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Small cannabis grower reflects on licensing delays, jumping into Vt.'s fledgling recreational marketVermont Cannabis growers are eagerly awaiting the approval of licenses from the state Cannabis Control Board, the governing body that decides who can sell products in the state’s forthcoming recreational marketplace. One small grower hoping to get one is Eduardo Jaime, owner of Fine Bud Farms in Randolph.
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The Latino Cannabis Association launched this month to help members who grew up in over-policed neighborhoods get licenses to enter the cannabis business with help from grants and social justice programs.
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The majority of Vermont towns weighed in on Tuesday on issues big and small: from funding infrastructure and wastewater projects, to allowing local cannabis sales, to electing city councilors, select board members and school board officials.
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Nikolas Kerest was sworn in as the new U.S. attorney for the District of Vermont in December. As the chief federal law officer in the state, he says violent crime, white-collar crime and bias incidents will be his top priorities, while the clash between state and federal law when it comes to cannabis will not be "on the top of our priority list."
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Can Vt. cultivators grow enough pot for when legal sales start? The Cannabis Control Board thinks soVermont’s cannabis retail market is set to go into place on Oct. 1, and a number of other states are closely watching the Vermont experience — because the state’s Cannabis Control Board has developed some policies unique to the state.
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Kittery raffled off 3 permits to open marijuana businesses. A company with big bucks won two of themOfficials had expected a few dozen applicants to pay the $750 entry fee, but in the end there were more than 700, as companies with financial footing paid hundreds of thousands of dollars just to sway the odds in their favor.
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In about a year, Vermont's retail cannabis market is scheduled to be in place. The state's Cannabis Control Board has already made some key decisions that's shaping what a future legal marijuana marketplace will be like.
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Vermont reporters provide a roundup of top news takeaways about Vermont's ongoing vaccination efforts, new trails and more for Thursday, July 29.
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This hour, we talk with Vermont's Cannabis Control Board about how they will meet the fall 2022 deadline for retail cannabis stores to open.
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Vermont could have its first legal retail cannabis shops open sometime next year, but the committee crafting the new rules for the state's marijuana industry is up against a tight timeline, and there could be a delay before the first pot shops open.