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Save the Cannabis Industry: Topple The Pyramids!

by Steve DeAngelo

In early October of 2006, I founded Harborside Health Center in Oakland CA; which had just received one of the first six licenses granted anywhere in the United States for commercial cannabis activity. Like every other new licensee; I had gained my cannabis experience and knowledge in the underground, legacy market. There was no alternative in those days. Cannabis corporations and consultants and MSOs did not exist then.

The locally regulated medical cannabis system that we legacy operators built in California from then until 2018 was simple and fair and efficient. It moved weed from growers to consumers along a very short supply chain. It maximized margin for the growers, and value for the consumers. Cultivators were able to sell their cannabis for prices that allowed them to buy the land they were farming on, to take vacations and send their kids to college. Medical cannabis patients got the very best lab-tested cannabis in the world at lower than ever seen prices—and the employees at dispensaries had the best jobs of their lives, receiving fair wages and good benefits; being treated with dignity and living with purpose and meaning.

Nobody got rich. Nobody made intergenerational wealth, but everybody was taken care of. The system worked in its basic purpose of providing high quality cannabis at affordable prices, and providing all of its participants with an adequate income and dignified lifestyle—so it grew, steadily gaining more and more in-state market share from the underground market.

Everything changed on January 1, 2018. The day before, Harborside had been supplied by over 500 small, independent cannabis farmers. The day after, we discovered that only 10 of those growers had been able to secure state licenses. At the same time, out on the sales floor, our prices increased by 40% because of ridiculous tax schemes enacted by all levels of government—city, county, and state. So consumers ran out of our doors with sticker shock, right into the arms of all the growers who had not been licensed. We immediately began to see a drop in sales, for the first time in our history—and the same thing happened to licensed dispensaries across the state.

The result was predictable. Today, the legal market in California is estimated at about 20% of the overall market. The only people who buy weed in licensed dispensaries are tourists, or people rich enough not to care about how much they pay, or so clueless they can’t figure out how to buy untaxed cannabis at half the price from their next door neighbors—on either side of them.

The massive regulatory overreach was complicated by the entry of big capital to California’s cannabis market. Most of this capital came from the Canadian public markets, and sadly its effect was more harmful than helpful. The financing largely flowed into the hands of newcomers with mainstream business backgrounds, rather than seasoned industry veterans.

These newcomers knew a lot about obtaining licenses and running investor relations, but very few of them knew anything about cannabis. The new corporate players set up massive cultivation centers, developed their planting plans more according to spreadsheets than deep experience or love of the plant, and created long and complex supply chains. For the most part, they couldn’t tolerate counterculture values and quickly got rid of most of the people in their companies who actually knew anything about the plant.

“Scale” was the word you kept hearing from these folks, and at first it sounded good to me. Coming from my Harborside experience, where even with our fair prices, many patients still could not afford to buy as much medicine as they needed, the idea of using modern agricultural and manufacturing techniques to cut costs and boost production was attractive. How cool would it be if our patients could actually buy all the cannabis they needed and wanted? That was one of the major reasons I had supported Proposition 64.

Today, after five years of watching at-scale corporate cannabis at work in California and other places, I have a different view. Almost everywhere I go, the highest quality cannabis is found in the unlicensed legacy market, not in legal shops. It is usually less expensive, sometimes half the cost or less than legal cannabis. Almost everywhere I go, I find that my counterculture cannabis tribe, the people who love this plant the most, and sacrificed the most to make her legal, have been mostly purged from legal companies, and many of them have entirely lost their livelihoods.

That’s the way it is in California, and the way it is in Massachusetts, and the way it is in Illinois. In Canada, only 20% of cannabis produced by the Licensed Producers since 2018 has actually been sold. 80% was of such low quality that it had to be destroyed or is still warehoused—resulting in the loss of $11 billion Canadian dollars of investors money.

Scale has driven legacy operators out of the legal market; and unleashed new versions of Prohibition to enforce its monopoly. Independent growers have lost their companies and livelihoods or become wage slaves in cannabis factories. Legal consumers are forced to pay higher prices for lower quality cannabis, shareholders have lost billions of dollars of value, and a parade of corporate cannabis executives have failed and some have even pled guilty to fraud and money laundering charges.

What a disaster. The system doesn’t really work for anybody but the investment bankers who engineered this tragedy. But many of this group realized long ago that the system is not working and have moved on to Psychedelics.

At its essence, scale is a pyramid—a small number of people directing the actions of a much greater number, and funneling the value thereby created back up to the top. If we listen carefully, we can hear the plant herself talking to us about scale. The Plant is telling us that she does not want to live in a Pyramid; that she will not thrive in massive cultivation facilities; she will not survive in crazy long supply chains; and a whole range of unanticipated problems will arise if we put her in these situations.

