California Marijuana Farmers Clamber To Avoid Major ‘Extinction Event’
This marks a last-ditch effort to remain in the legal market for many growers
Marijuana farmers across California are scrambling to revamp their operations to stay in the licensed market at a time when hundreds, if not thousands, of cultivators are in danger of going out of business.
Oversupply, high taxes and licensing fees, as well as depressed wholesale prices, are creating cash-flow shortages for farmers across the state, according to several industry insiders who spoke with MJBizDaily.
As a result:
- Scores of farmers are opting to let costly licenses expire to save money.
- Most are trimming overhead and production, with many forgoing planting altogether this season.
- Others are combining expertise and resources to make one final run at viability.
In a last-ditch effort to remain in the legal market, Northern California grower Mark Shaffer is partnering with Daydream Valley Farm in Mendocino County on a 10,000-square-foot grow after his single cultivation license expired in late March.
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