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Law Illinois MMJ

BREAKING: Illinois to Remove Medical Cannabis Card Registration From Police Database

A new amendment was filed on November 12th, aims to remove notations on driving records for people registered as qualifying patients or a caregiver. Further, upon approval of new registrations, the registered patient’s information would no longer be forwarded to the Secretary of State, which in effect removes medical cannabis registration information from the patient’s driving records, which up until recently could be pulled up by law enforcement when searching for driver license information. The amendment is waiting to be passed but it seems to be not if, but when.

Through the life of the program, many have refrained from obtaining a medical cannabis card for this reason, and the change will soon allow patients to more comfortably travel knowing their medical cannabis card registration is not readily available to law enforcement officials, who have been historically enforcing laws against cannabis.
With recreational consumers not being subject to such scrutiny, the amendment levels the field in restoring privacy rights for all consumers no matter whether they do so for recreational or medical purposes.

View attachment 14580

Furthermore, the amendment restores the age requirement for minor patients to be able to consume cannabis. Previously, consumers under the age of 21 were going to be prohibited from consuming forms of cannabis other than infused products and from purchasing any usable cannabis. But with the amendment, the age restriction dropped only to patients under the age of 18, once again allowing medical patients from the ages of 18-21 to purchase other forms of usable cannabis products.

According to our Administrator and Legislative Liason, Sandy Champion,
“If passed this week, the Secretary of State will have 6 months to remove all medical cannabis patients from their databases! In addition, effective immediately, patients age 18-21 will have their rights restored and can purchase all cannabis products.
Thanks to all our sponsors for getting this done.”

Read the full amendment here.
This is good news! I’ve scanned through this forum, pretty solid info., but would be nice to see more than just cut n paste AP articles.

As a medical card holder in Illinois since April of this year, shortages and price gouging are already upon us! Both local dispensaries have 1/8 going for $70! Ya that’s not a typo.

Wait till the recreational folks see tax rates of 20-30% and possibly higher depending on the THC level, the county & city you live in, as they play along and throw in a few % of their own. That $70 1/8 could be $100 out the door!

My medical card keeps my tax @ 1%! That works for me, I ‘ll review the situation when my card comes up for renewal next July. But for now medical is the way to go, also the state by law, protects my medical access whereas Rec. in a shortage would be sol.
 
would be nice to see more than just cut n paste AP articles.
I agree. But it takes members from the individual states to contribute personal experience for that to happen. Thanks for adding your experiences to this thread. :thumbsup:

Rec is about to hit Michigan next month. And I pity the medical patients who depend on the provisioning centers (I really don't like calling them that lol) when that happens. No doubt there will be a scarcity of product after the first couple days of rec. Fortunately, we still have a caregiver system here (and can grow) so I'm not concerned personally. My prices are so much lower than buying from the retail outlets... and once the 6% sales tax went into effect on medical last year I stopped going entirely. I don't need to pay top dollar ($300 - $400 oz) for product that isn't as good as what my caregiver can supply for $180/oz...... nor do I feel I should be taxed on my meds. Plus there's the added security of being a medical patient.
 
I can't comment on this article out of respect for Mom's rules.......

Illinois city approves using marijuana taxes to fund reparations program

Lawmakers in a Chicago suburb earlier this week approved using taxes from recreational marijuana sales to establish a local reparations program.

The money will go toward job training and other benefits for Evanston's black population, the Pioneer Press reported.

“We can implement funding to directly invest in black Evanston,” said Ald. Robin Rue Simmons, who proposed the reparations bill.

Simmons said the source of the funds was especially appropriate, citing the "war on drugs" that has led to increased incarceration rates among African-Americans, particularly for marijuana-related offenses.

Lawmakers in Evanston, Ill., will use taxes from recreational marijuana sales to fund a local reparations program. (National Institute on Drug Abuse)
The 8-1 vote comes as the city's black population has dipped from 22.5 percent in 2000 to just under 17 percent in 2017, the paper reported.
Supporters of the program say it will help address the lingering effects of slavery and discrimination, per the Pioneer Press.

The fund will be capped at $10 million, while the city estimates that the taxes from recreational marijuana sales could generate between $500,000 and $750,000 annually.
The idea of reparations to compensate the descendants of slaves has gained traction among progressives while a majority of conservatives oppose it.
Marianne Williamson, a spiritual advisor and 2020 presidential candidate, unveiled a formal reparations plan earlier this year.

The long-shot Democratic candidate has called for between $200 and $500 billion for a "payment of a debt that is owed."
 
ILLINOIS | J.B. Pritzker signed follow-up cannabis legislation today. Here's what it included.


SPRINGFIELD — One month before the scheduled rollout of legalized marijuana in Illinois, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a follow-up bill to the initial reform Wednesday and took questions about the next phases of the implementation.


“It’s new territory, we’re seeing that in some of the cleanup that we’re doing in this bill,” said Sen. Heather Steans, D-Chicago, who sponsored the initial marijuana legalization measure.


Steans said the bill clarifies that public consumption of marijuana can be done in only a licensed dispensary or a retail tobacco shop. This will be allowed only if a local government authorizes it on the premises.


“They can only be in those two kinds of locations,” she said.


It also requires that individuals who have their records automatically expunged are notified when the process takes place. Medical cannabis patients aged 18-21 will now have full access to cannabis products, including combustible marijuana.


The bill also clarifies a “revolving door” provision of the initial law by prohibiting future members of the General Assembly and their families from having a direct financial ownership interest in a cannabis business until two years after that lawmaker leaves public office.


She said the bill moves up to July, from September, the earliest date municipalities and county governments can begin collecting taxes resulting from marijuana sales.


Steans said while the follow-up measure, referred to as a trailer bill, was mainly about technical changes, more substantial changes could happen in the future.


