By Ed Pierce
For those eagerly awaiting the first day in Maine that adult
use retail marijuana can legally be sold on Friday, Oct. 9, expectations will
need to be tempered. And right here in Windham, it may be months or up to a
year before retail adult-use marijuana shops are open and operating.
On Tuesday evening the Windham Town Council gave its final
approval for the award of two adult-use retail marijuana licenses, voting to
rescind the license of a business that had been awarded a conditional license
on Sept. 15, replacing it with another candidate and finalizing the other retail
license awarded to Paul’s Boutique.
Windham RSL had been awarded a conditional adult-use marijuana license previously by the council, but information received by the town manager concerning the lease contained in its license application was called into question. During a public hearing Tuesday, Councilors Jarrod Maxfield, David Nadeau, Nicholas Kalogerakis and David Douglass voted 4-0 for a finding of fact that without the submission of a master lease or sublease in the application of Windham RSL, the original vote on Sept. 15 was rescinded and the next highest finisher in their adult-use marijuana retail license scoring system, JAR Cannabis Co., should be awarded the license instead.
licenses though, has led to a significant delay in Windham for adult-use retail marijuana shops being ready to open for business right away.
“We will definitely not be ready by Oct. 9,” said Shaw Dwight,
the owner of Paul’s Boutique. “We’ve been positioning to hope to be awarded a
license for over a year and discussing this with the town for over a year. Our
company has done its due diligence to be professional with the store. It’s now
time for my company to start preparing to enter the adult-use market to be
successful.”
Dwight said rampant uncertainty about state and municipal regulations,
ordinances, applications, and licensing has led to a bottleneck in the
wholesale marijuana market right now, resulting in exorbitant prices for a
limited number of products available and a poor supply to meet the market
demand right now.
According to Dwight, the entire process of growing, drying and
trimming marijuana for retail sales also takes time.
He said his company wasn’t ready to invest in a retail cultivation
facility to deal with logistical issues and finalize other plans until it knew
it was going to have a license and now that it does, the business can move
forward.
“We need to prepare this company for the future, but it will
take some time, at least a year,” he said. “We have a conditional license from
the state, but now we can go back and get a true license from the state. You
can’t put the horse before the cart. We’re just trying to set up a plan that
will ensure success.”
Dwight said he feels that not being totally prepared for what
lies ahead for the adult-use retail marijuana business in Maine is naïve.
“Being prepared means being able to control reasonable price
points, the availability of extracts and
edibles and the consistency to offer a
diversity of products,” he said. “We’re not there just yet, but within six
months to a year we will be. Now our work truly begins.”
Joel Pepin, who owns JAR Cannabis Company, said he was
grateful to have been awarded an adult-use retail license by the council, but
like Paul’s Boutique, find themselves in a similar place.
“Now that we’ve gotten local authorization from the town, I
think it will take about a month to obtain a license, the state office seems to
be moving quickly.”
Pepin said this year many medical marijuana providers have
struggled to keep their supplies up for the demand and he expects that to be
the case with adult-use as well.
“I don’t know exactly when we will make the transition from
medical marijuana to adult-use, but we have two facilities and that could only
be a couple of weeks,” he said. “We’ve got a lot of patients who are visiting
our existing storefront and we want to make it a smooth transition for them and
not alienate our existing patient base.”
According to Pepin, his biggest challenge going forward will
be the keep costs low enough for his existing patients.
“We want those patients to be able to shop with us, but they
may find that the excise tax and sales tax costs could go up,” he said. “We
want our patients to go out the door with products at similar prices.”
Because they are vertically integrated where the products they
sell come from their own garden and extraction lab, Pepin said that Jar
Cannabis Company may initially be behind a bit in selling edible products, but
he expects that to all work out over time.
“We’re aiming to be up and make the transition to adult-use by the end of the year or within the first few months of the new year,” he said. <