WeHo’s Four Medical Cannabis Shops Didn’t Make the Cut for Recreational Cannabis Licenses

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Not one of West Hollywood’s four medical cannabis dispensaries, each of which has a temporary license for recreational cannabis sales, has ranked high enough to qualify for one of eight permanent recreational cannabis sales licenses in that category.

So the City Council will be asked on Monday to increase the number of recreational cannabis licenses to 10 so that two of the existing dispensaries will be able to qualify.

A report from City Hall on the status of the cannabis business license application screening process notes that the temporary recreational sales licenses granted to the medical cannabis dispensaries on Jan. 2 will expire in March 2019. Under the city’s licensing plan, the medical cannabis dispensaries automatically qualify for one of the eight licenses that will be granted in the medical category.

As was expected, each of the medical dispensaries applied for a permanent recreational sales license. Recreational cannabis generate more revenue because they don’t require a doctor’s prescription, as do medical cannabis purchases. Such prescriptions have always been easy to acquire, no matter what one’s actual medical status, but the firms that supply them with a purported doctor’s endorsement charge as much as $100.

In November 2017, the City Council passed an ordinance that granted eight licenses in each of five categories: adult-use (recreational) cannabis retail; medical cannabis retail, consumption lounges for smoking, vaping and edible cannabis materials; consumption lounges for edible material only, and West Hollywood-based cannabis delivery services. The Council also stipulated a merit-based approach to decide who would get a license. Five people with experience in local government or the cannabis business were chosen to evaluate what turned out to be 313 applications from 122 different applicants. The applicants were screened based on a number of criteria including the quality of their business plans, the proposed design of their business and their experience in the business.

The city barred the five judges from communicating with City Council members about the applications to ensure that they would be evaluated on their merits only with no political influence. However, a number of cannabis companies did begin contributing to the Gay Men’s Chorus of Los Angeles, a non-profit organization whose chair is Mayor John Duran and which receives substantial donations from other organizations and businesses seeking to do business with the city or get City Council approval of their projects. Those GMCLA sponsors include MedMen and Alternative Herbal Health Services, medical dispensaries that currently have temporary recreational cannabis licenses. (Jason Beck, AHHS’s owner, has been a regular donor to GMCLA and other LGBT organizations for years). It is unclear whether MedMen and AHHS are those ranked No. 9 and 10 on the application list and would benefit from increasing the number of licenses granted.

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The licensing application report notes that some applicants have qualified for licenses in different categories. “Based on the scoring results, there will likely be 16 new cannabis business locations, for a total of 20 locations (if the four existing locations are included),” the report says.

An option the report asks the City Council to consider is increasing the number of licenses from eight to 10 in each of the categories.

The City Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the City Council Chambers, 625 N. San Vicente Blvd., south of Santa Monica. Parking is free in the five-story structure behind the Council Chambers with a ticket validated at the council meeting.

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19 Comments
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Lower Your Standards
Lower Your Standards
5 years ago

Lower your standards! Always a great move. 🙄🙄🙄

Greg
Greg
5 years ago

There are enough places to get weed. Weho has 1 CVS, 2 McDonalds, 4 super markets and now 40 new pot licenses. Enough is enough! We don’t need another two additional pot dispensaries.

Justin
Justin
5 years ago

very interesting issue if the city will play by their own rules.

adrian
5 years ago

it is so stupid that people who probably do not smoke get to make decisions for people who do smoke , also if you do not smoke pot maybe you should not worry about it and mind your business , also if you take pharmaceuticals and or drink alcohol then you really have no room to judge

David Larson
5 years ago

I hope they all fail. I hate the idea that this is anything less than companies selling drugs for people to get high.

No, it’s not NORML.

Jeff
Jeff
5 years ago
Reply to  David Larson

I’m sure you enjoy a cocktail so don’t judge.

Elizabeth
Elizabeth
5 years ago
Reply to  Jeff

Hahhha best comment

David Larson
5 years ago
Reply to  Jeff

You can drink to just have a drink and not intend to get buzzed or drunk (wine with meal, etc.). The intent is different with pot and this is where I take issue. Once this line is crossed it’s not for me to say what drugs are recreational and what drugs aren’t. I draw the line at the intent to get high….

money talks you will see!
money talks you will see!
5 years ago

The process always left open the possibility that none of the current medical dispensaries would be approved for recreational sales. Council members and staff should have considered this possibility when the process began. There is nothing transparent about donations to city council members to effect their votes and propping up insiders who did not win fair and square. Follow the money.

Bill Skywatcher
Bill Skywatcher
5 years ago

It would seem to me that something is immensely wrong.

The Gay Men’s Chorus as a recreational pot shop??

Is this an attempt to shut down recreational pot in WeHo???

Something is NOT right here.

Abby
Abby
5 years ago

Wow west Hollywood application was the most corrupt system yet!! Only rich conservative males applied. Right wing donors also. Integral was one of them. All public records btw which unfortunately doesn’t matter because nothing can be done anyways. A city that prides itself on liberal ideas end up being just as corrupt. Sad!!

Jeff
Jeff
5 years ago
Reply to  Abby

🙄🙄

90069
90069
5 years ago

You are about to watch money and corruption overtake this ‘fair’ process.

Larry Block
Larry Block
5 years ago

WOW! New applicants with best of breed new ideas and approaches to retail cannabis. How exciting! Despite the advantages of ‘incumbancy’ none of the existing medical dispensaries made the top selection process for retail. During the process these dispensaries made millions of dollars. Yet their applications did not invest or conceive the best business plan, or how to share in social equity, or whatever it is that allowed new applicants to obtain superior scores. Let the old dispensaries do what they do best, medical sales.. let the new concepts have an opportunity to get some market share. I fully respect… Read more »

Bill Skywatcher
Bill Skywatcher
5 years ago
Reply to  Larry Block

Bonkers.

I don’t want a “concept” dispensary, I want a dispensary that is clean, open, and makes purchasing the product easy. Many of us also have long-term relationships with the dispensaries we’ve been using for years.

While we’ll have to wait for the 18th to find out more about this situation, I have to say it sounds like the city has really shafted the residents here.

Dan
Dan
5 years ago

FYI MedMen was voted the Best of WeHo 2018 Best Cannabis Dispensary by the readers of this publication and West Hollywood Magazine. There is even a certificate signed by the entire city council dated Nov. 7, 2018. This defies logic.

Phil N.
Phil N.
5 years ago

The article doesn’t give any information about the actual companies affected, the definition of “why or how” the dispensaries did not rank high enough was not given or spelled out. Poor journalism to say the least.

Read the article again and see if it answers these 5 questions:
– who
– what
– when
– where
– why

This article fails.

Staff Report
5 years ago
Reply to  Phil N.

The information you mention has not been released by City Hall. The list of successful applicants will be released on Dec. 18. The ranking of each applicant may be available then but that is not yet clear. That information currently is private.

Robert Muniz
Robert Muniz
5 years ago
Reply to  Staff Report

A real journalist doesn’t wait for the information to be released, they get out there and dig it up themselves. Phil N.’s comments are correct…