“We did not want to go back and revisit policy at this point in time,” she said. “We know we may do that going forward, but we want to first get this up and running and see how it actually works.”


The lawmakers and stakeholders at the event emphasized that legalization is centered on racial equity and righting the wrongs of a decades-long war on drugs.


“Illinois' historic cannabis law puts social equity above all else, and the result will be a market unlike that in any state in the nation — one that rights the wrongs of the past by offering new opportunity to communities that have been torn apart,” said Esther Franco-Payne, executive director of Cabrini Green Legal Aid, where Pritzker signed the bill in Chicago. “From ownership to jobs to expungement, disproportionally impacted communities will be revitalized when this law takes effect on January 1 and as the industry flourishes in the years to come.”


Pritzker said the state will start accepting applications for new cannabis licenses, including from social equity applicants, on Tuesday, Dec. 10, through Thursday, Jan. 2. Information about licensing is available via the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.


Pritzker said the phased rollout of cannabis legalization will provide for 75 new dispensary licenses in May, at which point more social equity applicants will have the opportunity to be part of the marijuana industry. He said the initial 30 licenses go to those already in the medical marijuana business that had been licensed in the previous administration.


Pritzker said the bill was written this way to protect the medical marijuana industry, but it also limits minority participation in the first phase.


“We want the industry to be diverse,” he said. “We want black and brown people. We want people who’ve been left out and left behind to have a real opportunity to not only benefit from this new industry, but to create new millionaires in the black community, in the Latino community. ... That’s the purpose of the phased rollout.”


Toi Hutchinson, a former state senator who helped craft the initial bill and has since been named senior adviser to the governor for cannabis control, said the phase-in is also designed to “protect future market opportunities for those equity applicants to come on board.”


“We’ve gotta get this thing moving ...” she said. “We’ve gotta get the fees from the licensure to fund a revolving loan program so that we can cede equity to those applicants that we care so much about. And we’ve gotta make sure that we reinvest. This is the first state to take specific dollars from the point of sale and reinvest in exactly those same communities.”


The original bill creates the Restore, Reinvest and Renew program, which aims to “address the impact of economic disinvestment, violence, and the historical overuse of the criminal justice system,” according to the governor’s office.


Hutchinson also noted the bill requires future disparity and demand studies to inform future phases of the rollout and “inform specific course corrections” as legalization moves forward.


“The focus was never to get as much money as you possibly can as fast as you can,” she said. “The focus has always been to create an equitable industry that looks different than anywhere else in the country.”
 
Chicago Police Department Produces Video Explaining New Weed Laws


The Chicago Police Department has produced a video to explain the rules that will apply when recreational cannabis is legalized in Illinois next month. The video was posted to the police department’s Facebook page on Wednesday.

In the video, city police officers explain that beginning January 1, adults 21 and older will be allowed to consume marijuana recreationally. Adults will be permitted to possess and purchase up to 30 grams of cannabis, 5 grams of concentrate, and infused products containing up to 500 milligrams of THC.
The video notes that the home cultivation of cannabis will still be prohibited except for registered medical marijuana patients. Cannabis purchases will only be allowed at dispensaries licensed by the state. Private sales are illegal.

Police officers also explain that while recreational marijuana will become legal in the state on New Year’s Day, people won’t be permitted to light up or nosh on edibles anywhere they’d like. Under the new law, the consumption of cannabis products will be legal in private residences, although property owners and landlords will have the right to ban use by their tenants. Marijuana use will also be permitted in businesses that have been licensed by the state for onsite consumption.

Legal In Chicago Except Where It’s Not
It will still be illegal to consume cannabis in a motor vehicle and locations such as Chicago Transit Authority property including buses and trains, school grounds, restaurants and bars, or any public place. The video defines a public place as “any place where a person can reasonably be expected to be observed by others such as streets, sidewalks, parks and playgrounds, and front porches.”

The video advises that when transporting cannabis in a motor vehicle, it must be in a sealed child-resistant and odor-proof container that is placed in a reasonably inaccessible part of the vehicle. Violations of the ordinance governing cannabis use can result in citations or other enforcement action.

“As we move into the new year, we ask all adults who choose to legally purchase cannabis products do so in a safe and responsible manner in order to ensure the public safety of all Chicago residents,” an officer says as the video wraps up.

City officials in Chicago have also been hosting information sessions for residents to learn more about the upcoming legalization of cannabis in Illinois. Two more community meetings are scheduled for Thursday, December 5 at Malcolm X College and Friday, December 6 in the Breakey Theatre at Chicago State University. Both sessions begin at 6 p.m. and will be streamed live on Facebook and Twitter.
 
Lightfoot wants Chicago to grow its own pot in weed co-op
The mayor says a city-owned co-op would give minorities an opportunity to buy into the most lucrative part of the recreational weed business with a “modest cash investment” or “sweat equity.”

Lightfoot_press_conf_12_16_19.0.jpg


Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Monday she is “very serious” about the city growing its own recreational marijuana to give minorities a chance to learn the business and share the wealth — a plan the governor’s office later praised.

Lightfoot said up to $15 million generated by tax-increment financing could be used as seed money for the plan to open a “cooperative cultivation center” that residents of color could “buy into” — either with a “modest cash investment” or with “sweat equity.”

She said the idea is aimed at overcoming the biggest impediment to minority ownership: access to capital.

“This is a very, very expensive business to get involved with. The basics to be a cultivator requires about a $13 million to $15 million investment. There are not a lot of people that have that, particularly in a market that a lot of banks and traditional lenders won’t touch,” she said.

“I think the only way to really crack this nut is for the city to invest its own resources to get engaged, get diverse entrepreneurs involved in the most lucrative part of the business, which is cultivation,” Lightfoot added.

