Observer: That’s a grow facility?
Steinmann: Grow, manufacture, and then obviously they sell to retailers. In those particular situations— if it if it’s strictly going to be for adult use—then our revenue stream is greatly improved. Basically, once they’re growing plants, they sell the plant to the manufacturer, who is going to make it into whatever form that they’re going to put it in.
Tahir Johnson has been arrested on marijuana possession charges three times. Now, for the first time in his life, his conviction on one of those charges won't hurt his employment prospects. It will help.
Some residents of Ewing are scared to death about how a proposed "grow operation" will affect their property values. We've received emails from concerned residents in the neighborhood where the proposed facility will be located.
Neighbors are afraid that it will adversely affect their property values. No one really knows for sure what the real impact will be.
Concerns about people possibly trying to break into the facility, not to mention the odor and just how much the value of their property will be impacted.
There are a few communities currently considering plans. A handful of others already have been adjusting to legal medical grow sites as new neighbors, while a few spots in South Jersey have embraced the job creation that comes with the new business.
It can be a contentious relationship — such as in one Hunterdon County town, which this month reversed course on previous plans and prohibited any cannabis facilities from being set up in the community.
Alexandria votes down marijuana
AFC Gamma, Inc. announced it has provided a credit facility of $22 million to Justice Cannabis Co., a Chicago-based multi-state operator with licenses in eight states. The credit facility is designed to provide Justice Cannabis Co. with the capital necessary to purchase and complete the build out of its 72,000 square foot cultivation and processing facility, along with the buildout of a dispensary, both in Ewing, New Jersey.
The New Jersey Department of Health last week issued a permit to Justice Grown in Ewing to begin growing medical marijuana. The permit was issued after a comprehensive review including several site inspections, background checks of its corporate officers and a review of its security operations and cultivation facility.
Justice Grown is proud to announce that it has officially received a permit to cultivate and process medicinal cannabis products from the New Jersey Department of Health. The permit will allow the company to serve the more than 74,000 patients in the state from its operation in Ewing Township, NJ.
More than a year after the New Jersey Department of Health granted initial approval to a Chicago-based company’s proposal to open a medical marijuana facility in Mercer County, the firm is expected to seek approvals at the municipal level.
Submitted by njlegalizeme on Tue, 12/18/2018 - 12:35