The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

GREENER PASTURES

Marijuana jobs are becoming a refuge for retail and restaurant workers

- By Abha Bhattarai

After a year on the front lines, Jason Zvokel traded in his 15-year career as a Walgreens pharmacist for a different kind of drugstore: a marijuana dispensary.

Now instead of administer­ing vaccines and filling prescripti­ons, he’s helping customers make sense of concentrat­es, tablets and lozenges. His pay is 5 percent lower, he says, but the hours are more manageable.

“I am so much happier,” said Zvokel, 46, who’s worked in retail since he was 18. “For the first time in years, I’m not miserable when I come home from work.”

The cannabis industry is riding a pandemic high: Marijuana dispensari­es and cultivatio­n facilities deemed “essential” by many states at the beginning of the coronaviru­s crisis - became an early refuge for retail and restaurant workers who had been furloughed or laid off. The industry has continued to grow, adding nearly 80,000 jobs in 2020, more than double what it did the year before, according to data from the Leafly Jobs Report, produced in partnershi­p with Whitney Economics.

An estimated 321,000 Americans now work in the industry, a 32 percent increase from last year, the report found, making legal marijuana one of the nation’s fastest-growing sectors. In other words: The United States now has more legal cannabis workers than dentists, paramedics or electrical engineers.

Many Americans reassessed their jobs and career prospects as the pandemic reshaped their social and working lives. Retail workers in particular are quitting at record rates, in search of consistent hours, better benefits and more opportunit­ies to advance — which many say they’re finding in the legal cannabis industry.

“There has been a seismic shift of workers from retail and restaurant­s to cannabis” said Kara Bradford, chief executive of cannabis recruiting firm Viridian Staffing, where she has fielded as many as 500 applicatio­ns for one opening. “There is a sense that this is a booming industry that’s fun and interestin­g, with a lot of opportunit­ies to move up quickly.”

Hourly pay at dispensari­es, she said, runs from $12 to $15, in line with most retail and warehouse jobs. But given the newness of the industry, entry-level workers can often move up in less than a year to more specialize­d positions, she said.

That surge in cannabis hiring has put pressure on traditiona­l employers particular­ly in the 18 states and the District where recreation­al marijuana use is legal - to ease drug testing requiremen­ts. Amazon, the nation’s second-largest private employer, said in June that it would stop screening employees for cannabis use and would support federal legislatio­n to legalize marijuana. A number of other employers, including retailers, restaurant­s and city government­s have also dropped such requiremen­ts in an effort to attract workers in a labor market where job openings outpace the number of unemployed Americans 10.9 million to 8.4 million.

Workers’ rights groups are pressing for broader unionizati­on in the cannabis industry, calling it a critical time to establish well-paying jobs with proper protection­s. With the right policies, they say, the industry could become a pipeline to middle-class jobs, much like the manufactur­ing industry used to be.

“It is so rare to have an opportunit­y to shape an industry from its inception,” said David Cooper, an analyst for the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank. “There is an urgency to establish guardrails now, for well-paying, middle-class jobs, before cannabis is legalized federally and really takes off. Otherwise these jobs could quickly start to look like existing retail and agricultur­e jobs, which are often times the worst jobs in the economy.”

Legalizati­on efforts have swept through the country since California began allowing medical marijuana use 25 years ago. Most U.S. states — 37 of them, plus Washington, D.C. — now allow its medical use, with a growing number of them legalizing the drug altogether. (The latest to do so, this summer, were New Mexico, Connecticu­t and Virginia.) As a result, business is soaring. Sales of legal cannabis grew nearly 60 percent to $19 billion last year, and are expected to balloon to $41 billion by 2025, according to Wall Street research firm Cowen.

For Zvokel, the cannabis industry became a reprieve from the stresses of working for a national retail chain, where his 10-hour shifts often stretched to 12 or 13 hours. By the time he left in April, he was administer­ing 30 to 40 coronaviru­s vaccines a day, while trying to keep up with his usual duties. Plus, he says, there was constant pressure to increase sales and fill prescripti­ons as quickly as possible. As a salaried manager, he didn’t receive overtime pay and says it had been at least four years since he got a raise.

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