“First of all, we’ve got to jump through the regulatory hoops. … Hopefully, we will get those roadblocks cleared. But I’m very serious about it.”

And where would a cash-strapped city find $15 million to open its own cultivation center?

“Well, we obviously have resources,” Lightfoot said, mentioning not just TIF money but also the Neighborhood Opportunity Fund and Catalyst Funds.

The share-the-wealth Neighborhood Opportunity Fund, created by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel, uses funds generated by developers. In order to build bigger and taller buildings in a broader downtown area, they contribute to a fund that is then used to rebuild long-ignored neighborhoods on Chicago’s South and West Sides.

Pritzker interested
Later Monday, Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration signaled support for Lightfoot’s bold proposal — but not for more than a year when the new law allows the Illinois Department of Agriculture, which regulates cultivation licenses, to decide whether to increase the number of large-scale cultivation centers in the state.

“The administration is excited that people are discussing new and innovative approaches to equity and we look forward to exploring those options when the application for cultivation centers begins in 2021,” Pritzker spokeswoman Jordan Abudayyeh said in a statement.

However, Krista Lisser, a spokeswoman for the Department of Agriculture, said it’s unclear whether it would be possible to issue a grow license to a public entity under the law.

“The rules are still being written on that,” Lisser said. “We really haven’t been posed with that question as of right now.”

Lightfoot first mentioned a city-owned cultivation center last week, responding to a renewed threat by the City Council’s Black Caucus chairman to delay the start date for selling legal weed in Chicago from Jan. 1 to July 1.

Lack of owners of color
Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) is furious that African Americans — who bore the brunt of the war on drugs — have “zero representation” among the owners of 11 medical marijuana dispensaries that would get a running start when recreational weed sales begin Jan. 1.

Those 11 medical marijuana dispensaries would be allowed to immediately pivot to recreational marijuana sales during the first year of legalization and have the exclusive right to open a second location until late spring, when new businesses would finally get a chance to bid.

Lightfoot’s answer to that is to have the city get into the business of growing recreational marijuana.

“One of the things that every entrepreneur that’s a small businessperson faces is access to capital. There are some things that we can do using existing city resources to help facilitate that,” she said.

“I’ve made no secret of the fact that I would like to have the opportunity for the city to create a cooperative cultivation center so we can bring a professional in, let the professional run it. But then, people will buy into the cooperative — either with modest cash investment or sweat equity — and eventually, after they learn the business from top-to-bottom, turn that over to them,” she said.

“This is a challenging issue. No question about it. This is a marketplace that was already created with medical marijuana. The vast majority of the people that are the entrepreneurs and business owners are white men. We know that. We will work as a city to make sure that we give opportunities for other people to be participants in this thriving market.”

Ervin could not be reached for comment on the mayor’s city-owned cultivation co-op idea.

Ald. Carrie Austin (34th), chair of the Committee on Contract Oversight and Equity, has called a meeting for 2 p.m. Tuesday on Ervin’s proposed six-month delay.

Austin hopes to avert a floor fight on the issue at Wednesday’s Council meeting. She could either seek to vote down Ervin’s ordinance or approve it, but not call it for a vote in the full council.

Before Austin’s move, Ervin said he would voluntarily call off the floor fight only if there is a “solution that works for our community.”

“We walked into this seeking a decent level of ownership for members of our community in a program — if you want to call it a gravy train — that has left a significant portion of the citizenry of our city out of it,” he said.
 
Illinois: Pro-pot lawmakers warn of supply shortage, vow to prioritize weed sales to medical patients

A group of pro-pot state lawmakers penned a joint letter Monday acknowledging that the state’s cannabis supply could be limited when the drug is fully legalized on Jan. 1.

“Each state that has implemented an adult-use cannabis program has had issues related to supply shortages,” according to the group, made up of state Sens. Heather Steans and Laura Fine and state Reps. Kelly Cassidy, Bob Morgan, Jehan Gordon-Booth, Celina Villanueva and David Welter.

In their letter, the legislators also reassured medical marijuana card holders that they will be given priority access to pot when recreational marijuana is made legal. Under state law, dual-use pot shops will be required to keep a monthly inventory of medical cannabis on hand that’s comparable to the average amount that was sold in the six months leading up to the implementation of the new legislation.

However, the group wrote, patients and caregivers have already “raised concerns to us and to the media about product shortages, and alleged product & price manipulations.”

“We have relayed this information to the Pritzker Administration and have confidence that they take these matters as seriously as we do,” they wrote.
Jordan Abudayyeh, a spokeswoman for Gov. J.B. Pritzker, told the Sun-Times that the administration is actively monitoring supply, adding that regulators can penalize “bad actors” and potentially revoke dispensary and cultivation licenses held by those who violate the law.

Both the Illinois Department of Professional Regulation, which oversees dispensaries, and the Illinois Department of Agriculture, which regulates cultivation centers, are monitoring shortage-related complaints and can track inventories to check whether license holders are adhering to provisions that grant medical patients priority access to cannabis, Abudayyeh said.

Eighteen of the state’s 21 existing cultivation centers have been issued licenses to start growing recreational cannabis. Those grow operations will be tasked with supplying the 37 dispensaries that have been licensed to dole out both medical and recreational weed.
 
Okay... spirits might have been high going in... but I'll bet they weren't as high going out after seeing how much they had to pay in taxes. I've included a couple of customer receipts from another source.... check out how much they had to pay!!!

There are also a couple news videos and some pics in the linked article that I couldn't embed.

Spirits high despite long lines on first day of legal recreational marijuana

CHICAGO — Some Chicagoans lined up bright and early on New Year's Day to be the firsts to legally purchase recreational marijuana.

