Bridge City Collective plans to bring a community focus to Missouri
It should be hard to find a more mission-driven, community-focused cannabis company than Bridge City Collective.
Coverage of Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, and Ohio.
It should be hard to find a more mission-driven, community-focused cannabis company than Bridge City Collective.
Today, we are publishing a list of 56 dispensary license owners we could identify through public records and news reports.
Craft grow applicants have more financial exposure than other license types, since their application requires a specific location and site plan to be detailed as part of the application.
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.
Although the product category is nascent and heavily restricted, big business is already bullish on bud-infused beverages.
Two recent MRA decisions have substantially altered the state’s cannabis market, where some independent dispensaries have been hard up to obtain supply.
Now that Missouri regulators have certified a testing facility, BeLeaf will be some of the first product on Missouri shelves.
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.