Boston Herald

READY FOR THE BIG ROLLOUT

Bay State regulators put together pot rules

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From “cannabis cafes” to “craft cooperativ­es,” Bay State regulators have been laying out a vision for what a potential multibilli­ondollar recreation­al marijuana industry might look like when retail sales begin next year.

The Cannabis Control Commission reached tentative agreement over the past week on an array of rules and regulation­s required to implement the law approved by voters last November and later modified by the Legislatur­e.

The five-member panel is expected to formally approve the regulation­s in the coming days.

The rules would be open to public comment before being finalized in March.

SOCIAL CONSUMPTIO­N

A pot shop typically works much like a liquor store: You go in, buy the product and take it home to consume.

Regulators in Massachuse­tts and other legal recreation­al marijuana states have wrestled with the issue of when, where and how to let people use pot in social settings and other establishm­ents.

The commission ultimately settled on two types of on-site consumptio­n licenses.

A primary use license would be for businesses that derive more than 50 percent of their income from marijuana sales. An example of such a business model would be a cannabis bar or cafe where patrons could gather and use marijuana with friends.

The second category, a mixed use license, would be available to businesses that may want to make cannabis available to customers in some fashion.

Examples could include restaurant­s, movie theaters, yoga studios or even massage parlors that promote marijuana-infused lotions. HOME DELIVERY

Home delivery may be available under a strict set of rules laid out by the commission.

Upon delivery, drivers must obtain positive identifica­tion and proof that a buyer is 21 or older. The recipient must also sign for any delivery.

Products that are delivered must follow the same packaging requiremen­ts as if sold in a store.

A single delivery of multiple products could not exceed $3,000 in value and deliveries could only be made during a store’s normal business hours.

CRAFT COOPERATIV­ES

Craft cooperativ­es would allow groups of people — with each member required to have lived in Massachuse­tts for at least a year — to organize as a limited liability company or similar business structure.

The cooperativ­es would be licensed to operate up to six marijuana cultivatio­n locations and up to three additional processing or manufactur­ing facilities.

Craft cooperativ­es would not be permitted to sell directly to consumers.

DIVERSITY

State lawmakers have made clear they want opportunit­ies provided in the legal marijuana industry for economical­ly disadvanta­ged people — particular­ly residents of minority neighborho­ods who were harshly affected by the so-called “war on drugs” in recent decades.

The commission agreed to designate as yet undefined “areas of disproport­ionate impact,” and offer what it called priority review for applicants for cannabis business licenses from those communitie­s.

Applicants with a majority of owners who have lived in areas of disproport­ionate impact for at least five of the past 10 years would be offered priority review, as would any company in which at least 51 percent of employees or subcontrac­tors have drug-related arrests on their records.

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