all the requiremen­ts.

The non-refundable applicatio­n fees for retailers start at $250 for the social equity lottery.

It’s unclear how many people are behind the 15,602 applicatio­ns received by the state. Some people interested in getting into Connecticu­t’s market indicated they intended to each submit hundreds of applicatio­ns given there’s no limit on the number of times you can apply for a license.

But the rules do limit how many licenses an applicant can receive. DCP cannot award a license to an applicant that already has two or more licenses of the same type, or in the

same license category.

Asked whether the large number of retail applicatio­ns is a sign that many of the applicants are out-ofstate companies or wealthy individual­s, Comer said, “I think that’s certainly a possibilit­y.”

“My hope is that there will be a variety of applicants and that there will not be domination or continued domination of the market by a few players,” Comer said.

In total, DCP had received 18,585 applicatio­ns for the varying license types, from retailer to micro-cultivator, as of its weekly count Thursday morning.

“It’s terrific to see this level of engagement,” said Adam Wood, president of the CT Cannabis Chamber of Commerce.

After retail, the microculti­vator license type was drawing the second-highest interest with 1,896 applicatio­ns submitted so far. The deadline to submit applicatio­ns for micro-cultivator licenses is next week.

 ?? Julio Cortez / Associated Press ??
Julio Cortez / Associated Press

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