Recreational pot became legal in the state on Jan. 1, making Illinois the 11th state to do so.

The Sunnyside dispensary opened its doors at 6 a.m. and customers were lined up around the corner to make their purchases and make history. Jackie Ryan was the first customer at the dispensary to make a purchase.

Customers must be 21 years or old to purchase marijuana and must bring cash — credit cards will not be accepted.

At 5 a.m., 200 people were already in line at Dispensary 33 in Andersonville.

"But I mean, it is 20 degrees out. People are standing outside for hours talking about it," David Samo said. "Celebrating out in the open. The cops are all around. It’s really nice, it’s showing progress.

Hannah Houde waited in line and finally got her chance to purchase legal recreational marijuana four hours later. She was happy she got there early.

"The staff kept reassuring us in the line that we would be fine," Houde said. "But they said the people at the end of the line may not be able to get anything today, so that would be too bad."

Workers at the Dispensary 33 were prepared for the large crowds, but explained it’s not a quick in-and-out process.

"What you do is you go around and shop with somebody and they go ahead and take your order down," manager Paul Lee said. "You pay and then there’s a fulfillment team that will actually take your order, fulfill it for you, and then give it to you."

At Herbal Care Dispensary on South Western Ave, all flower products were sold out. Only edibles and oils were left.

By the end of the day, Herbal Care served 1,700 customers.

Not everyone is excited about the legalization. Zach Levin of the Betty Ford Foundation, which specializes in addiction recovery, believes it sends the wrong message to younger people.

"Legalizing recreational cannabis use means that it is then safe to consume,” Levin said. "I think we are at a similar place to where we were with nicotine."

Illinois residents can purchase up to 30 grams of flower, 5 grams of concentrate and 500 milligrams of THC-infused products (edibles). Out-of-state visitors will be able to buy half those amounts. Dispensaries will determine residency based on your state-issued ID or driver's license.

For more information about Illinois' new pot laws CLICK HERE.

On Tuesday, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker granted over 11,000 pardons for people who had low-level cannabis convictions.

The expungement of thousands of records applied to all low-level pot possession convictions dating back decades — that means possession of 30 grams or less. However, state’s attorneys throughout Illinois can consider filings to vacate cases involving up to 500 grams of marijuana.




These two receipts are not a part of the article above, but I thought you might be interested in the amounts charged for product and the insane amount of tax charged....

81310189_10107329852803250_6022646400808910848_n.jpg

81039298_2456655914599407_9181912313819561984_n.jpg
 
Okay... spirits might have been high going in... but I'll bet they weren't as high going out after seeing how much they had to pay in taxes. I've included a couple of customer receipts from another source.... check out how much they had to pay!!!

There are also a couple news videos and some pics in the linked article that I couldn't embed.

Spirits high despite long lines on first day of legal recreational marijuana

CHICAGO — Some Chicagoans lined up bright and early on New Year's Day to be the firsts to legally purchase recreational marijuana.

Recreational pot became legal in the state on Jan. 1, making Illinois the 11th state to do so.

The Sunnyside dispensary opened its doors at 6 a.m. and customers were lined up around the corner to make their purchases and make history. Jackie Ryan was the first customer at the dispensary to make a purchase.

Customers must be 21 years or old to purchase marijuana and must bring cash — credit cards will not be accepted.

At 5 a.m., 200 people were already in line at Dispensary 33 in Andersonville.

"But I mean, it is 20 degrees out. People are standing outside for hours talking about it," David Samo said. "Celebrating out in the open. The cops are all around. It’s really nice, it’s showing progress.

Hannah Houde waited in line and finally got her chance to purchase legal recreational marijuana four hours later. She was happy she got there early.

"The staff kept reassuring us in the line that we would be fine," Houde said. "But they said the people at the end of the line may not be able to get anything today, so that would be too bad."

Workers at the Dispensary 33 were prepared for the large crowds, but explained it’s not a quick in-and-out process.

"What you do is you go around and shop with somebody and they go ahead and take your order down," manager Paul Lee said. "You pay and then there’s a fulfillment team that will actually take your order, fulfill it for you, and then give it to you."

At Herbal Care Dispensary on South Western Ave, all flower products were sold out. Only edibles and oils were left.

By the end of the day, Herbal Care served 1,700 customers.

Not everyone is excited about the legalization. Zach Levin of the Betty Ford Foundation, which specializes in addiction recovery, believes it sends the wrong message to younger people.

"Legalizing recreational cannabis use means that it is then safe to consume,” Levin said. "I think we are at a similar place to where we were with nicotine."

Illinois residents can purchase up to 30 grams of flower, 5 grams of concentrate and 500 milligrams of THC-infused products (edibles). Out-of-state visitors will be able to buy half those amounts. Dispensaries will determine residency based on your state-issued ID or driver's license.

For more information about Illinois' new pot laws CLICK HERE.

On Tuesday, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker granted over 11,000 pardons for people who had low-level cannabis convictions.

The expungement of thousands of records applied to all low-level pot possession convictions dating back decades — that means possession of 30 grams or less. However, state’s attorneys throughout Illinois can consider filings to vacate cases involving up to 500 grams of marijuana.




These two receipts are not a part of the article above, but I thought you might be interested in the amounts charged for product and the insane amount of tax charged....

View attachment 15444
View attachment 15445
And once again another greedy government is going to ensure the continuation of the black market from their predatory tax levies.

You have regular sales tax and then another 35% on top of that!! Wow.
 
