Two more lawsuits add questions to Illinois’ dispensary license process
Two more lawsuits were filed this week in Illinois courts that may slow down a process that was supposed to have been completed on April 30.
Two more lawsuits were filed this week in Illinois courts that may slow down a process that was supposed to have been completed on April 30.
Missourians are heatedly debating whether or not it has approved enough medical cannabis licenses, or even if there should be limits on licenses at all.
Grown In conducted an exhaustive search for information on each license, by comparing organizer names, addresses, reviewing land records at recorder of deeds offices, news articles, and social media accounts.
Illinois cannabis regulators promised to pay accounting firm KPMG $2,500 per application reviewed and stipulated that cannabis dispensary application evaluators only needed a bachelor’s degree.
For those catching up on the Show Me State’s cannabis industry, here’s twelve things to consider.
The MRA conducted a brisk, meeting with little new to report in its September quarterly meeting.
A tribe of about 2,200 members in Michigan’s upper peninsula, announced plans yesterday to build a cannabis grow facility, processing, and dispensary all in one location.
While the state’s announcement caused plaintiffs of a highly publicized federal case to drop their suit, two less proclaimed suits in state courts threaten to hold up the awarding of licenses for months, possibly not until 2021.
Native American tribes in Michigan are making a pair of moves which may open the state’s already relatively unregulated market even more.
ttorneys for the State of Illinois entered into a verbal agreement Thursday to delay the state’s cannabis dispensary lottery until October 15 and Gov. Pritzker responded to legislative concerns.