Dozens of Licensed Weed Shops Were Placed Too Close to Schools

2 days ago 7

New York|Dozens of Licensed Weed Shops Were Placed Too Close to Schools

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/28/nyregion/weed-shops-schools.html

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State regulators said that a misreading of the law that legalized cannabis in New York allowed some shops to open in unsuitable locations. Those businesses may be uprooted now.

A person walks past a storefront with a large sign that says “Recreational Cannabis Dispensary.”
A cannabis dispensary in the East Village in 2023. An error by the Office of Cannabis Management has created uncertainty around the future of dozens of dispensaries in New York State.Credit...Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Ashley Southall

July 28, 2025, 10:29 p.m. ET

More than 100 licensed cannabis dispensaries in New York were allowed to open too close to schools and may have to move, state regulators said on Monday.

State law prohibits dispensaries from opening within 500 feet of schools. For the past three years, regulators in the Office of Cannabis Management have measured the distance from the entrance of the potential dispensary to the entrance of a school. However, the agency said on Monday that the distance should have been measured to a school’s property line.

The announcement has created uncertainty around the future of dozens of dispensaries at a time when suitable locations have become increasingly rare and expensive. A vast majority of the affected businesses are in New York City and owned by veterans, people affected by the state’s past anti-marijuana laws and others who were given preference to receive licenses.

Felicia Reid, the agency’s acting executive director, told her staff in an email obtained by The New York Times that the affected businesses include 60 dispensaries that are currently open and 45 others that are getting off the ground, as well as 47 applicants who were required to secure deeds or leases in advance. Officials said the change stemmed from a review of the agency’s practices that Ms. Reid ordered last year.

In letters to the businesses, Ms. Reid acknowledged that her agency’s decision might have harmful repercussions for people who have poured their time, money and energy into jump-starting the legal cannabis industry.

“To give you this news, and for the weight of it, I am incredibly sorry,” she said.

In a statement, the agency said it was seeking an unspecified legislative solution to help the dispensaries stay in place. But in online guidance, officials cautioned that if lawmakers did not act, the agency could not renew the dispensaries’ licenses at their existing locations. The agency has also set aside $15 million to help cover the expenses of finding a new location for the affected applicants looking to open dispensaries.


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