IndustryPolitics

Advocates Ask Maine to Put Locals, Small Businesses First

Published on May 23, 2019 · Last updated July 28, 2020
(cgouin/iStock)

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Maine’s marijuana legalization advocates used a public hearing on Thursday to implore the state to protect the small businesses and growers they think should make up the backbone of the state’s budding cannabis industry.

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The Maine Office of Marijuana Policy held the public hearing about the state’s draft marijuana rules, which are nearing approval after years of delay. State officials have said marijuana could be available in stores in early 2020, or possibly even sooner, but the state needs to pass a legal framework first.

“Maine doesn't need 10 marijuana companies with 500 employees, it needs 500 marijuana companies with 10 employees.”

The state needs to use the rules to prevent corporate marijuana interests from overrunning the state’s small cannabis industry, which is long established as a result of legal medical marijuana in the state, said Charles Hawkins, who owns a North Windham dispensary.

“Maine doesn’t need 10 marijuana companies with 500 employees, it needs 500 marijuana companies with 10 employees,” Hawkins said.

Voters in Maine approved legal adult use of marijuana in a 2016 vote. The draft rules must still be approved by the Maine Legislature before they can implemented. The rules cover issues such as licensure, retailing and taxation.

The state is still taking public comment on the proposed rules until June 2, said Erik Gundersen, the director of the marijuana office. The state could then provisionally accept the rules and the legislative process could begin.

Gundersen said after the hearing that Maine’s proposed laws are tailored to prioritize state residents. The proposal would limit licenses to state residents at first.

“A lot of people want to focus on the small guy. We’ve done a good job of making sure that Mainers, and the small guy, get the first shot at the industry,” he said.

Speakers at the hearing also called on the state to approve a tax structure that isn’t punitive for retailers and users. The price point of legal marijuana has to be competitive to deter people from the black market, speakers said.

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