‘It’s a lot happening all at once’: Illinois shops run out of marijuana just six days after start of legalization

Tens of thousands of people lined up outside eight dispensaries in Chicago to buy recreational marijuana during the first week of legal sales, but at the ninth store selling the newly legal drug, there were no lines.
Instead of forcing people wait in the cold for hours, Dispensary 33 asked eager customers to share a cellphone number, “like when you go to a crowded restaurant and when the table is ready they text you,” Bryan Zises, co-owner of the cannabis shop on Chicago’s North Side, told The Washington Post.
The dispensary texted dozens of people each hour on the first three days of recreational sales, funneling them into the store from opening at 9 a.m. to closing at 9 p.m. But on the fourth day, Zises was forced to turn away recreational customers because his supply of cannabis had been depleted and a new shipment had not yet arrived to restock his store’s shelves. The same thing is likely to happen again Tuesday.
“We’ve been trying to get a sustainable approach in a very unknown market,” Zises said.
His dispensary stopped selling recreational marijuana on Saturday and Sunday. Sales resumed Monday morning, but the shop ran out within three hours.
“We’re still waiting on cultivator deliveries but will serve as many rec customers [as] we can each day til further notice!” the dispensary tweeted on Monday evening.
Standing in line for hours in frigid temperatures, tens of thousands have flocked to the nine dispensaries selling recreational cannabis in Chicago after Illinois’s newly legalized cannabis sales began on New Year’s Day.

The numbers have been staggering: 55 dispensaries in the state sold more than $3 million in THC-imbued products on day one, matching Oregon’s record-setting opening for recreational sales in 2015. By Sunday, Illinois’ cannabis customers had bought nearly $11 million worth of recreational marijuana in the first five days, making more than 271,000 purchases.
But the crush of eager buyers strained the state’s marijuana supply, leading many dispensaries in Chicago to turn away customers before the first week of sales even ended. Meanwhile, given the state’s restrictive licensing rules, some large cultivators are now rushing to keep up with recreational demand in a market previously designed to serve a much smaller number of medical cannabis patients.
Illinois passed legislation in June to legalize the sale and possession of recreational cannabis by January 2020, giving the existing growers — who served about 87,000 medical marijuana patients before the change — fewer than six months to expand their operations to meet the increased demand. The Chicago Tribune reported last year that the state, which was the first to legalize recreational marijuana through legislation instead of a ballot measure, estimated it could have more than 900,000 marijuana users.
Although the 11 states to legalize recreational marijuana sales have struggled to adopt regulations, Illinois’ first week of sales has been particularly rough for dispensaries. Colorado and Washington state, the first to allow recreational sales, had much smaller opening weeks in 2012. Oregon and Washington have since struggled with a different supply problem, after hundreds of cultivators created a surplus by growing far more cannabis than consumers can buy and use.
The economics of the cannabis industry are strange. In other industries, if a state produced too much of a commodity, the extra would probably flow to places facing shortages. Marijuana is still illegal under federal law so itcan’t be sold across state lines. As a result, states that have too much cannabis, like Oregon, can’t sell their surplus inventory to those, like Illinois, that have too little.
Demand from recreational users often outpaces medical marijuana use by up to 10 times, economist Beau Whitney told the Chicago Sun-Times. It will probably be months before existing cultivators are able to grow enough cannabis to satiate consumers, even though virtually all the cannabis flower grown in the state is cultivated indoors or in greenhouses and can be harvested throughout the year as it matures, regardless of the season.

Unlike some of the independent retailers that have run out of marijuana and have been left waiting for deliveries from suppliers, some larger companies that both grow and sell marijuana still have product to put on their shops’ shelves.
“Everybody knew there were going to be supply issues at the beginning, and that was before we saw the crowds that came out,” Jason Erkes, a spokesman for cannabis cultivation company Cresco Labs and its Illinois-based dispensary chain, Sunnyside, told The Post. “It’s going to take a little bit of time for everyone to ramp up as they’re expanding their grow facilities.”
Sunnyside’s dispensaries closed on Monday, but Erkes said the closures were not because of a marijuana shortage. Instead, he told theSun-Times there was “a shortage of state-approved employees” to deal with the influx of recreational consumers. The Sunnyside stores will open again Tuesday after giving employees the day off.

Illinois has placed strict limits on the number of licenses for cannabis growers and dispensaries. Existing cultivators were allowed to expand under the new law and already-open medical dispensaries were the first stores allowed to make recreational sales. But the market will continue to improve when the state eventually adds licenses for 100 small growers and 185 new dispensaries in two rounds later this year. Until then, the existing medical growers must expand their operations to meet the demands of the new recreational market.
The chaotic first week of recreational sales has strained dispensaries in other ways as well. Thieves burglarized the MOCA Modern Cannabis Dispensary on the city’s northwest side around 3 a.m. Monday and stole cash from the shop. Because federal law bars marijuana sales, banking options are limited for dispensaries and cannabis growers. Most people in the industry do business in cash, making them a magnet for robberies and burglaries.
MOCA also suspended recreational marijuana sales on Sunday because of limited supply, but the shop’s owner said it will start again Tuesday, according to the Sun-Times.
“It’s a lot happening all at once in the first few days,” said Danny Marks, MOCA’s owner.
 
This sure seems to be a reoccurring theme with rec.... Would you not think that this would have been figured out prior to launch?

Recreational marijuana shortages may last up to 2 years says CEO

The first week of recreational adult-use cannabis sales hit nearly $11 million statewide. Over 270,000 transactions were made in that span. One of the most commonly used phrases around dispensaries however, "they're out of flower."

"We're still rationing the flower that we have. But you can get your limit as far as concentrates and edibles go."
Greg Gossett, Rise Canton
Rise Canton was the only Central Illinois dispensary carrying marijuana flower, the commonly used form, on January 1st. They limited each customer to 1/8 oz. or about 3.5 grams. Less than a week later we returned to Rise. Two customers walking out when we arrived had been there on January 1st also. Craig and Emilie Hendrix said, "They're all out of flower."

