Business opportunity in legal states

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
The licensing requirements and application process, crazy license fees and competition you will not believe make growing an uphill battle in Alaska. Backlog of hundreds of applications and hindsight is always 20/20.

An issue in Fairbanks now is the odor. What we love "they" don't. Requirements for odor control are in the laws so be prepared.

The point here - there will be a growing industry just on air movement and odor control.

Is it really an issue? Yes! A county in SE Washington just banned all cannabis grow ops by popular vote. In Fairbanks every borough council meeting where a cannabis facility license comes up for approval or discussion the Red Shirts show up and do everything together. Opposed to cannabis for every reason.

Just a thought here
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Controlled environment agriculture, aka sealed growing facilities. Air exchange in a frigid climate is a bad idea for lots of reasons.

Shed the heat without exchanging air.

I can do it without AC.
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
You're going to heat anything in the North and air exchange is a must. This is the point of the post. It can be done. One of the largest growers in Alaska had just this problem in one of their three grow rooms. Humidity is the likely culprit for Blackwater to hermie. 300 plants + out the door and destroyed. Posts on Facebook ragging about the seeds and three expert growers canned because of decreased staff needs losing a room .
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
And that's the problem, because the black market can easily make money selling weed for less than that.
That's one of the big issues here 2 years after legalization. A lot of folks went legal and it's way more than license fees. 24/7 video surveillance feed to the state with no blind spots, cash payment only of taxes requiring each operator to drive almost 400 miles one way regularly as we as samples to labs and so on.

Others chose to stay free and it's caused some hard feelings
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
That's one of the big issues here 2 years after legalization. A lot of folks went legal and it's way more than license fees. 24/7 video surveillance feed to the state with no blind spots, cash payment only of taxes requiring each operator to drive almost 400 miles one way regularly as we as samples to labs and so on.

Others chose to stay free and it's caused some hard feelings
Those opposed to legalisation have piled on so much regulations they're encouraging the worst of the black market.
 

neved

Well-Known Member
I don’t know what’s happening but
Ive buying mine from weedmaps deliveries In LA.
Exotic strains 1/2 100$ (Wedding cake)
I was working in dispensary as well in downtown la .
Got some exprinces how these shops put the weeds into jar and selling them 5/6 times more than ....
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Cannabis is currently badly over regulated. I think market forces will push back on this and things will get more reasonable over time.

Corporate cannabis can be quality but needs strong oversight and an actively involved consumer. They'll be shamed into behaving if they get caught cutting corners and word gets around.

It is also true that technology will continue pushing growing costs down and that will eventually benefit the customer.
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Cannabis is currently badly over regulated. I think market forces will push back on this and things will get more reasonable over time.

Corporate cannabis can be quality but needs strong oversight and an actively involved consumer. They'll be shamed into behaving if they get caught cutting corners and word gets around.

It is also true that technology will continue pushing growing costs down and that will eventually benefit the customer.
The cheapies will start going with machine trimmers pretty soon. Moisture here is 15% or less. Growers are responsible for paying $50 @ ounce for bud they grow. Up front. Anchorage assembly sees the state collected another million in these taxes and ooooh. We smell money. They tried to tack on an additional 2.5% on sales tax inside Anchorage to bring it to 7.5% sales tax on cannabis. Not beer which I will guarantee you outsells bud any day.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
The cheapies will start going with machine trimmers pretty soon. Moisture here is 15% or less. Growers are responsible for paying $50 @ ounce for bud they grow. Up front. Anchorage assembly sees the state collected another million in these taxes and ooooh. We smell money. They tried to tack on an additional 2.5% on sales tax inside Anchorage to bring it to 7.5% sales tax on cannabis. Not beer which I will guarantee you outsells bud any day.
If there was a larger market there I'd move.
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Update: Anchorage

http://www.ktva.com/story/38781894/does-the-nose-really-know-marijuana-company-says-codes-are-too-vague

"In an ongoing series of violations, AlaskaSense, LLC was issued six odor violations in the month of May between May 4 and May 11. Land Use Enforcement officers detected a strong odor of marijuana beyond the property lines. The violations came before the municipality of Anchorage on Monday.


AlaskaSense owner Smadi Warden had her handlers permit revoked last week after an investigation from February deemed she and her company did not properly dispose of marijuana waste, failed to allow investigators into a waste dumpster and had the dumpster emptied while investigators were away."

Dumbass.
 
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