Massachusetts
When will Massachusetts allow cannabis lounges? It’s anyone’s guess
There was a time when it might have been considered surprising: In a state where cannabis lounges were not yet licensed, a Worcester lounge was open for business.
Cannabis connoisseurs could arrive, get high, and hang out, just as if they were nursing a beer at a bar down the street.
But to call the Summit Lounge an open secret would be the wrong designation.
The lounge, which operates as a private club, has 12,000 members. Everyone — Worcester city councilors, police, public health officials, and even the state’s Cannabis Control Commission — knows about it.
“You can come down there, you can rent a bong, you can smoke a 2-gram dab if you want,” owner Kyle Moon said, referring to concentrated marijuana. “And then you can put your stuff in your pocket and you can leave the building.”
The Summit Lounge is one of an unknown number of establishments operating in a gray area of Massachusetts’ cannabis law.
The lounge isn’t selling drugs, placing it out of reach of state cannabis regulators.
Members pay $10 per visit, self-supply their weed, and can smoke it as they please while unwinding in a dimly-lit back room blocks from Polar Park, home of the Worcester Red Sox. If not for the lack of a fluorescent “Samuel Adams” sign and a back bar stocked with liquor, the Summit Lounge could pass as another local pub.
A look into the The Summit Lounge and its owner Kyle Moon at 116 Water St Worcester, MA on Wednesday May 1, 2024.Sebastian Restrepo
Moon has operated the lounge for more than six years while waiting, he said, for the commission to issue licenses for social consumption businesses — commercial establishments where cannabis can be consumed on-site.
In Massachusetts, where people who publicly smoke pot risk a $100 fine, advocates say cannabis cafes or similar businesses would be a haven for tourists and residents of apartments or public housing where the drug is not allowed — not to mention a popular new draw and expansion of the booming regional cannabis industry.
Even as retail marijuana prices sunk last year to their lowest point since pot shops opened in 2018, the state’s cannabis sellers notched a record $1.56 billion in sales. Nearly 100,000 medical marijuana patients accounted for another $225 million.
Of the 24 states that have legalized marijuana, half allow pot lounges or some other form of on-site use. Massachusetts is not one of them.
Bay State voters allowed such businesses when they legalized recreational weed in 2016. But for several reasons, and to the irritation of hopeful business owners, the commission is still drafting regulations for social consumption.
Hot Box Social was the first licensed cannabis consumption lounge to open in Michigan. (Photo provided to MLive.com by Hot Box Social)
Cannabis Commissioner Bruce Stebbins, who is helping lead efforts to regulate social consumption, said work is progressing toward a regulatory “framework.”
He said commission officials have studied social consumption in other states and hope to write regulations that keep the public safe while allowing businesses to turn a profit.
“A colleague has referred to regulatory agencies sometimes as ‘sloths on Ambien,’” he remarked earlier this spring. “I’ve said we’re a regulatory agency trying to keep up with an industry that really wants to be innovative and entrepreneurial.”
Absent official regulations, business owners have taken it upon themselves to operate as they are able.
Similar to Moon, Samantha Kanter operates a social consumption business, Dinner at Mary’s, in the murky void left open by the lack of state guidelines.
Her Boston-based business caters private meals using a cannabis-infused olive oil and hosts cannabis-friendly yoga sessions and other events.
But where Moon sells memberships to cannabis consumers who “BYOC,” Kanter uses a “gifting model,” she said. Customers pay for a yoga lesson or catered meal; the weed is a bonus.
A cannabis yoga event hosted by Samantha Kanter’s businesses, Dinner at Mary’s, in Boston’s Charlestown neighborhood on March 13, 2024.Courtesy of Samantha Kanter
For many, the default image of social consumption is akin to a cigar lounge or bar, but for marijuana — similar to the Summit Lounge, or Amsterdam’s famed cannabis coffeeshops.
But prospective business owners also envision outdoor hangouts akin to beer gardens, pot-friendly music venues, spas where customers can toke up before a massage, cannabis festivals with legal on-site consumption, and much more.
The Boston Globe recently told the story of a Somerville dispensary hosting weekly stoned knitting circles. Since the shop lacks a social consumption license, any smoking occurs offsite beforehand.
Kanter has even higher dreams: “At Fenway [Park], you should be able to get a seltzer infused with cannabis and a seltzer with booze in it.”
Both she and Moon have been open about their businesses — and their concerns that the Cannabis Control Commission has been too slow to regulate social consumption.
The board drafted regulations in 2017. But it held off on issuing licenses amid concerns from then-Gov. Charlie Baker and others about how lounges would avoid over-serving patrons and how they would account for other safety issues.
Bruce Stebbins, a member of the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission, at a May 2019 meeting in Springfield of the state Gaming Commission, which he formerly sat on. (Hoang ‘Leon’ Nguyen / The Republican)
Social consumption was further delayed by an issue with state law that left unclear how municipalities could decide to allow on-site cannabis consumption businesses. The state Legislature corrected that problem in 2022.
The commission also had planned to introduce social consumption with a pilot program limited to 12 communities.
The board scuttled that idea last year. Stebbins, who co-chairs the working group developing social consumption regulations, said keeping the pilot program could have delayed the rollout of social consumption by “easily at least two years.”
Last year the commission held three public meetings and sent a survey to 1,000 cannabis businesses statewide to gather input on social consumption.
