Opinion | Calhoun: Wake-up Call

Medical marijuana dispensary owners get fingered for new Denver license

Alert for dispensary owners: You'll want a clean (for the last five years) record and clean hands when you appear at the Wellington E. Webb building to file your application for a medical marijuana dispensary license. Under the ordinance passed by Denver City Council last month, anyone who owns at...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Alert for dispensary owners: You’ll want a clean (for the last five years) record and clean hands when you appear at the Wellington E. Webb building to file your application for a medical marijuana dispensary license.

Under the ordinance passed by Denver City Council last month, anyone who owns at least 10 percent of a dispensary must go through a thorough background check — and that includes fingerprinting. It’s part of a new licensing application that every dispensary must submit by March 1. And the city will start accepting those applications at 7:30 a.m. today.

Under the city’s rules, anyone convicted of or doing time for a felony in the past five years is not eligible to be a dispensary owner.

And while that’s a challenge for many would-be pot entrepreneurs, it’s one of the easier parts of the process for the city, since it already does background checks for liquor-license applications. But licensing Denver’s several hundred dispensaries involves all kinds of new complexities.

When news happens, Westword is there —
Your support strengthens our coverage.

We’re aiming to raise $50,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to this community. If Westword matters to you, please take action and contribute today, so when news happens, our reporters can be there.

$50,000

“We do face some unique challenges in mobilizing to implement a new type of licensing requirement for such a large group of applicants over such a short time frame,” says Penny May, director of Denver Department of Excise and Licenses. “That said, as Denver Excise & Licenses (unlike other municipalities in Colorado) has so much experience with so many other types of business licenses, we have a lot of institutional experience that will help us meet this challenge.”

That challenge begins for May’s office this morning.

Wash your hands first.

Loading latest posts...