New York Post

BUZZ OVER PIZZA

State weighs pot in eateries

- By CARL CAMPANILE ccampanile@nypost.com

This could give new meaning to Big Apple pizza joints.

New York state officials are weighing whether to allow pizzerias and other eateries to sell fresh cannabis-infused grub and packaged pot edibles, The Post has learned.

Aaron Ghitelman, a spokesman for the state Office of Cannabis Management, confirmed there have been discussion­s about awarding such licenses to food preparers — raising the possibilit­y of offerings such as pesto pot pizza or a pepperoni with sweet weed sauce.

However, “the regulation­s regarding infused food products have not been released yet,” Ghitelman stressed.

The Empire State passed a bill legalizing recreation­al marijuana

last year, and the first licenses to sell weed will be issued in the fall, with sales in neighborho­od stores to begin by the end of 2022.

Not a new idea

State Sen. Liz Krueger (D-Manhattan), a key architect in writing New York’s cannabis law, said having eateries like pizzerias using cannabis was not a hot topic when she worked on the bill — but it’s not explicitly prohibited, either.

“Of course cannabis with edibles is not a new concept,” Krueger said.

The pizza industry has been abuzz about pot goods such as cannabis-infused pies, which have the possibilit­y of generating sky-high profits.

PIE HIGH:

State officials are mulling whether to make it legal for pizzerias and other eating establishm­ents to sell pies and other goods made with marijuana, although the idea does not come without limits and obstacles.

Some pizza makers have already begun linking up with marijuana suppliers and experiment­ing by mixing in cannabis oils in their tomato and pesto sauces. One THC speakeasy, Stoned Pizza in the East Village, advertises “gourmet cannabis pizza.”

But the idea isn’t without complicati­ons.

New York’s law bars anyone under the age of 21 from purchasing cannabis, so pot pizza could not be served to children. Kids should not even be allowed on sites where cannabis-infused food is served, Krueger said.

“So no big pie shared with kids,” she noted.

The lawmaker said the amount of cannabis in foods like pizza would have to be “labeled correctly.

Owners who obtain a license to sell cannabis are barred from also having a liquor license or vice

versa, vastly weeding out the number of eateries that would apply.

“We’ve been advocating for onlicense cannabis sales for restaurant­s and nightlife establishm­ents. New York is the culinary capital of the world,” said Max Bookman, an attorney with the NYC Hospitalit­y Alliance.

“But denying establishm­ents from having both a liquor and cannabis license killed our buzz,” he said, adding, “we’re waiting to see the regulation­s.”

Other legal issues could also arise as marijuana is still considered an illegal or illicit drug under federal law, although the state has legalized it. One industry source questioned if insurance companies would cover the costs of litigation if a customer sues a pizzeria claiming illness or a “bad trip” from eating weed-laced slices.

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