New York's Weed Nightmare
How pot bureaucrats used legal weed to push their social justice agenda
HD DownloadWhen former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo faced sexual harassment allegations that threatened to end his career, he made a last-ditch effort to curry favor with the voters: He legalized weed. Maybe he hoped New Yorkers would be too stoned to remember the accusations that he had groped aides or asked female staffers to play strip poker with him.
New York's progressive legislators had been crafting a recreational marijuana bill since 2018, but the version that passed was rammed through as Cuomo fought for political survival. The bill wasn't just about legalizing cannabis; it was about righting historic wrongs by prioritizing licenses for people disproportionately impacted by prohibition. But in practice, the legislation has created a bureaucratic disaster that's failed both business owners and consumers.
Jonathan Elfand spent a decade in prison for growing and selling weed—a conviction that, under New York's new laws, should have given him priority in obtaining a legal dispensary license. Instead, he found himself stuck in bureaucratic limbo, with state regulators refusing to give him a license.
So Elfand did what any guy ballsy enough to run an illegal weed operation in the 1980s would do: He opened up anyway—and New York's authorities responded with aggressive raids, trying to force the closure of his shops.
He wasn't alone. While the state stalled on issuing legal licenses, thousands of gray-market dispensaries popped up, filling the void. Instead of facilitating a smooth transition to a regulated market, New York cracked down.
Unlike other states that simply legalized weed and let businesses flourish, New York took a heavy-handed, social justice–driven approach. Regulators created criteria that would offer priority licenses to women, minorities, veterans, and those from communities that had been "disproportionately impacted" by prohibition.
Even though Elfand had served a decade in prison for weed-related charges, that wasn't enough to guarantee a license. Instead, bureaucrats picked winners and losers, leaving enterprising business owners like Elfand out in the cold.
Shouldn't regulators let pretty much anyone open up, and allow customers to decide who they want to patronize?
But the Empire State isn't the only one that's terribly mismanaged legalization. California, with its overregulation and sky-high taxes, has also struggled to transition from an illicit market to a functioning legal one. Excessive licensing fees and burdensome regulations forced many legitimate businesses to shut down while illegal dealers continued to thrive.
New York copied quite a few components of this failed model. Taxes on legal weed are exorbitantly high, leading most consumers to continue buying from the illegal market. One cannabis industry lobbyist estimated toward the end of 2023 that as much as 90 percent of New Yorkers still purchase weed illegally—two and a half years after legalization.
New York's law explicitly allowed public consumption, unlike places like Amsterdam, which have designated coffee shops where people can get baked in semi-private. The result? A city where the smell of marijuana permeates the streets, frustrating residents who didn't sign up for this level of exposure.
Peter Moskos, a former Baltimore cop and professor at John Jay College, says this rise in open drug use coincided with broader declines in quality of life. "Legal weed came at the same time as rising public disorder," Moskos says. "It gets blamed for bigger problems." The fix for the rampant public disorder, both real and perceived, is somewhat obvious: Allow cops to police low-level quality-of-life offenses again, restoring order to places like the subway system. The more order you have across the city, the less pot will be viewed as the convenient scapegoat for all manner of social ills.
The law's architects justified public consumption as a way to ensure people in public housing—where smoking indoors is illegal—could still partake. But this created more backlash than legislators and activists anticipated.
New York could have followed Amsterdam's model: designating semi-private areas for smoking while enforcing no-smoking laws elsewhere. Instead, the state prioritized social justice and government control over decent policymaking.
Elfand, despite being exactly the kind of person the law was supposed to help, remains shut out of the legal market. But he's not giving up. If he doesn't get a license, he plans to reopen anyway, daring the state to stop him.
"I'm not going to prison again for growing a plant," he says.
New York's marijuana legalization effort was meant to correct past injustices. Instead, it has created a new class of victims: Entrepreneurs denied the opportunity to compete in a free and fair market. The real winners? The black market dealers who never stopped selling in the first place.
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NYS green lights growers to start on the idea dispensaries would be in place at the end of the season.
NYS's social justice licensing scheme gets held up in court due to a anti-bias lawsuit. Dispensaries do not open by the end of the growing season which screws the growers.
So people opened non-state approved stores to get the supply to the demand. On every block. At this point we have free market weed. Stores to meet demand, prices dropped as expected. But that was a problem for the city and state. The city called the stores a nuisance and wanted them shut down. The state wanted them shut down because they did not get the state's approval. Authority cracks down, most the storefronts closed, back to black market delivery.
