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A recreational cannabis bill Gov. J.B. Pritzker is expected to sign could bring hundreds of new jobs to Illinois even before the law goes into effect and retail sales begin.
The owner of two medical cannabis dispensaries said there are likely to be hundreds of jobs created even before the adult-use, recreational cannabis bill is in full effect.
House Bill 1438 creates the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. The measure has been sent to Gov. J.B. Pritzkerâs desk. He has yet to sign the measure, but when he does, HCI Alternatives owner Chris Stone expects to have the medical dispensary continue and to expand to offer recreational sales. He said he expects 15 to 20 new customer service jobs for his operations.
âYouâre going to be seeing patient care consultants ⊠which are going to turn out to be customer service reps,â Stone said. âTheyâre going to be trained over the course of the next six months.â
He said there would be even more jobs created for existing cannabis cultivators.
âAnything from cultivation managers, meaning veg managers, flowering managers, trimmers, extraction, production packaging,â Stone said.
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And that probably wonât wait for the adult-use program because another bill expanding and making the medical pilot program permanent, Senate Bill 2023, could soon be signed by the governor, though that measure has yet to be sent even though it passed both chambers.
âSo I think youâre going to see probably increases between now and the end of the year with regard to the expansion of the medical program as well trying to accommodate for that,â Stone said. âYou got two programs that are going to see really good growth here.â
Marijuana Policy Project Senior Legislative Counsel Chris Lindsey said the number of jobs created in the first year in Coloradoâs legal cannabis industry was 18,000. He said itâs a safe bet thousands of new jobs will be created in Illinois.
âNo question about it,â Lindsey said. âWeâve probably had thousands of jobs created just on the medical cannabis program and thatâs been pretty limited. So now weâre going to see a much, much bigger system in place.â
Lindsey said there will be a lot of ancillary economic activity associated with the cannabis industry such as landlords, consultants, contractors, printers, packaging companies, lawyers and more.
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Additional jobs are expected once the state opens up more cultivation, dispensary and cannabis transportation licenses, something that will be based on a demand study thatâs part of the adult-use measure pending the governorâs signature.
The jobs at HCI Alternatives would offer start at $14 an hour, Stone said, and will include benefits. He said applicants will get the necessary training.
âYou would think you might need someone [with] maybe like a pharmacy background, or maybe some type of medical background, we actually like the idea of people that are customer service oriented, people that have a good way about them and that are quick either on their feet or with their head in terms of being able to learn product,â Stone said. âNot necessarily having any experience is maybe a good thing for us in terms of how we run our training.â
Stone said he doesnât require drug testing for employees because some are medical cannabis patients already.
âWe obviously do background checks and are provided fingerprints for our employees, but we donât necessarily do drug testing,â Stone said. âWe are looking for people that can use the product if theyâre a patient, but at the same time arenât using the product as theyâre working.â
The adult-use measure now on the governorâs desk gives local governments control over whether to allow recreational sales in their jurisdiction. Stone said the areas that donât allow retail sales could miss out on new jobs.
âIf they decide that they donât want to green light us to be able to do an adult-use secondary license and an adult-use at our current licensed facilities then weâre going to have to look elsewhere and then weâll have to get the state involved for a variance to look elsewhere,â Stone said.