Do you think cannabis retailers should be limited to a certain number of stores in individual state markets? Or should the free market decide and allow retailers to own/operate as many stores as they see fit? Why?
Davis Tiburzi | CEO | CannaZip
George Fernandez | CEO | Modern Canna
Christina Betancourt Johnson | CEO | Standard Wellness Maryland
Danielle Wildstein | CEO | Blue Oak Dispensary
Ulysses Youngblood | President | Major Bloom
Jesse Alderman | Partner | Foley Hoag
Corey Keller | Co-owner | Bonanza Cannabis Company
Blythe L. Huestis | Vice president of retail | Sun Theory
David Paleschuck | Author and brand consultant | Branding Bud Consulting Group
Garrett Rudolph | Editor in chief | Marijuana Venture
I’ll play devil’s advocate here. In general, I think free-market principles should guide regulations in terms of licensing and limits on the number of cannabis stores an individual or company can own. However, I also think having limits allows a more diverse, vibrant, competitive business landscape to develop — as it has in places like Massachusetts, New York and Washington, where store ownership is capped — instead of allowing large-scale chains to immediately buy up a significant chunk of the market. What I would ultimately like to see is states implement tighter restrictions in the first, say, five to 10 years of the adult-use market, with a sunset provision that allows those caps to be eliminated as the market matures and, inevitably, some chains look to grow while others look to exit.