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Sunday, August 13, 2023

Hochul team flunked NY’s legal marijuana rollout while letting black market thrive

 The Hochul administration’s slow rollout of New York’s legal cannabis trade was a real buzzkill — and the market is still far from recovered from it, an industry group says in a stinging “report card.”

The Coalition for Access to Regulated and Safe Cannabis gave the state Office of Cannabis Management the failing grades of three Fs, one D, a D+, and a C- in various categories.

It’s really four Fs, though.

The group, which includes licensed medical marijuana dispensaries, sarcastically gave OCM an “A” for allowing a huge illicit market of unlicensed cannabis shops to flourish before licensed weed shops even opened, according to the report obtained by The Post.

“Despite its enormous potential, New York’s adult-use cannabis market right now is failing by almost every measure – on access, on equity, and on economic viability,” said CARSC rep Kirsten Foy.

“This is solely the fault of Governor Hochul’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM), which has let the illicit market thrive while shutting the door on vetted Social Equity applicants – including minority and women business owners, veterans, and the registered organizations that have been serving the state’s medical cannabis patients for almost a decade,” Foy said.

The OCM’s grades include:

“F” in “Administrative licensing”: Only 21 adult-use retail dispensaries have opened nearly two and half years since New York’s Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act was approved by the state legislature and then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Hochul’s predecessor, in 2021.

There is a backlog of 463 cannabis-licensed operators that have yet to open.

Even if the state doubled its pace in helping to get them up and running, it would still take five years for all operators to open their weed dispensaries at this rate, the report card claims.

Chris Alexander, New York's Office of Cannabis Management's executive director, spoke as advocates urge New York state legislators to support the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act.
Chris Alexander, New York’s Office of Cannabis Management’s executive director, spoke as advocates urge New York state legislators to support the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act.
AP

“F” for Raising Revenue”: Halfway through 2023, the state is only on pace to generate $48 million in new tax revenue from cannabis sales this year. That means New York – with a population of 19.8 million – is barely set to eclipse Montana, which has 1.1 million residents and generated $42 million last year, the group said.

“F” for Constitutional Law: A judge has issued a temporary restraining order blocking the state from issuing any more cannabis licenses after disabled veterans accused regulators in a lawsuit of violating statutes. The vets say they were excluded from the first round of licenses in favor of applications submitted by those previously convicted of marijuana-related crimes when dealing was illegal.Current medical marijuana companies also were excluded from the first round of licenses, which offer cannabis to all customers, not just patients.

In addition, the group claims regulators disregarded the law by staggering the sale of the newly licensed products to favor one group of applicants.

Some existing medical marijuana providers will be allowed to start opening their stores to all adults beginning Dec. 31, while others will be phased in through next year.

“A” for Illicit Market: This was a sarcastic cheeky grade for allowing the illicit cannabis market to flourish before the budding legal market got off the ground.

“With the NYC Sheriff’s office estimating over 2,000 illicit shops in NYC alone, there appears no stopping this booming market,” the report card said.  “Further, even though the State passed a new law in March that would fine these shops up to $10,000 per day, players in the industry are doubtful taxes could get collected from these mostly cash-only shops.”

Greenhouse With Cultivated Cannabis Plants in Flowering Stage.
Current medical marijuana companies were excluded from the first round of licenses, which offer cannabis to all customers, not just patients.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

“D” for “Medicinal Cannabis”: Though New York was once home to one of the most successful medical cannabis programs in the country, revenue from its medicinal cannabis sales has plummeted 30% from a year ago.

Many patients are now going to unlicensed shops, advocates for medical cannabis shops said.

“D+” for “Sociality Equity”: OCM claims to value equity above all else, but reserving the first batch of licenses to “justice-involved” individuals with weed convictions is unfair, the report stated.

“The State is leaving out countless Black and Brown entrepreneurs without drug convictions and women seeking a foothold in this booming industry, making their program inherently inequitable,” the report card said.

“C-” for “Law Enforcement”: The report card calls the state’s crackdown on illicit cannabis operators belated, “meager and futile.

Advocates for medical cannabis shops said many patients are now going to unlicensed shops.
Advocates for medical cannabis shops said many patients are now going to unlicensed shops.
Getty Images/iStockphoto
“With thousands of illegal stores in the state selling UNTESTED, UNTAXED, and UNSAFE

cannabis – in many cases to minors – a true crackdown strategy, coordinated at every level of government, is needed to give the State a stronger grade,” it said.

The Office of Cannabis Management and Hochul’s office had no comment Sunday.

https://nypost.com/2023/08/13/hochul-team-flunked-nys-legal-marijuana-rollout-while-letting-black-market-thrive-cannabis-advocates-say/

Urban progressives blast the unsafe cities that THEY created

 The capital of the most powerful and prosperous country to ever grace Earth is an unpleasant — even unlivable — place to call home.

Over the past decade, Washington, DC, has transformed from a beautiful, bustling and vibrant metropolis into a city that often feels like a rip-off of Batman’s Gotham.

Between 2013 and 2019, DC recorded between 104 and 166 homicides per year.

