The wait is finally over.
At the Friday meeting, the commission’s executive director Jeff Brown proposed licensing 10 cultivation sites, double the initial number, to meet patient demand.
All of the businesses given licenses Friday are certified minority- or women-owned, Brown said.
And one of them, Etain New Jersey LLC is comprised of nearly 75% percent females. In fact, Etain is also New York’s only women-owned, family-run and vertically integrated cannabis company.
Etain CEO, Amy Peckham, founded the company along with her two daughters Hillary and Keeley, learned that they'd won a New Jersey operating license while attending the Benzinga Cannabis Capital Conference in New York.
'We're so excited. We jumped up from our seats when we heard. My hands are still shaking," Amy Peckham told Benzinga. "We'd been trying every two years," said Peckham who gave a presentation at Friday's Benzinga conference. She and her daughters started Etain when they began researching medical marijuana and discovered its potential benefits
The licenses granted on Friday are exclusively for medical marijuana businesses, which is all that New Jersey has so far, even though voters said yes to legal adult-use weed last fall.
The rollout of the state's cannabis law, not unlike many others, is complex and moves in fits and starts, but the New Jersey commission is expected to begin licensing new businesses soon.