New York Expands CAURD License Program
300 CAURD licenses will be issued, doubling their previous cap of 150
New York’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) and Cannabis Control Board (CCB) made a significant announcement during the CCB’s board meeting on March 2, 2023: the Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary License (CAURD) program is expanding the number of CAURD licenses to 300, doubling the previous allotment of 150 CAURD licenses.
As a brief refresher, this is a conditional license that is limited to individuals who have suffered from New York’s needless and damaging war on cannabis: licenses are limited to applicants with a marijuana-related offense conviction that occurred prior to the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA) being passed on March 31, 2021, or a parent, legal guardian, child, spouse or dependent with a pre-MRTA marijuana-related offense conviction in the State of New York. The CAURD application window actually closed on September 26, 2022, with the OCM having received over 900 applications.
As to why the OCM and CCB are now expanding the CAURD program, here’s what Chief Equity Officer Damian Fagon had to say about the reasoning: “More stores means more locations for New York farmers to sell their harvests, more convenience for consumers to make the right decisions and purchase safer product, and twice as many opportunities for New Yorkers harmed by over-policing during cannabis prohibition.”
We also suspect that the ongoing Variscite case and the current injunction played a role in the OCM and CCB’s decision. The OCM has been prevented from issuing any licenses in 5 geographic regions, which includes Brooklyn. In that litigation, the OCM produced its scoring matrix as part of arguing that the plaintiff would not have been issued a license even if the underlying conviction was in New York. It is possible that by expanding the number of licenses for the plaintiff’s first ranked region, the plaintiff would be issued a license, potentially rendering the ongoing litigation moot (and, accordingly, lifting the injunction).
It will also be interesting to see if or how this affects the overall roll out of adult-use licenses (a topic we recently wrote about!). With more retail dispensaries open, it is possible that the OCM and CCB will be under less pressure to issue non-conditional retail dispensary licenses, but we’ll have to see how that plays out.
Source: Canna Law Blog