And there is another, deeper message. We have to listen carefully to hear this one, because Mama Ganja is a plant, so she talks to us in metaphor and symbols and poetry and aroma. If you pay close attention, you can almost hear her whisper “I did not come to you to help you build Pyramids; I did not come to you to help you build intergenerational wealth; I came to you to help you topple Pyramids; to spread prosperity and freedom more broadly, not to concentrate them more narrowly.”

So these days I’m thinking about a different approach. 1,000,000 square foot grow facilities don’t work. Human scale cultivation and handling has always been what produced the highest quality cannabis, and distributed it most efficiently—and it is the pathway out of the mess we are in today. Human scale cultivation and a short, direct route from the farm to consumers has always been what produced the highest quality cannabis—and it is the pathway out of the mess we are in today.

What would happen if we enacted an industry-wide 5000 square foot canopy limit? What would happen if we awarded those licenses easily and widely, without ridiculous regulation and over taxation? What would happen if we allowed those licensees to make any product they wanted out of the cannabis they grow, and then sell them directly to consumers, straight from the farm gate or the workshop floor?

It seems to me that almost everybody would win. Thousands of legacy, artisan producers could get into the industry without the need for crazy amounts of capital. They would be growing small batch, top quality cannabis, and turning it into a wide range of artisan quality products. Consumers would still get higher quality cannabis at lower prices, most of the middlemen costs could be substantially reduced, and risks would be far lower for everyone.

The biggest challenge in this scenario is distributing the cannabis from these many thousands of small producers to the many millions of consumers in the modern marketplace. But there are ways to do it, if we can get regulators and investors to stretch a bit and embrace a rational, efficient distribution system.

Imagine a cannabis artisans village that housed 100 small producers in one geographic location. Consumers could walk from shop to shop, selecting from dozens of different strains and products, all of the highest quality. The same crowd would provide clientele for a range of other non-plant touching businesses: restaurants, boutiques, head shops, music and comedy venues, maybe even hotels. What a wonderful experience it would be.

The same thing could be done digitally. If small producers were allowed to directly fulfill retail orders via the mail or package services like FedEx and UPS, they could all be given space in an online marketplace, where consumers could place orders directly with them. It would be kind of like an Etsy for weed.

This type of broadly distributed cultivation of cannabis would solve all or most of the problems we are facing with scale. High quality cannabis would replace low quality cannabis and prices would drop, so consumers would be attracted back to the legal market. Legacy producers would flock to the legal opportunity, reducing the supply of unregulated cannabis. Tax revenue would expand along with the growing legal market, and more people would be able to become entrepreneurs instead of employees.

Scaled-up cannabis companies would be freed from the thankless and impossible task of producing high quality cannabis in massive facilities. They could stop disappointing their investors and focus instead on an achievable goal: providing the financing, infrastructure and marketing capacity that small producers will need to succeed. If we were able to make that kind of mutually beneficial reset; with each part of the industry focusing on what it does best; with all of us taking into account the natural inclinations of the plant, without trying to force her into a pyramid she does not want to live in, then together we can position the industry for real, steady organic growth.

We don’t have to accept the status quo. We can move away from the boom and bust cycle that has been so destructive for so many companies and so many markets, and restore the excitement and optimism that we saw in the early days of legal cannabis. The brightest of futures is still possible if we have the courage to think outside the Pyramid.

 

 

Steve DeAngelo

Steve DeAngelo is a globally recognized cannabis leader who was dubbed “the father of the legal industry” by former Speaker of the California Assembly Willie Brown. As a lifelong activist, author, educator, investor, and entrepreneur, he has spent more than four decades on the front lines of the cannabis reform movement. His most notable business achievements include co-founding Harborside-one of the first six dispensaries licensed in the United States-now a publicly-traded company on the Canadian Securities Exchange; Steep Hill Laboratory, the first cannabis analytics company; Arcview Group, the first dedicated cannabis investment network, and Last Prisoner Project, dedicated to fighting criminal injustice and reimagining drug policy

Steve is the author of The Cannabis Manifesto and an originator of the wellness approach to understanding cannabis. He played a key role in the passage of Initiative 59, Washington DC’s medical cannabis law; the passage of Prop 64, California’s adult-use law; and successfully defended multiple legal attempts by US federal authorities to shutter the doors of Harborside.

This Post Has 2 Comments
  1. Steve has been a true cannabis supporter for years. The plant is medicine – once people realize that it can be used for a number of ailments the pharmaceutical companies will swarm in on targets firms that will push it into a pill. The market for legal cannabis has to evolve and it will overtime. People like Steve started this entire industry and his effort to support the small farmer is valid. The issue is corporate America will not see it the same way. Hopefully it will wash out like the craft beverage market in the US has. Individuals should be able to grow a plant and use that plant. Could you imagine someone saying you can’t grow a tomato plant?

  2. In Oregon, though price pressure has created enormous stress in the licensed industry, forcing many high quality growers to leave the legal market as well as reduced revenue at every level of the market, the best quality cannabis is still likely grown in the licensed space.

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