In the three full years since, it’s recorded 198, 223 and 203 murders. 

This year, it’s on pace to bear witness to 256.

All this has been accompanied by skyrocketing crime rates across the board.

The capital has already far eclipsed the staggering number of carjackings that took place there last year.

Worse yet, only 80 arrests have been made in connection with 2023’s 606 carjackings so far. 

Police patrol and continue to investigate  where three people were shot and killed in an outbreak of gunfire in the Anacostia area Police patrol and continue to investigate  where three people were shot and killed in an outbreak of gunfire in the Anacostia area of Southeast Washington Saturday night.   We cover the aftermath of the shootings in Washington, DC on August 06, 2023.
Police patrol and continue to investigate where three people were shot and killed in an outbreak of gunfire in the Anacostia area in Washington, DC on Aug. 6, 2023.
The Washington Post via Getty Images

Prospects are so bleak that Trayon White Sr., a Democratic city councilman who originally voted to lower the criminal penalties for a number of serious infractions — including carjacking and armed carjacking — is now calling for the National Guard’s intervention in the carnage.

Imagine telling someone in June 2020, amidst the gnashing of teeth that accompanied Sen. Tom Cotton’s call for the National Guard’s use then, that a little over three years later, Democrats would be pining for the same.

“I am tired of burying our children,” White told the press this week.

Security personnel stand at an entrance to Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling during a lockdown after a report that an armed person was spotted on the base, Friday, Aug. 13, 2021
Security personnel stand at an entrance to Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling during a lockdown after a report that an armed person was spotted on the base on Aug. 13, 2021.
AP

“We are too comfortable with the state of our city. We must take action to gain control and protect our residents.”

The violence and liberal backlash to it are hardly contained to the capital.

Oakland is on track to double the number of assaults and triple the number of carjackings cases in the city from 2019. 

Ward 8 representative and Democrat Trayon White (C) holds a press conference on the death of 3 people during an armed clash that took place on Aug. 6 as he is calling out National Security to increase measures in the area, in Washington DC, United States on August 08, 2023.
Ward 8 representative and Democrat Trayon White holds a press conference calling for National Security to increase measures in Washington DC, on Aug. 8, 2023.
Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Its NAACP chapter has minced no words in assigning blame for this sorry state of affairs. 

“Failed leadership, including the movement to defund the police, our District Attorney’s unwillingness to charge and prosecute people who murder and commit life-threatening serious crimes, and the proliferation of anti-police rhetoric have created a heyday for Oakland criminals,” asserted the progressive group in a letter.

“People are moving out of Oakland in droves. They are afraid to venture out of their homes to go to work, shop, or dine.”

Police at the scene where a person was reportedly fatally shot on E118th Street at Lexington Avenue in New York, NY around 11:35 p.m. on July 22, 2023.
Police at the scene where a person was reportedly fatally shot on E118th Street at Lexington Avenue in New York City around 11:35 p.m. on July 22, 2023.
Christopher Sadowski

This spring, even Al Sharpton — he of “No justice, no peace!” fame — ripped his fellow progressives for their reticence to take the crime epidemic seriously.

“Anybody that tells you they’re progressive but don’t care about dealing with violent crimes are not,” declared Sharpton.

“You’re labeled progressive, but your action is regressive.”

Police at the scene where a person was shot on E115th Street at Third Avenue in New York, NY around 12:30 a.m. on August 6, 2023.
Police at the scene where a person was shot on E115th Street at Third Avenue in New York City around 12:30 a.m. on Aug. 6, 2023.
Christopher Sadowski

All this follows Eric Adams’ ascension to Gracie Mansion on the strength of his tough-on-crime image in 2021 and San Francisco’s ejection of progressive prosecutor Chesa Boudin last year.

As the Golden City’s bleeding-heart liberal mayor London Breed put it in a famous rant in late 2021, it’s time for “the reign of criminals who are destroying our city” to end.

Both she and law enforcement, she said, needed to be “less tolerant of all the bullsh-t that has destroyed our city.”

Hear, hear. 

Breed’s fellow progressives may be late to notice the rampant lawlessness rendering America’s cities unrecognizable, but their change in heart should nonetheless be celebrated.

The hard truth is that because urban electorates will not so much as give Republican candidates a second look, Democrats will need to lay the groundwork for urban revival in most cases — at least over the short term.

City dwellers should be optimistic about progressives’ increasingly firm grip on reality regarding the state of their streets, then — but only cautiously so.

As Mayor Adams has shown, there are limits to the power of tough talk. 

Polling last month showed 70% of New Yorkers are still “very” or “somewhat” concerned that they may soon be the name behind another crime statistic.

Nearly a tenth of the city says it has been assaulted or robbed some time in the past 12 months. 

So by all means, give the new liberal crime hawks a round of applause for their stated intentions.

But don’t let them off the hook if their actions don’t ultimately mirror their rhetoric. 

Isaac Schorr is a staff writer at Mediaite.

https://nypost.com/2023/08/13/urban-progressives-blast-the-unsafe-cities-they-created/