The governor of New York on Tuesday signed a bill to provide provisional marijuana cultivator and processor licenses for existing hemp businesses that take certain steps to promote equity in the emerging industry.
Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes, who championed the state’s adult-use legalization bill that was enacted last year, and Sen. Michelle Hinchey (D) sponsored the newly signed legislation.
The aim is to simultaneously expedite the process of standing up New York’s adult-use market while supporting efforts to reach ambitious equity goals with respect to cannabis business participation.
Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) said in a press release that she is “proud to sign this bill, which positions New York’s farmers to be the first to grow cannabis and jumpstart the safe, equitable and inclusive new industry we are building.”
“New York State will continue to lead the way in delivering on our commitment to bring economic opportunity and growth to every New Yorker in every corner of our great state,” the governor said.
Tuesday’s signing action comes just days after lawmakers in both chambers advanced the measure to Hochul’s desk.
“With the passage of this bill, we have the opportunity to create a responsible start to the adult-use cannabis industry by authorizing temporary conditional cultivator and processor licenses to current New York hemp farmers,” Peoples-Stokes, who recently launched a political action committee that will help elect pro-marijuana reform candidates, said.
“This authority will help secure enough safe, regulated, and environmentally conscious cannabis products to meet the demand of the adult-use cannabis market when retail dispensaries open,” the leader said. “The temporary conditional licenses authorized by this bill will ultimately help realize the vision and goals of the MRTA.”
As it stands, adults 21 and older can possess and publicly consume cannabis, as well as gift marijuana to other adults as long as they aren’t being compensated. But regulators are still finalizing licensing rules, and there are currently no retailers that are authorized to sell cannabis for adult use in the state.
Unlike a separate temporary licensing bill that was filed in the Senate last year, the measure signed by Hochul puts a strong emphasis on equity objectives.
Not only will prospective conditional license holders need to have been authorized by the state Department of Agriculture to grow hemp as of December 31, 2021—and have grown the crop for two of the past four years—they will also be required to “participate in an environmental sustainability program and a social equity mentorship program.”
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“Such mentorship program shall be directed to train individuals interested in becoming licensed cultivators and shall leverage remote and in-person mentees with experience in agriculture business management, sustainable cannabis cultivation, and best practices,” the bill text says, adding that mentees must fit within the established definition of an equity applicant.
That currently includes people from communities disproportionately impacted by prohibition, minority- and women-owned businesses, distressed farmers and service-disabled veterans. However, other bills have been introduced in recent months that are aimed as expanding the equity qualifications to include other groups such as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and non-binary people.
Further, the cannabis bill requires conditional licensees to “enter into a labor peace agreement with a bona-fide labor organization that is actively engaged in representing or attempting to represent the applicant’s employees within six months of licensure.”
Hinchey said that with this legislation, which is also cosponsored by the chamber’s champion for last year’s adult-use legalization bill, Sen. Liz Krueger (D), “farmers can now put seeds in the ground to ensure we meet the demand of this burgeoning industry.”
Krueger echoed her colleagues, saying this measure “is an important step in ensuring an adequate supply of cannabis for the adult-use market while prioritizing New York farmers, supporting social and economic equity mentorship programs and encouraging environmentally sustainable agricultural practices.”
The Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) will be able to issue the conditional licenses up until June 1, 2023, after which point businesses will be required to apply under a standard adult-use license. The conditional licenses will be invalidated in their entirety as of June 30, 2024.
Conditional cultivator licensees would be authorized to “minimally process and distribute cannabis products, provided that such final products shall be in the form of cannabis flower,” the bill says.
For those who are awarded a conditional license and maintain good standing in compliance with the rules and requirements, those provisional cultivators and processors will “be eligible to apply for and receive an adult-use cultivation license, provided the licensee can meet all requirements of the new license.”
“Such a licensee will receive, at minimum, an adult-use cultivator license for the size of flowering canopy that they were licensed to grow pursuant to their conditional adult-use cultivator license or a larger size flowering canopy and authorization to use artificial light as may be set out by the board in regulation,” the text states.
“This law places New York’s farmers first in line to grow cannabis, the timing of which is critical to our efforts to roll out the adult use program,” Cannabis Control Board Chair Tremaine Wright said. “With this bill, we’re continuing to put equity and inclusion at the forefront of the new cannabis industry we’re building.”
Enacting legislation that expedites licensing could help the state reduce the number of businesses that are effectively using the legal “gifting” provision of the state’s marijuana law to give away cannabis for “free” if a non-marijuana-related purchase is made.
New York regulators recently issued warnings to more than two dozen businesses that they allege are either illegally selling marijuana without a license or exploiting the “gifting” component.
Here are some other ways that New York lawmakers and regulators are working to build upon the legalization law as the state prepares to implement retail sales:
Earlier this month, for example, a state senator filed a bill that would promote recycling in the marijuana industry once retail sales officially launch.
Hinchey is also sponsoring that legislation, which would require cannabis shops to apply a $1 deposit for any marijuana products sold in single-use plastic containers and also reimburse consumers for that fee if they return the container.
The senator is also behind a separate bill filed last year that would prioritize hemp-based packaging over synthetic plastics for marijuana products.
The recycling bill is identical to an Assembly version filed by Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy (D) last year.
Sen. Jeremey Cooney (D) is sponsoring a recently introduced bill to allow licensed cannabis companies to deduct certain business expenses on their state tax returns. He’s also behind the aforementioned measures to expand the marijuana law’s equity definition and provide provisional licenses to get the market ready.
Hochul, who replaced Cuomo after he resigned amid a sexual harassment scandal, has repeatedly emphasized her interest in efficiently implementing the legalization law.
The governor released a State of the State book last month that called for the creation of a $200 million public-private fund to specifically help promote social equity in the state’s burgeoning marijuana market.
The governor said that while cannabis business licenses have yet to be approved since legalization was signed into law last year, the market stands to generate billions of dollars, and it’s important to “create opportunities for all New Yorkers, particularly those from historically marginalized communities.”
That proposal was also cited in Hochul’s executive budget, which was released last month. The budget also estimated that New York stands to generate more than $1.25 billion in marijuana tax revenue over the next six years.
The state Department of Labor separately announced in recent guidance that New York employers are no longer allowed to drug test most workers for marijuana.
Meanwhile, a New York lawmaker introduced a bill in June that would require the state to establish an institute to research the therapeutic potential of psychedelics.
Another state legislator filed legislation in December to legalize psilocybin mushrooms for medical purposes and establish facilities where the psychedelic could be grown and administered to patients.
Meanwhile, as New York prepares the launch of its adult-use marijuana market, OCM announced this month a significant expansion of the existing medical cannabis program.
Now doctors will be able to issue medical marijuana recommendations to people for any condition that they feel could be treated by cannabis, rather than rely on a list of specific eligible maladies.
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Photo courtesy of Mike Latimer.
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