Seven medical marijuana dispensaries got the green light Monday, when Ohio’s Board of Pharmacy unanimously approved their licenses.
They’ll be the first in the state allowed to sell the newly legal drug beginning in September — if they can get up and running by then.
The shops and locations are:
Care Med Associates, LLC
5149 Kennedy Ave., Cincinnati
Green RX, LLC
8420 Vine St., Cincinnati
Pharmacann Ohio, LLC
5445 Ridge Road, Columbia Township
127 OH, LLC
Village of Seven Mile
CannAscend Alternative, LLC
300 N. Main Street, Monroe
Therapeutic Healing Care II, LLC
1525 Glenntown Dr., Suite B, Lebanon
Debbie’s Dispensary Ohio 4, LLC
1088 N. High Street, Hillsboro
Through his license for Green RX, LLC, the Rev. Damon Lynch III plans to turn a former pharmacy into a dispensary in the city’s Harwell neighborhood. The business will operate with the name Have a Heart Cincy.
Cincinnati investor James Gould, who’s behind the CannAscend Alternative group, previously raised concerns about the scoring process for marijuana growing licenses. He and business partner Ian James, of Columbus, say they will pursue an effort to make recreational marijuana legal in Ohio this year. The duo led the failed ballot initiative in 2015 — dubbed Responsible Ohio — which aimed to legal recreational and medical marijuana but limited the pot growing operations to a handful of investors.
Ohio faces a Sept. 8 deadline to have its medical marijuana program up and running. That means the 56 businesses across the state who won a dispensary license now have less than six months launch their new ventures.
Thomas Rosenberger, of the National Cannabis Industry Associates of Ohio, said the state’s process may have been long, but it did it right — and Monday’s decision was long awaited.
“This is probably the most public-facing part of the program, so finally getting that aside is finally going to put to rest a lot of the questions about whether Sept. 8 is realistic or not,” he said.
Dozens of other start-ups were vying for a dispensary license in southwest Ohio, but their aspirations went up in smoke with Monday’s news. All told, more than 370 firms submitted dispensary applications to Ohio’s Board of Pharmacy, which will regulate the businesses. Ohio has set strict rules for how many dispensaries can open in certain parts of the state.
And as the new program has rolled out, dozens of communities have taken steps to temporarily block or ban pot-related businesses from opening.
Locally, Blue Ash, Colerain Township, Fairfield, Hamilton, Liberty Township, Sharonville and West Chester Township all have rules blocking marijuana-related businesses in their areas.
The law also bans marijuana businesses from being within 500 feet of schools, playgrounds, public libraries and churches.