Politics & Government

Milford Business May Get First Recreational Marijuana License

State officials meet with Sira Naturals on Thursday to consider approving the business to cultivate marijuana for recreational use.

MILFORD, MA — Milford-based Sira Naturals is likely to be the first business in Massachusetts to be awarded a business license to grow adult-use cannabis in the state, according to reports. The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission is meeting with Sira Naturals on Thursday to address an application for its cultivation facility in Milford, reports the Boston Globe.

The company currently grows medical marijuana at the facility that it sends to dispensaries in Cambridge, Needham and Somerville.

The public meeting and hearing takes place Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Health Policy Commission Center in Boston.

Find out what's happening in Milfordfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

If approved, Sira Naturals' facility would be inspected and cleared to proceed with growing recreational marijuana.

"We are very gratified that the Cannabis Control Commission has seen fit to put us on this list," Sira CEO Michael Dundas told WBZ NewsRadio 1030. "We're not sure exactly what's going to happen tomorrow, but it does appear relatively likely that they will take this vote--and we're very very excited."

Find out what's happening in Milfordfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

>>>Listen to that full interview on WBZ NewsRadio 1030 marijuana podcast Blunt Talk.

In a contentious ballot measure earlier this year, Milford voters supported banning recreational marijuana businesses from town, but with a caveat: existing businesses could continue. Of the 2,629 casting a vote in a special election, 73 percent backed that ballot measure.

First, Milford joined (even if only barley) others across the country by approving marijuana establishments during the state ballot question in the presidential election of 2016. In September last year, Milford voters, by a little more than half, approved a bylaw to prohibit recreational marijuana establishments in the town. Then in October, at Town Meeting, voters overwhelmingly approved an amendment to allow those businesses that were established before July 2017 to continue.

ProVerde is the other of the two Milford marijuana-growing businesses that exist in town.

The Cannabis Control Commission received 51 applications from cannabis businesses across Massachusetts. Fifteen of those are from potential retailers.

On May 22, the Cannabis Control Commission ended its priority review process and approved 205 prospective licensees to enter the agency’s application system early and have their license applications processed first. The 205 total certified includes 82 Registered Marijuana Dispensaries (RMDs) and 123 Economic Empowerment Applicants, which were "required to demonstrate residency, experience or business practices that promote economic empowerment in communities disproportionately impacted by marijuana enforcement."

With an official July 1 opening day start for retail adult-use marijuana businesses technically allowed to open by voter approved state law, as WBUR reports, that opening day will be "far from robust." Since no commercial businesses licenses have been granted, it is unclear how many, if any, will actually be open for business on July 1.

Photo via Shutterstock

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