Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker asserted Thursday that his state’s cannabis social equity program is thus far the most successful in the nation during a speech to a room full of marijuana industry attorneys.
Pritzker, who gave the keynote address at the seventh annual Cannabis Law Institute held in Chicago this week, cited a study released earlier this month that concluded Illinois has “the most diverse cannabis industry in the nation,” with 60% of recreational marijuana business permits held by women or minorities as of January 2023, compared to 21% in the medical side of the Illinois industry.
“I really am incredibly proud of the progress we’ve made. It hasn’t been easy. We have more work to do. There’s no doubt. I’m not satisfied with where we are. We have a long way to go to repair the damage done by the war on drugs,” Pritzker said, addressing members of the International Cannabis Bar Association. “I’m really hopeful that the cannabis industry will continue to bring opportunity and wealth to communities of color for decades to come.”
Pritzker said that the study, which was authored by the Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Office, reported that Maryland had the second most diverse cannabis industry, with 37% of business permits held by minority or women owners, followed by New Jersey with 36%, Colorado with 34%, Michigan with 25%, and Massachusetts with 24%.
The CROO study also reported that “minority- or women-owned businesses held 63% of craft grower, 61% of infuser, and 74% of transporter licenses” in Illinois.
That makes Illinois a national leader in both cannabis and social equity, Pritzker asserted Thursday, with the Illinois social equity program poised to be “a national standard” because many other states have “failed” where Illinois has succeeded.
“This landmark new law was carefully crafted to accomplish a model of what common-sense equity-focused cannabis policy can look like. We’d seen the other states and the direction they had gone, and they had failed to, in my view, get it right and were trying to play catch-up afterward,” Pritzker said. “We wanted to start from the very beginning, trying to get it right.”
In 2022, Illinois awarded 185 new social equity dispensary permits; 108 of those had opened for business by this month, according to state marijuana regulators, as the Land of Lincoln continues opening and licensing more cannabis shops.
Pritzker added that there’s still a lot of work to be done moving forward, but said the social equity program is likely to mint plenty of new millionaires.
“If you got a license and you could open your doors, you’re probably becoming a millionaire. That’s a big change for people that this program was designed to address,” the governor said.
Pritzker concluded by noting that there’s more to come on the social justice front in Illinois. He also noted that “hundreds of millions of dollars” of cannabis tax revenue have been reinvested into communities harmed by the war on drugs and that more than 800,000 nonviolent cannabis criminal records have thus far been expunged.
Pritzker estimated that about 25% of all state marijuana tax revenue comes from “cannabis tourists” who visit Illinois from neighboring states that still have prohibition, such as Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, and Wisconsin.
“People from Indiana, people from Iowa, people from Wisconsin, Kentucky, drive across the border and buy something in a dispensary in Illinois. Now, they’re not supposed to drive back over the border to their home states, so I assume they’re just staying in Illinois,” Pritzker said as knowing laughs rippled through the auditorium.
The governor also suggested pointedly that federal marijuana legalization should have some sort of social equity wrapped into it.
“Equity demands that we go at this at the federal level,” Pritzker said to applause.