The arrival of 2022 ushered in significant changes to state marijuana markets across the nation, ranging from the launch of adult-use cannabis sales in Montana to flowers being sold for the first time by medical marijuana retailers in Louisiana.
Additional notable business developments took effect in other states on January 1, including:
- The end of an opt-out period for New York localities that wanted to ban either recreational marijuana sales or local consumption lounges ahead of the state’s upcoming adult-use market.
- New regulations took effect in Colorado and Oregon, with the former reducing marijuana concentrate purchase limits and the latter expanding them and launching home cannabis delivery.
- New Mexico finalized regulations for its soon-to-launch recreational market, which is slated to begin on April 1.
Experts said that the changes reflect how the more significant U.S. cannabis industry continues to expand.
“Even medical cannabis laws continue to get better – more qualifying conditions, new forms of access – even in very deep red states,” said Karen O’Keefe, the director of state policies at the Washington DC-based Marijuana Policy Project (MPP).
“It’s all positive, in my read. Slowly marching forward.”
Andrew Livingston, director of economics and research at Denver-based consulting firm VS Strategies, said the updates reflect the marijuana industry’s constantly changing nature.
“A lot of this is just the implementation of our wins. We planted trees earlier with ballot measures or legislative bills, and those are now bearing fruit,” Livingston said.
“Strap in, because this is going to continue to change over time.”
Montana starts with a bang.
Montana’s recreational marijuana sales kickoff and the start of cannabis flower availability in Louisiana were both reported as successes for businesses.
According to Helena TV station KTVH, roughly 380 retailers in 29 counties can now sell both medical and adult-use cannabis.
The Montana Department of Revenue found that sales at cannabis shops topped $1.5 million over the New Year’s weekend, KTHV reported.
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Some Montana shops retailers experienced lengthy lines of customers who braved near-zero temperatures to make adult-use purchases – a sign of robust demand, the Independent Record of Helena reported.
Customers also arrived from neighboring states, such as Wyoming, to buy cannabis.
“If you’re a Montana medical operator, you’re going to be able to transition to adult use, and you’re going to see a significant boon,” Livingston said.
But some retailers hoarded inventory to stay supplied, the Record reported.
And legal questions remain over issues such as retail license caps in municipalities like Bozeman.
Prices’ double’ Louisiana’s illicit market
In Louisiana, medical marijuana patients encountered “long lines” to pay an estimated “double” the price of marijuana available on the illicit market, the Lafayette Daily Advertiser reported.
One medical marijuana pharmacy charged $440-$480 for an ounce of flower, while prices for an eighth of flower ranged from $35 at one pharmacy to $80 at a New Orleans retailer.
According to the (Baton Rouge) Advocate, some of Louisiana’s nine registered MMJ pharmacies saw “hours-long waits” and placed rations on how much flower patients could purchase at once.
Despite some bumps, O’Keefe and Livingston agreed that Louisiana’s decision to add flower—which both Florida and Minnesota did after once prohibiting it—would brighten the business prospects for the state’s registered medical cannabis companies.
“If you’re a medical cannabis pharmacy in Louisiana, you’re going to have a new product to put on your shelves,” VS Strategies’ Livingston said.
“For the average business, things are going to be a net positive.”
More incremental steps are still significant.
While less attention might have been paid to regulatory steps taken in Colorado, Oregon, New Mexico, and New York, O’Keefe and Livingston said that those steps also reflect the ongoing changes within the larger industry.
“Progress has moved forward in the past year quicker than I think we ever saw before,” MPP O’Keefe said.
“By and large, most of the new regulatory measures have been overwhelmingly positive.”
O’Keefe did note that Colorado took a step backward with new purchase restrictions on marijuana concentrates, which were lowered from 40 grams a day to 8 grams.
O’Keefe said the change could have “adverse impacts,” particularly for medical patients who rely on high-potency products.
However, the rest of the industry changes were largely positive for businesses.
According to data from the Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, 655 of New York’s 1,518 municipalities chose to prohibit adult-use sales, and 751 decided to ban consumption lounges.
While the number of localities banning recreational businesses might seem high, Livingston noted that it’s not even half the state.
In California, by contrast, local marijuana business bans still cover roughly two-thirds of municipalities.
Meanwhile, Oregon and New Mexico issued new rules likely to benefit marijuana businesses.
In Oregon, the state boosted purchase limits from 1 ounce to 2 ounces while edible concentrations per package increased from 50 milligrams to 100.
Also, marijuana home delivery is now allowed across city and county lines, expanding the radius for all transport operators.
In New Mexico, regulators are prepping for a free market with no license caps.
Now that the rules have been issued, business owners can begin prepping for operations, and a handful of permits have already been awarded.
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