Hundreds of legal cannabis dispensaries are a step closer to opening in NY

Customers browse products at a cannabis dispensary near Union Square
Customers browse products at a cannabis dispensary near Union Square. Photo credit Seth Harrison/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK

NEW YORK (AP) — New York cannabis regulators approved a deal on Monday to settle lawsuits that have blocked recreational cannabis dispensaries from opening, as officials move to restart the state’s troubled legal market.

The settlement still needs a judge’s approval before it can take effect. The state’s Cannabis Control Board did not immediately release the terms of the settlement.

The deal would lift a court order that has blocked the state from processing or issuing retail cannabis licenses since August, following lawsuits over rules that promised many of the first licenses to people with past drug convictions.

New York’s retail cannabis market has been in disarray since sales began almost a year ago. Bureaucratic problems and lawsuits have allowed only about two-dozen legal shops to open, while farmers sit on a glut of crops and an ever-growing black market of storefronts fill the void.

The New York State Cannabis Control Board said more than 400 provisional retail licensees will be able to move forward with their stores if the settlement is approved by a judge. Regulators also recently opened up a general application window to grow, process, distribute or sell cannabis, expecting to issue more than 1,000 new licenses in a bid to kickstart the market.

The lawsuits — one of them filed by a group of four military veterans and the other by a coalition that included large medical cannabis companies — challenged state rules that allowed people with drug convictions to open the first dispensaries.

Last summer, state Supreme Court Justice Kevin Bryant blocked the state’s licensing program from moving forward. He ruled that regulators improperly limited the first round of licenses to people with past convictions rather than a wider group of so-called social equity applicants included in the original law that legalized cannabis.

A representative for the group of veterans declined to comment on Monday. An attorney for the coalition of medical cannabis companies did not return an emailed request for comment.

The settlement vote came during an emergency hearing in New York City.

Featured Image Photo Credit: Seth Harrison/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK