Tuesday, August 15, 2023

The city can now fine landlords for renting storefronts to unlicensed cannabis shops

Photo from June by Stacie Joy 

As of yesterday, a new city law is now in effect that holds commercial landlords responsible for renting storefronts to unlicensed cannabis shops. 

Introduction 1001-B, known as Local Law 107 of 2023, prohibits owners of commercial spaces from knowingly leasing to unlicensed sellers of marijuana or tobacco products, imposing fines of up to $10,000 on landlords for violations. 

The legislation followed a Council oversight hearing on the growing problem of unlicensed smoke shops operating across the city. The bill was passed on June 22. 

In a statement by Queens Councilmember Lynn Schulman, chair of the Council's Health Committee and prime sponsor of the unlawful cannabis shop enforcement legislation: 
"My recently enacted legislation ... will help shut down the illegal cannabis and smoke shops that have proliferated our city and created public health and safety hazards in our communities. This legislation is a game changer and adds another tool to the enforcement toolbox against these harmful businesses." 
Per a media advisory about the newly enacted law: 
... agencies that conduct inspections for unlicensed marijuana or tobacco sales and find such activity may provide written notice to the property owner requiring they ensure such unlicensed activity is ceased, serving as the basis of the violation. Any subsequent inspection that finds continued violation would make the landlord subject to a $5,000 civil penalty at first, and a $10,000 penalty for each subsequent violation. The commencement of an eviction proceeding shall be considered an affirmative defense for a landlord.

It is estimated that New York City is home to approximately 8,000 illegal, unlicensed smoke shops [ed note: half of which seem to be in the East Village]. Consequently, sales by illicit stores undermine the licensed recreational marijuana market, depriving New Yorkers of the tax revenues and community reinvestment funds generated from the 13% tax on legal sales. The products sold in unlawful stores are unregulated and therefore can pose health risks to consumers.
As we've seen in previous months, shops that have been raided-fined have eventually resumed operations, new shops have risen from the ashes of shuttered venues, or new businesses with increasingly cutesy names arrive down the block.

Meanwhile, to avoid detection, several readers have noted at least two shops have removed their signage and only open in the evenings when a coordinated raid is less likely. 

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good!!

Anonymous said...

The only one undermining the city’s rollout of legal marijuana is the city itself. Meanwhile the mayor goes on and on about needing money from the feds yet he can’t tax the products that’s being sold from 8000 shops on city streets

Anonymous said...

Good, fuck em. The city needs to roll out legal weed yesterday, but these dubiously legal smoke shops are horrendous

Anonymous said...

You can report a a storefront here (not sure if it will do anything): https://cannabis.ny.gov/report-an-incident

Anonymous said...

Does anyone know if there is an easy way to report these places? 311 told me to call 911. 911 said call the police precinct directly. No one there seemed very interested. They were not interested because there was not an 'illegal sale in progress'. It seems like if you can report sidewalk dining and rats easily online, there should be a way to do this as well.

Anonymous said...

Going after the landlord reminds me of when the city did that in Chinatown with those shops selling fake handbags and watches years ago.

Anonymous said...

I just don't feel right about this. This is all the state's fault for screwing up the licensing process. These businesses opened with the intent of getting their licenses, but the state dragged out the process. Now landlords are being punished.

Anonymous said...

Amazing how fast Albany was able to move on this but still dragging their feet — and looking the wrong way — when it comes to lithium batteries and illegal vehicles that have turned NYC streets into the deadliest year for traffic deaths on record

Anonymous said...

They know they are not supposed to be selling and the one in my block is selling to minors - and has a rowdy crowd outside of it on many days. It has brought down the quality of life on this little block considerably and I want it closed.

Sarah said...

"These businesses opened with the intent of getting their licenses"

Many of these businesses opened well before there was any possibility of getting their licenses, meaning they were deliberately selling illegally. And their landlords knew. There was nothing stealthy about these operations whatsoever. If you knowingly lease to a store that's blatantly selling illegal goods and it blows up on you, that's your problem.

Anonymous said...

@9:10am ... try opening a bar without a liquor license or setting up a moonshine stand on the corner and see how long it takes to get shut down. Cry me a river for these poor "shops"? I don't think so.

Anonymous said...

You are either a shill for the illegal sellers or extremely naive. Do you think the licensing agency is going to say” Oops, it’s our fault you are selling illegal goods and skipping out on paying taxes. Here’s your license with our apologies?”

Anonymous said...

So can I open a liquor store or nail salon with only the “intent” of getting a license? Sign me up!

Anonymous said...

So, everyone is afraid to ride the subway or walk after dark, yet this is a priority? How about selling licenses to each smoke shop for a high rate and use that money for the good of all New Yorkers.

Anonymous said...


Hate to insert logic over emotion, but the slow rollout caused the market for these shops.

Imagine if there were less than 200 bars and liquor stores in the state? What would happen?

I forgot, it was called Prohibition, and that didn't work either.

https://ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/politics/2023/04/03/new-york-approves-99-more-pot-shop-licenses-after-court-ruling

Anonymous said...

The "Silver Linining" for what few of these illegal shops which will ever get busted is that they'll then be able to apply for fast-tracking in the licensing process since folks with "priors" are ostensibly given preference.

We seem to live in one of the dumbest of all possible timelines.

Anonymous said...

This is the right Link https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSewgscuKchRD50ydOCy8zuvp9cf7fXXfqPaBHEXr1hMRvz1xA/viewform

StevenS said...

Everyone isn't afraid to do that. We don't all read the Post and watch Fox news.

Anonymous said...

The city made this problem... allowed it to fester on the heels of the pandemic... and now of course will make laws so that they can make profit of busting them. the real losers here are the ones who got the legit go ahead, but got screwed from the pricing. Compared to numerous other states, NY and NYC have been the absolute greediest. Street dealers rejoice at the incompetence

Anonymous said...

The pot shop across the street from me has already closed, and good riddance. They attracted cars that would pull up and play loud music all night, over the music the pot shop blared from its speakers. How this proliferation of illegal drug selling shops was allowed to happen is a mystery to me. What is it with drug users that they have to be so loud and antisocial? Or maybe they are too social? If a bodega sells cigarettes or beer to a minor they are fined, can lose their cigarette and lottery sales license and can be shut down. This is the end of an error. Best thing the city has done in ages to a problem that should have never happened in the first place.

Anonymous said...

Sorry to be that guy but I moved from EV to California two years ago. There must be some black market weed dealers here. But I have yet to see or even hear of one; everyone I know purchases from legal dispensaries and is plenty satisfied with the quality and selection of products. I wish the same for NYC.

Sarah said...

I think everyone can agree that the slow rollout was a serious fuck-up, but that doesn't mean we have to support the hyenas coming in to break the law to profit, either.

Anonymous said...

Exactly! They are all just trying to make fast money on this because they know the city doesn’t have it together to shut them down quickly.

Anonymous said...

Classic NY politics… Legalization rollout is obviously a complete failure, so what do they do? Double down.

The shops exist for a reason, as did the delivery services that predate them- there’s a market out there. It just shows how totally out of touch our lawmakers are that they thought they could funnel a billion dollar industry into the the hands of a just a few outlets chosen by a board of political appointees.

This new prohibition clearly won’t fly, but they’re heading down the runway anyway. Good luck!