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The Water Cooler
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Thinking About Growing Commercial Marijuana...
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<blockquote data-quote="zghorner" data-source="post: 3213208" data-attributes="member: 35089"><p>["One problem is that Oregon simply handed out too many weed business licenses. Unlike Washington and Colorado, which capped the number of businesses allowed to open, the Beaver State set no such limit. </p><p></p><p>As of November 2018, Oregon had 2,065 registered weed business, compared to Washington’s 1,435, according to records from both states. Colorado, by contrast, has just 1,690.</p><p></p><p>Like farmland, licenses in Oregon were relatively easy to come by and cheap—thousands of dollars less than in California, for example. The license approval process may have also been a bit too, well, <em>mellow</em>, experts said. </p><p></p><p>“Almost everyone who applied has been able to get a license,” said Margolis. “There were few barriers to entry.”</p><p></p><p>The boom in bud may have put an unexpected burden on both business owners and regulators, she said. “It’s double what they planned for.”]</p><p></p><p>Sure looks like Oklahoma is on a fast track to Oregon 2.0...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="zghorner, post: 3213208, member: 35089"] ["One problem is that Oregon simply handed out too many weed business licenses. Unlike Washington and Colorado, which capped the number of businesses allowed to open, the Beaver State set no such limit. As of November 2018, Oregon had 2,065 registered weed business, compared to Washington’s 1,435, according to records from both states. Colorado, by contrast, has just 1,690. Like farmland, licenses in Oregon were relatively easy to come by and cheap—thousands of dollars less than in California, for example. The license approval process may have also been a bit too, well, [I]mellow[/I], experts said. “Almost everyone who applied has been able to get a license,” said Margolis. “There were few barriers to entry.” The boom in bud may have put an unexpected burden on both business owners and regulators, she said. “It’s double what they planned for.”] Sure looks like Oklahoma is on a fast track to Oregon 2.0... [/QUOTE]
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