NY Head Cannabis Regulator Sends New Letter to Businesses Impacted by School Proximity Correction | Where to buy Skittles Moonrock online
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New Yorkās top cannabis regulator sent a letter Aug. 6 to the 108 business licensees whose locations conflict with state law, directing them not to close, move locations or alter their current operations.
Felicia A. B. Reid, the acting executive director at the Office of Cannabis Management (OCM), sent the letter as a follow-up to the officeās July 28 school proximity correction. The correction detailed how the office began misguiding the stateās Cannabis Control Board (CCB) in 2022, leading to regulators erroneously approving dispensaries that were located too close to schools.
document of the 108 impacted licensees and the 44 impacted applicants. Specifically, the 44 applicants without their final licenses must secure new, compliant locations before moving forward in the application process.
While the OCM is working with Gov. Kathy Hochulās office and the Empire State Development to provide a $15 million fund to provide each of the 44 impacted applicants with up to $250,000 in relief coverage, some industry stakeholders say that amount of money wonāt cover the damage.
Curaleaf Executive Vice Chairman Joseph Lusardi called the $250,000 a āslap in the face.ā While Curaleaf isnāt impacted by the OCMās proximity correction, it operates in New York, and its wholesale partners were among those impacted.
āIt takes sometimes years of blood, sweat and tears to get a location approved,ā Lusardi wrote on X. āLobbying, lawyers, community outreach, architects, etc., all cost $$$. Carrying lease payments all that time while some regulator slow plays you.ā
While the 44 applicants (who only have provisional licenses) now must find new locations, Reid said the 108 impacted licensees will be receiving a separate notice updating them and providing them with additional resources.
In the meantime, the OCM is not directing licensees to:
- close their businesses;
- move their businesses;
- stop working toward opening if they are not yet open;
- alter their current or planned business operations; or
- otherwise cease operating.
āFinally, OCM is NOT recommending to the CCB that licensees whose locations conflict with Cannabis Law § 72 (6) have their licenses revoked or taken away,ā Reid wrote. āGovernor Hochul and OCM are pursuing a legislative change to ⦠enable impacted licensees and their businesses to remain at their current locations.ā
Reid said she has had conversations with ādozensā of legislators and is āheartened by their resounding support for legislative redress.ā
New York state Sen. Luis R. SepuĢlveda, D-Bronx, filed legislation on Aug. 4 in an attempt to amend the state law to grandfather in locations for the impacted adult-use dispensaries. Notably, there are two medical cannabis dispensaries also impacted, but SepuĢlvedaās billās language specifically exempts āadult-useā retailers whose final licenses were approved before July 28.
Cannabis Business Times reached out to SepuĢlveda, asking if the language in his bill intentionally left out the two medical cannabis dispensaries.
RELATED: New York Lawmaker Introduces Legislative Fix to Grandfather in Dispensary Locations
Regardless, itās unclear if lawmakers will have to wait until the next regular legislative session convenes in January 2026 to consider the bill, or if Hochul will call a special session and ask legislators to take up the fix this year.
In any case, the OCM has indicated that the 108 impacted licensees can submit license renewals and remain open while the office delays reviewing those renewals until after the legislative fix.
āOCM and the governorās office will be looking to the Legislature to address this issue as early as possible during the upcoming legislative session, before CCB makes any determination on a timely submitted and sufficient renewal application,ā Reid wrote. āIf, while the OCM and the governorās office pursue legislation, an impacted licensee needs proof of the license validity / a letter of good standing for business operating purposes, they can request one from OCM at: AUlicensing@ocm.ny.gov.ā
Still, some businesses fear that insurance companies and banks may shy away from servicing them amid an expired license fiasco thatās dependent upon the uncertainty surrounding a pending legislative fix.
Meanwhile, after the OCM issued the July 28 proximity correction, CBT learned that Jeffrey Jensen, a California and New York lawyer who founded the Variscite companies that sued OCM multiple times in the past, attempted to put the school measurement issue on OCMās radar 16 months earlier.
However, an OCM spokesperson told CBT earlier this week that the officeās current leadership āwas not aware of this issue until recently.ā
RELATED: Lawyer Alerted New York Regulators of Noncompliant Dispensary Location in March 2024
Reid also pointed to the OCMās previous leadership as responsible for the officeās misguidance.
āI want to reassure each of you that Governor Hochul understands the injustice to impacted businesses in how previous OCM leadership set in place a practice that did not comply with Cannabis Law,ā Reid wrote. āThe governor is committed to fighting for impacted cannabusinesses so that they can continue living MRTAās economic development mission and remain a vital and vibrant part of their communities.ā


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