NY state approves sale of cannabis at events, festivals amid dispensary shortage

People smoke cannabis at Washington Square Park on April 20, 2023
People smoke cannabis at Washington Square Park on April 20, 2023. Photo credit Leonardo Munoz/VIEWpress

NEW YORK (AP) — Cannabis can legally be sold at festivals and other events in New York under a measure approved by state regulators Wednesday, after farmers complained that there are too few dispensaries to sell what they harvest.

The initiative approved by the Cannabis Control Board will allow three or more growers to partner with retailers for consumer sales outside of dispensaries at adult-oriented, locally sanctioned events.

The partnerships can also include a processor, who will be able to sell products like edibles and vape cartridges.

Municipal approval will be required.

Pot farmers around New York have said they entered this growing season still stockpiling cannabis from last year because the state has been opening stores too slowly.

Cannabis plants are grown at a Claudine Field Apothecary farm on in Columbia County, New York, last fall
Cannabis plants are grown at a Claudine Field Apothecary farm on in Columbia County, New York, last fall. Photo credit Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Twenty licensed retailers are currently open statewide, and more than 40 more are in development, according to regulators.

“We certainly heard from our cultivators the urgency of a program like this to expand their retail sell-through opportunities,” said John Kagia, a top state cannabis policy official.

Officials said the measure also will give consumers legal access to weed in areas that have no dispensaries.

The initiative is among a series of moves by regulators to shore up the state's nascent recreational pot market. They've also begun cracking down on unlicensed operations that are competing with aboveboard shops, especially in New York City.

Featured Image Photo Credit: Leonardo Munoz/VIEWpress