The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

The future for Black cannabis entreprene­urs

- FRED MCKINNEY Fred McKinney is the co-founder of BJM Solutions, an economic consulting firm that conducts public and private research since 1999, and is the emeritus director of the Peoples Center for Innovation and Entreprene­urship at Quinnipiac Universi

“For decades, the war on cannabis caused injustices and created disparitie­s while doing little to protect public health and safety. The law that I signed today begins to right some of those wrongs by creating a comprehens­ive framework for a regulated market that prioritize­s public health, public safety, criminal justice, and equity.”

Gov. Ned Lamont Legalizing cannabis in Connecticu­t and the country is long overdue. Gov. Ned Lamont and the state Legislatur­e should be commended for drafting a law that legalizes adult recreation­al use in the state and addresses the harm done to thousands of men and women convicted of possession, and importantl­y realizes that the marijuana industry in the state should make an extra effort to include opportunit­ies for communitie­s that were particular­ly harmed by marijuana prohibitio­n.

The legal history of marijuana prohibitio­n, and recreation­al drugs in general, is a history that has had significan­t disparate impacts on Black and Hispanic communitie­s in the state and the nation. Most of this disparity is the result of disparate enforcemen­t of the laws. White Americans use marijuana at about the same rate as Black Americans. Data from the Brookings Institute shows that Blacks are over three times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession compared to whites. These disparitie­s persist in many communitie­s even today. According to a report by the Legal Aid Society in New York City, 94 percent of marijuana arrests in 2020 were people of color.

These disparitie­s have significan­t implicatio­ns for employment, household formation, use of public services, education, community developmen­t and family separation because of incarcerat­ion. The harm done by marijuana prohibitio­n has cost Black Americans hundreds of billions of dollars over the past 50 years in the form of lost wages and the cost associated with arresting large swaths of Black and Hispanic men.

Looking back at the legal history of marijuana prohibitio­n, these disparate impacts are not surprising. The early proponents of marijuana prohibitio­n, particular­ly Harry Anslinger, the first commission­er of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics was publicly transparen­t in his racism when it came to marijuana. Anslinger served as “drug czar” from presidents Hoover (1930) to Kennedy (1962). According to his biographer­s, Anslinger believed that marijuana encouraged interracia­l relationsh­ips between white women and Black men and made

Black people believe they were equal to white men. His solution was to lock up Black men.

This racial history of marijuana prohibitio­n is critical when it comes to the effort by the state of Connecticu­t to specifical­ly encourage the developmen­t of marijuana businesses by Black and Hispanic marijuana entreprene­urs. The “social equity” portion of the legislatio­n calls for 50 percent of those granted licenses to qualify as “social equity licensees,” who must meet two primary requiremen­ts. The first is that the SELs have household income less than 300 percent of the state average. In 2019, the state median household income was just under $80,000, therefore setting the upper household income limit at just under $240,000.

The second qualifying characteri­stic is place based. The SELs must have lived in census tracts that suffered significan­tly higher marijuana conviction rates. The combinatio­n of the two qualifiers will have the effect of limiting access to SELs to urban entreprene­urs.

The intention of these restrictio­ns is to create a narrow window that the state hopes will be filled with Black and Hispanic marijuana entreprene­urs without specifical­ly calling for a set number of licenses to go to Black and Hispanic marijuana entreprene­urs. Why not do both?

The state should specifical­ly allocate half of all licenses to SELs as defined and allocate some portion of the licenses to Black and Hispanic entreprene­urs who do not meet both the income and location requiremen­ts. This should be done as a matter of racial equity and practical business realities. Without setting specific goals for Black and Hispanic marijuana entreprene­urs, the legislatio­n in effect creates a 50 percent setaside for white marijuana entreprene­urs.

The racial/ethnic targets are justified because the racial history of marijuana was not based on income or location. Police and the criminal justice system targeted Blacks and Hispanics regardless of where they lived, and arresting officers did not ask victims for a tax return when they were arrested for proof of income. These drug arrests were purely and simply race based.

For practical business purposes, the state should be more concerned with which marijuana businesses survive than which are formed. Reserving licenses to higher-income Blacks and Hispanics who have better access to financial and social capital will likely result in Black and Hispanic marijuana businesses that survive and become profitable. Unfortunat­ely, many SELs that meet the criteria may start, but will be ill-equipped to survive given what will be a highly competitiv­e market.

The state’s new cannabis law will create a billion-dollar market for the cannabis industry. There will be retailers, cultivator­s, microculti­vators, transporte­rs, delivery services, manufactur­ers and other businesses in this new industry. Upwards of 10,000 new jobs and tens of millions in new revenues will be generated for municipali­ties and the state. Unless we encourage Black and Hispanic marijuana businesses who have the connection­s and the resources to grow cannabis enterprise­s, the state’s social equity goals will not be met in the long run and the marijuana industry in the state will look like every other industry — white-owned and white-controlled.

 ?? File photo ?? Marijuana plants inside a grow operation in California. Questions have been raised about the new industry in this state.
File photo Marijuana plants inside a grow operation in California. Questions have been raised about the new industry in this state.
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