PORTLAND, Maine
(AP) — Maine’s rollout of legal marijuana sales has been muted compared
with other states because of the coronavirus pandemic, but shops are
reporting brisk business nonetheless.
Maine
wasn’t able to replicate the grand opening scenes that have followed
the first sales in other states. But regulators reported more than $1
million in sales in October, more than $1.2 million in November and
nearly $2 million in December. The number of retail businesses also
continues to grow.
“Despite
all the market challenges, everything from COVID to supply chains and
beyond, Maine has done a really good job getting this market up and
running,” said Thomas Winstanley, vice president of marketing for Theory
Wellness, which has locations in South Portland and Waterville.
“Cannabis is becoming part of the social fabric.”
Nearly
a third of U.S. states have approved legal adult use marijuana. That
includes several states with longer established marijuana programs and
four that just went legal in the 2020 elections and are developing
programs.
But
only Maine went legal in 2016 and then took nearly four years to create a
legal framework for retail sales. Those sales began in October, just as
the pandemic was worsening in the state and around the country.
Cannabis
sales in Maine are much less than Massachusetts, which also went legal
in 2016 and was swifter to set up its marijuana program. Officials in
Massachusetts have reported more than $1 billion in sales going back to
fall 2018.
Maine
is now home to 15 marijuana stores, 16 cultivation facilities and nine
product manufacturing facilities that have active licenses. The state
approved the first six active licenses in September. Dozens more
licenses are in various places along the pipeline.
Maine’s
program was tailored to meet the needs of a smaller state. The state is
wise to take a cautious approach to growing the industry, especially
during a pandemic, said Scott Gagnon, a member of the Maine Marijuana
Advisory Commission.
Consumers
have had to exercise the same kind of social distancing and
face-covering requirements as everyone else in Maine, which is subject
to a statewide mask directive from Gov. Janet Mills, a Democrat.
“In
other states, on the first day of sales, there are people lined up
along the block and it’s a big, huge thing,” Gagnon said. “I think it
has, at least compared to other states before us, been less of a big
deal.”
Maine’s
long-established medical marijuana program, which dates to the late
1990s, is also still operating during the pandemic. The medical program
remains much larger, accounting for more than $200 million in sales last
year.
Some
in the medical marijuana business approached retail legalization with
trepidation, and that has continued with the roll-out of recreational
sales, said Catherine Lewis, chairwoman of the board for the Medical
Marijuana Caregivers of Maine trade association.
“The
way it was rolled out was more for large commercial businesses as
opposed to the small Maine cottage industry we started with the medical
program,” she said.
For
now, though, the retail industry is excited it’s getting up and
running, even under less than ideal circumstances, said David Boyer, a
Portland-based cannabis industry consultant.
“Maine
has grown marijuana for a long time, and with tourism down due to COVID
it can be tough for some of these places when you open up,” Boyer said.
“There’s stuff on the shelves.”