Gossett said, "we're struggling through it. We're still pretty decent, we have a limited, very limited flower supply." He's optimistic the shortage won't be a long term hassle for their business. "There will definitely be intermittent shortages of the supply. But i suspect a month down the road things will be a thousand times better than what you see today and there won't be limits on the amount of flower you can purchase," Gossett explained.

But not so fast. One of 20 cultivation centers statewide is located in nearby Delavan. CEO of Revolution Global, Mark de Souza, said the challenge of meeting the demand may take longer than expected. Their 80 acre campus is undergoing massive construction to add a "super-facility" for growing and processing more marijuana to meet demands.

"Thats a challenge we're going to be facing as an industry for a little bit here, and maybe as long as 18 to 24 months."
Mark de Souza, CEO Revolution Global
But why is the industry falling short of demand? De Souza said there are a number of issues, but it's fairly simple. Cultivators weren't willing to invest in their operation until they knew for sure the legislation would pass. May 31, 2019 is when it was passed. That leaves roughly 7 months until the first sale. De Souza said they had already been operating to fill the need of medical marijuana in the state, but "That demand has just surged way faster than what current suppliers have the ability to produce under the current legal framework."

Another reason for a possible lengthy shortage is the amount of space cultivators are allowed to grow. De Souza said in a report the state of Illinois estimates they will need around 1.7 million square feet of growing space to meet a demand for medical and recreational marijuana. But by their numbers, de Souza believed the state needs more than double that.
 
Would you not think that this would have been figured out prior to launch?
Got to take into account who it is that is supposed to do this figuring out. sigh
 
I think the fact that Illinois a state of nearly 14 million people has 21 licensed, approved cultivators constricting supply so that $70.00 1/8ths. aren't uncommon. By contrast a state like Oregon, population approx. 4 million people, has over 1k+ cultivators and mid to top-shelf ounces can be had for $60.00

Tax revenue is a function of two factors: retail price and % of tax per product category( thc 35% or less 10%, thc 35+ 25%, edibles 20%) So for my local dispensaries in Springfield IL., your effective tax rate on say a concentrate product would be 28%!(Springfield levies 3% municipal tax NO county tax luckily) So if the concentrate retails for $65 and not $45, gross tax revenue is greater. I do think the cultivators and state have a vested interest in keeping supplies tight. Illinois doesn't want near un-restricted supply, they want to massage the revenue stream. This is why I keep my medical card, the TOTAL tax is 1%!! Medical availability is guaranteed by law.
 
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I think the fact that Illinois a state of nearly 14 million people has 21 licensed, approved cultivators constricting supply so that $70.00 1/8ths. aren't uncommon. By contrast a state like Oregon, population approx. 4 million people, has over 1k+ cultivators and mid to top-shelf ounces can be had for $60.00

Tax revenue is a function of two factors: retail price and % of tax per product category( thc 35% or less 10%, thc 35+ 25%, edibles 20%) So for my local dispensaries in Springfield IL., your effective tax rate on say a concentrate product would be 28%!(Springfield levies 3% municipal tax NO county tax luckily) So if the concentrate retails for $65 and not $45, gross tax revenue is greater. I do think the cultivators and state have a vested interest in keeping supplies tight. Illinois doesn't want near un-restricted supply, they want to massage the revenue stream. This is why I keep my medical card, the TOTAL tax is 1%!! Medical availability is guaranteed by law.
MD has about 6M people and we have over 100 operating dispensaries. Grow, processor, and dispensary licenses are all separate (and I rather like that and rather do NOT like vertical integration).

But this is a med program and MD does not tax prescriptions AT ALL and that applies to med MJ as well.

But prices are still high as law suits etc have held up the state from issuing more grower licenses and so we are no experiencing a bit of a flower shortage...particularly with the better brands (with better product).

And I agree that everybody involved....from gov to industry...thinks that they can turn this into the goose with the golden eggs. I rather hope that everywhere else that has very high taxes also experiences the issues they are having with black market in CA. If you tax the living shit out of people, they rebel and go around the law. Been that way since the Tea Party in Boston.

Cheers
 
What happens to weed discarded in those blue amnesty boxes at O’Hare and Midway?
You might have noticed the bright blue boxes pop up outside TSA after the holidays.
Screen_Shot_2020_01_09_at_11.10.38_AM.0.png.jpeg

Cannabis amnesty boxes popped up outside TSA at O’Hare and Midway airports once weed was legalized on Jan. 1.

Travelers at either of Chicago’s airports may have noticed something new while passing through security after the holidays.

The bright blue cannabis amnesty boxes were installed at the end of every TSA checkpoint at O’Hare and Midway airports after weed was legalized on Jan. 1. The boxes are owned by the Department of Aviation, but serviced by the Chicago Police Department, said Maggie Huynh, a CPD spokesperson.

The boxes provide travelers leaving Chicago a place to dispose of pot before hopping on a plane, as it’s illegal to carry it across state lines. But even though marijuana is still illegal under federal law, authorities have no intention of arresting people caught with the drug at Chicago airports.

Instead, TSA says it will defer to police if they find someone carrying pot. And Chicago police, while advising against traveling with the drug, say they won’t arrest you if you aren’t carrying more than what’s allowed under the new law.

So why should people use these blue boxes instead of, say, a more discreet trash can? Because only officers can access and empty them, Huynh said, which can help keep pot and related products out of the wrong hands.

The boxes are being regularly checked and cleared by police. If cops find any weed in the boxes, they write up a report and inventory, then dispose of the pot just like they would narcotics.

But are people really using these? Chicago police says the boxes are being used, though they couldn’t say how frequently.
 
