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Connecticut Starts Accepting Applications for Adult-Use Cannabis Business Licenses

The State Department of Consumer Protection will take applications for retail and social equity cultivation licenses beginning Feb. 3.

Cannabis Buds Adobe Stock Credit Hanohiki Resized
hanohiki | Adobe Stock

Connecticut officials officially started accepting applications for adult-use cannabis business licenses Feb. 3.

The State Department of Consumer Protection (DCP) is taking applications for retail and social equity cultivation licenses, defined as those in disproportionately impacted areas, according to a wtnh.com report.

RELATED: Connecticut Will Begin Accepting Applications for Adult-Use Cannabis Business Licenses Next Month

The department is expected to hold a lottery to issue the licenses.

“There are several pathways in which people can apply for these licenses,” Andrea Comer, DCP Deputy Commissioner and chair of the Social Equity Council, told wtnh.com. “Some will be applied directly to the lottery. Others will be applying directly to open a cannabis establishment.”

Applications for micro-cultivators, delivery services and product manufacturers will be available in the coming weeks, wtnh.com reported.

Connecticut became the 19th state to legalize adult-use cannabis when Gov. Ned Lamont signed a legalization bill into law in June 2021.

Under the law, adults 21 years and older may possess up to 1.5 ounces of cannabis flower or an equivalent amount of concentrate in public, and up to 5 ounces in their homes, beginning July 1, 2021.

Commercial adult-use cannabis sales could launch as soon as this spring.

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