It's really about the government getting their money. Social justice, not so much.
In this case it wasn't about money for the government. It was about grift to a well connected special interest.
It's always about the money. I'm expecting pot to come under the same stamp enforcement that is done with cigarettes.
"Social justice?"
If ever there was an oxymoron, this is it.
How pot bureaucrats used legal weed to push their social justice agenda
So it's all "stop fighting kultur war hurr durr" mocking until that Kultur War comes for your pet libertarian project. Got it.
I don't know. Liz doesn't seem entirely opposed to fighting some culture war.
I would like to see the universe where instead of everyone clamoring for legality despite all known bureaucratic nonsense in the sidecar everyone just continued to ignore its illegality until public opinion waned
I do kind of like how it is where I live. Not legalized, but no one gives a fuck anymore. Weed stores (I refuse to say "dispensary") are sort of convenient, but all the hyper-regulated rituals you need to perform and the excessive packaging and high taxes are pretty irritating.
>>Not legalized, but no one gives a fuck anymore.
exactly.
Because the government has WAY too much power. This would be hard if they didn't, but we've made it easy. Being in NYC does not help at all.
Why is legalizing weed hard? Because the government wants their share of protection money. I have little doubt the mob is cheaper, because they are motivated for efficiency, while the government is motivated for more power than they had yesterday.
I have lived in NYC for over 23 years. Our city government is much LESS intrusive in many respects than other places I have been. For example, it doesn't care that I do not have a single blade of grass on our yard. Doing that in most suburban areas will get you hauled into court. But in NYC they don't mind if you let your property stay undeveloped. We also just had a humongous relaxation of zoning regulations and streamlined a lot of development approvals as well. Every Republican voted against those relaxations. In most suburbs, don't even think about asking for a rezoning for your property; the NIMBYs will run you out of town. Our property taxes are also a LOT lower.
""Our city government is much LESS intrusive in many respects""
I've lived here 34 years. Makes me wonder what other places you have lived.
No other city I've lived would send someone out with a DB meter because someone complained about the noise.
Just a reminder that marijuana remains a Schedule I controlled substance, illegal under federal law everywhere in the US. Trump and MAGA oppose changing that.
Oppose? Have they even said anything lately about that?
Cuomo would have done better with the COVID pandemic had he not tried to stage manage the vaccine distribution. One of the very few things DeSantis did well in the pandemic -- possibly the only thing -- was that he cut a deal with the Publix supermarket chain to make the vaccines available to anyone. Sometimes the best thing to do is to have the private sector handle things. Maybe most of the time.
That's what you think was his biggest failure? Good heavens.
Many serious crimes--- including homicides--- were discovered because the smell of weed gave officers probable cause to search.
"Many violations of the 4th Amendment were committed because the "smell of weed" gave officers an excuse to break into properties to search, occasionally discovering serious crimes."
FIFY
Now everybody thinks it's just peachy keen to smoke anywhere, anytime. I have smelled it in heavy traffic in the Chicago suburbs while driving(!) Two knuckleheads in a corvette convertible were once sighted passing a bong back and forth while driving. I walked from my car up to them. "Hey assholes! Knock that shit off! My mother lives around here, and I'm not having you dipshits hitting her." They were all like "Sorry man."
The bill wasn't just about legalizing cannabis; it was about righting historic wrongs by prioritizing licenses for people disproportionately impacted by prohibition.
Which is exactly what libertarian drug addicts deserve. Live by the woke, die by the woke. Want your high, go kneel at the alter of the perpetually victimized.
Cuomo forgot the number one rule regarding Sexual Harassment, be handsome.
According to Luigi Fettuccini's go fund me, that also works with Intentional Murder.
Social Justice decoded = Social COSTS for those *special* people entitlements.
"A city where the smell of marijuana permeates the streets, frustrating residents who didn't sign up for this level of exposure."
Seriously, GTFO of here with that crap. And while you're at it, never write for Reason again.
I have to gag and be nauseated several times daily by the noxious perfume and cologne of anosmic imbeciles. And if I had the gall to complain about this, literally 99% of everybody would roll their eyes, not because this is objectively any different or better, only because decades of laws which are themselves criminal have given them the emotional entitlement to sit on a high horse when it comes to the smell of cannabis.
Fuck you and fuck your level of exposure. I'm out.