What happens to weed discarded in those blue amnesty boxes at O’Hare and Midway?
You might have noticed the bright blue boxes pop up outside TSA after the holidays.
View attachment 15557
Cannabis amnesty boxes popped up outside TSA at O’Hare and Midway airports once weed was legalized on Jan. 1.

Travelers at either of Chicago’s airports may have noticed something new while passing through security after the holidays.

The bright blue cannabis amnesty boxes were installed at the end of every TSA checkpoint at O’Hare and Midway airports after weed was legalized on Jan. 1. The boxes are owned by the Department of Aviation, but serviced by the Chicago Police Department, said Maggie Huynh, a CPD spokesperson.

The boxes provide travelers leaving Chicago a place to dispose of pot before hopping on a plane, as it’s illegal to carry it across state lines. But even though marijuana is still illegal under federal law, authorities have no intention of arresting people caught with the drug at Chicago airports.

Instead, TSA says it will defer to police if they find someone carrying pot. And Chicago police, while advising against traveling with the drug, say they won’t arrest you if you aren’t carrying more than what’s allowed under the new law.

So why should people use these blue boxes instead of, say, a more discreet trash can? Because only officers can access and empty them, Huynh said, which can help keep pot and related products out of the wrong hands.

The boxes are being regularly checked and cleared by police. If cops find any weed in the boxes, they write up a report and inventory, then dispose of the pot just like they would narcotics.

But are people really using these? Chicago police says the boxes are being used, though they couldn’t say how frequently.
Hey Mom, there is already a meme on this, shows the face of somebody inside the box waiting for the next “drop”. Your article states that the police will monitor the boxes and make reports/inventory the product b4 disposal. Reminds me of a story my sister-in-law a nurse @ one of our local hospitals used to tell. Back in the day they were the only facility with a medical waste incinerator. Local police would periodically show up to incinerate drugs no longer needed for trials and she said there was always a pretty big discrepancy between the manifest and what was actually destroyed, imagine that?
 
Hey Mom, there is already a meme on this, shows the face of somebody inside the box waiting for the next “drop”. Your article states that the police will monitor the boxes and make reports/inventory the product b4 disposal. Reminds me of a story my sister-in-law a nurse @ one of our local hospitals used to tell. Back in the day they were the only facility with a medical waste incinerator. Local police would periodically show up to incinerate drugs no longer needed for trials and she said there was always a pretty big discrepancy between the manifest and what was actually destroyed, imagine that?
hahaha....yeah, no doubt true. Its like the Cuban cigars I would buy when younger and still smoking them. Customs would catch a box once in a while and I am certain that they burned them......one at a time! haha
 
Illinois Regulators Investigating Violations of Cannabis Stockpiling Rule

Potential violations of a rule against stockpiling products from a single supplier could lead to huge fines for Illinois cannabis dispensaries.

In a matter of a couple weeks, Illinois’ recreational cannabis consumers have all but depleted the state’s stock of cannabis products. The widespread disequilibrium between supply and demand has made it tough for dispensaries to serve customers. And some shops, Illinois regulators say, have started breaking the rules in order to put products on their shelves.
Since issuing a formal warning to Illinois dispensaries last week, regulators have begun investigating violations of rules against stockpiling cannabis and selling medical cannabis reserves to non-patients. The scope and extent of these violations is still unknown, but officials say persistent offenders could face fines and potentially, antitrust investigations.
Dispensaries Are Breaking the Rules to Source Products for Their Customers
Cannabis shops in Illinois are running out of weed. And that’s a problem, not just for eager recreational consumers, but for medical cannabis patients who depend on the products they need being available.
Illinois’ new cannabis law, which took effect January 1, mandates that dispensaries keep a 30-day supply of a full range of medical cannabis products on hand to sell to patients. To comply with this rule, several dispensaries had to close down as they replenished their stocks, or only sell to medical cannabis patients. But some stores, regulators said, have been dipping into their medical cannabis reserves to make products available for retail customers.

Regulators also said that some dispensaries are breaking another rule to deal with the supply shortage. They’re sourcing more than 40 percent of their products from a single cultivator.
The rule is an anti-stockpiling measure designed to prevent certain businesses from attempting to control the market by controlling supply. Illinois law does permit vertical integration in the cannabis industry, meaning a cannabis company can own and operate both dispensary sites and cultivation sites.
During a supply shortage, such companies have a major advantage over retailers who source products from other companies’ cultivators. No wonder several Illinois cannabis companies have already brought their concerns to the state attorney general, Kwame Raoul. Raould has the authority to open antitrust violations against cannabis firms that attempt to illegally control the market.

Violations Could Spark Antitrust Investigations
The rule against stores stockpiling more than 40 percent of their product from a single cultivator also aims to ensure consumer choice. By blocking cultivators from entering into exclusive agreements with dispensaries, stores necessarily have to stock a wider range of products and brands from different suppliers.
But in the face of a surge in demand for cannabis products, some dispensaries are violating the cannabis stockpiling rule. The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation sent a letter to dispensaries last Friday, stating that the agency knew of potential violations and would begin investigations into how widespread the issue is.
Despite referencing suspected offending dispensaries—the names of which officials declined to share—the letter is just an initial warning. Regulators are launching an investigation, but they’ve also given shops the chance to stop violating the stockpiling and medical supply rules. Dispensaries that continue to violate the rules, however, face fines and penalties up to $20,000.

“The department is currently investigating the scope and extent of those potential violations,” said deputy director of the state agency’s cannabis control section, Bret Bender.
 
Pot taxes in Chicago could be as high as 41% by July as county moves forward with 3% levy
The Cook County Board will vote on approving the Cannabis Retailers’ Occupation Tax on recreational pot sales on Thursday after a committee signed off on it.

countytax_071615_011_e1543963428823.0.jpg

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, left, and Commissioner John P. Daley during a County Board meeting in 2015. File Photo. | Saiyna Bashir/Sun-Times

A 3% tax on cannabis retailers was approved by a Cook County panel Wednesday and is expected to be approved by the full Board of Commissioners Thursday — meaning taxes on some pot products in Chicago could exceed 41% by the summer.

The county proposed the Cannabis Retailers’ Occupation Tax on recreational cannabis in December. It would be imposed on “all persons engaged in the business of selling cannabis.”

That 3% would be in addition to the city’s 3% planned tax and state excise taxes of 10-25%, based on the level of THC, the ingredient in pot that gets users high, in the product purchased. Marijuana products also carry normal sales taxes — which in Chicago are 10.25% — meaning some products could carry taxes of 41.25% starting this summer.

The 3% figure is the highest the county can tax, according to state law. The county wouldn’t be able to start collecting revenue from drug sales until July.

While the total taxes are high, they are less than what’s charged to buy a pack of cigarettes in Chicago. Federal, state and local taxes are more than $8 on a pack of cigarettes, which can cost $14-16 in the city.

Commissioner Larry Suffredin, D-Evanston, said the tax is needed because pot legalization will lead to increased health and policing costs.

In other states where marijuana legalization has gone into effect, he said, there have been “increases in emergency room and medical treatments because of interactions between the marijuana products and other drugs.” There’s also been an increase in “the number of DUIs and the requirement of police authorities, like our sheriff’s office, to come up with unique methodologies to be able to register how impaired individuals are who are driving under the effects of marijuana,” Suffredin said.

“Those two issues will have an impact on the county’s budget in the future,” he said. “This is a reasonable taxation to protect our citizens from further taxation necessary to cover both the medical cost of the program and the court cost.”

Commissioner Sean Morrison, R-Palos Park, voted present on the matter because he’s “not big on taxes that go above and beyond what our normal sales tax is.” Commissioners Stanley Moore, D-Chicago, and Peter Silvestri, R-Elmwood Park, also voted present.

The county isn’t expecting much revenue from the tax — projections currently show that amount to be around $850,000 for the last six months of 2020, said Ammar Rizki, the county’s chief financial officer. That money will likely go into the county’s public safety fund as well as the general fund, Rizki said.

The county’s other cannabis-related measures, including ordinances creating a cannabis commission to study legalization’s impact on the county and a zoning ordinance governing pot-related retailers opening in unincorporated Cook, also passed out of the Legislation and Intergovernmental Relations Committee and the Zoning and Building Committee respectively.

The tax, as well as the commission and zoning ordinance, are slated for approval of the county’s Board of Commissioners Thursday.
 
Pot taxes in Chicago could be as high as 41% by July as county moves forward with 3% levy
The Cook County Board will vote on approving the Cannabis Retailers’ Occupation Tax on recreational pot sales on Thursday after a committee signed off on it.

View attachment 15645
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, left, and Commissioner John P. Daley during a County Board meeting in 2015. File Photo. | Saiyna Bashir/Sun-Times

A 3% tax on cannabis retailers was approved by a Cook County panel Wednesday and is expected to be approved by the full Board of Commissioners Thursday — meaning taxes on some pot products in Chicago could exceed 41% by the summer.

The county proposed the Cannabis Retailers’ Occupation Tax on recreational cannabis in December. It would be imposed on “all persons engaged in the business of selling cannabis.”

That 3% would be in addition to the city’s 3% planned tax and state excise taxes of 10-25%, based on the level of THC, the ingredient in pot that gets users high, in the product purchased. Marijuana products also carry normal sales taxes — which in Chicago are 10.25% — meaning some products could carry taxes of 41.25% starting this summer.

The 3% figure is the highest the county can tax, according to state law. The county wouldn’t be able to start collecting revenue from drug sales until July.

While the total taxes are high, they are less than what’s charged to buy a pack of cigarettes in Chicago. Federal, state and local taxes are more than $8 on a pack of cigarettes, which can cost $14-16 in the city.

Commissioner Larry Suffredin, D-Evanston, said the tax is needed because pot legalization will lead to increased health and policing costs.

In other states where marijuana legalization has gone into effect, he said, there have been “increases in emergency room and medical treatments because of interactions between the marijuana products and other drugs.” There’s also been an increase in “the number of DUIs and the requirement of police authorities, like our sheriff’s office, to come up with unique methodologies to be able to register how impaired individuals are who are driving under the effects of marijuana,” Suffredin said.

“Those two issues will have an impact on the county’s budget in the future,” he said. “This is a reasonable taxation to protect our citizens from further taxation necessary to cover both the medical cost of the program and the court cost.”

Commissioner Sean Morrison, R-Palos Park, voted present on the matter because he’s “not big on taxes that go above and beyond what our normal sales tax is.” Commissioners Stanley Moore, D-Chicago, and Peter Silvestri, R-Elmwood Park, also voted present.

The county isn’t expecting much revenue from the tax — projections currently show that amount to be around $850,000 for the last six months of 2020, said Ammar Rizki, the county’s chief financial officer. That money will likely go into the county’s public safety fund as well as the general fund, Rizki said.

The county’s other cannabis-related measures, including ordinances creating a cannabis commission to study legalization’s impact on the county and a zoning ordinance governing pot-related retailers opening in unincorporated Cook, also passed out of the Legislation and Intergovernmental Relations Committee and the Zoning and Building Committee respectively.

The tax, as well as the commission and zoning ordinance, are slated for approval of the county’s Board of Commissioners Thursday.
Can't these people read or are they blinded by greed and potential tax money to spend to buy votes?

CA is the prime example of how to keep a black market thriving via usury tax rates.

Frakin idiots
 

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