Stebbins said the working group plans to release a framework for social consumption regulations this year, though a lengthy process would remain before the commission finalized the regulations themselves.
To some hopeful business owners, it sounds like a bureaucratic nightmare.
In March, at the New England Cannabis Convention in Boston, Stebbins sat on a panel titled, “What’s Taking So Long? Social Consumption in Massachusetts.”
A customer plays cards and smokes a joint at Kalkushka, a licensed marijuana lounge in Kalkaska, Michigan. (Photo provided to MLive.com by Chris Atteberry)
Indeed, eight months had passed since Stebbins and fellow commissioner Nurys Camargo said their working group would unveil a “regulatory proposal to the full commission in the near future.”
When the panel took questions, Kanter, Moon, and others chastised the commission’s regulatory pace.
“We want the license. We want the regulations. We want to be good corporate citizens. So why isn’t there a license?” Moon asked. “I don’t understand it and I’ve been struggling with it for six years.”
“I know the message is, ‘What’s taking so long?’” Stebbins responded. He remains optimistic about the possibility for the regulations to be written by the end of this year.
But licensed cannabis lounges open for business are likely far off.
“I don’t see an actual establishment opening for at least three to four years,” Moon said.
A cannabis-infused dish prepared for a Dinner at Mary’s tasting dinner.Courtesy of Samantha Kanter
Even with commission regulations in writing, individual towns must choose to allow consumption venues. Then local zoning and health boards will have their say. Only then, once business owners understand how they can operate, will they begin the state licensing process. And that could take years to complete.
“It’s very difficult to find a space if I’m not sure what we’ll be allowed to do,” Kanter said.
Until the regulations are in place, she said many property owners are unwilling to discuss leasing space to a future social consumption business.
“I’ve talked to 50 landlords and 49 of them were like, ‘We’re not touching it,’” Kanter said. And she doesn’t blame them.
A myriad of questions remain for regulators to address, including how business operators will monitor customers to prevent over-serving.
The Summit Lounge, a private cannabis consumption club in Worcester, is one of an uncertain number of establishments operating in the gray area of Massachusetts’ cannabis law.Sebastian Restrepo
Newton Police Chief John Carmichael Jr., who sits on the commission’s Cannabis Advisory Board, said he believes social consumption businesses can be opened safely, just as other cannabis businesses have been — “as long as they’re following the regulations.”
“It comes down to individual responsibility — the establishment being responsible and the individual being responsible as they come and go,” Carmichael said.
The Summit Lounge “has not been the cause of any major issues,” a Worcester Police Department spokesperson said.
Though no roadside test exists to detect whether a driver is impaired by marijuana, Carmichael said police officers are trained to recognize the signs of a high driver. The arrival of pot lounges will not greatly affect how police operate, he said.
Other questions remain.
If a patron doesn’t finish a pot-infused brownie, for example, could they take it home to finish later?
In the variable New England climate, will smoking or vaping be permitted indoors? As a private club, the Summit Lounge allows smoking. But regular businesses face far stricter rules.
An ashtray fills up inside the consumption lounge of Only Alien Cannabis Co. in Kalamazoo, Mich. on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024.Devin Anderson-Torrez | MLive.com
“My concern is they’ll regulate it into an unprofitable state,” Blake Mensing, an attorney who has represented both cannabis companies and municipalities, said.
He and his business partners are now opening Firebrand Cannabis, a dispensary near Boston’s South Station, though Mensing also hopes to one day open a cannabis lounge.
Stebbins believes the state’s cannabis industry is better positioned now to adopt social consumption than it was a year ago.
He points to the removal of the pilot program, the recent introduction of grants to support businesses in the state’s cannabis social equity program, and reforms that reeled in the conditions municipalities can place on cannabis businesses.
But the pace of the commission’s work still confounds business owners like Kanter, who have spent years operating in a legal gray area.
“I just don’t understand what’s taking so long,” she said.
Massachusetts
Hunger in Massachusetts is about to get worse – The Boston Globe
Catherine D’Amato is president and CEO of The Greater Boston Food Bank.
US Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins recently threatened to withhold funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program to states — including Massachusetts — that are not providing the federal government with data about the food program’s recipients. Meanwhile, new SNAP eligibility and work requirements, passed as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, have gone into effect. These wide-ranging new rules require even more Americans who were previously exempt, like veterans, teens, and older Americans, to work or volunteer 20 hours per week to qualify for food assistance as well as jump through bureaucratic hoops to keep their benefits.
For The Greater Boston Food Bank and our anti-hunger partners across the state, this one-two punch presents serious new challenges in our mission to end hunger. Federal food assistance programs are under unrelenting attack. And hunger is about to get worse.
For years, food insecurity has been on the rise in Massachusetts. Even before the federal government shut down and new requirements took effect, 1 in 3 Massachusetts residents struggled to afford enough food.
These are not abstract numbers. These are our neighbors, parents, caregivers, veterans, seniors, children, and full-time workers. Too many are forced to choose between buying food and paying rent, heating bills, or medical expenses.
Those experiencing food insecurity are often hiding in plain sight. Among food insecure individuals that do not report being disabled or retired, 82 percent are working households — meaning that one or more people in the house are working, according to the food bank’s most recent Food Access Study.
SNAP is the nation’s strongest defense against hunger, providing assistance in fiscal 2024 for nearly 42 million people on average per month. For every meal provided by the emergency food system in America, SNAP provides nine more meals. It is simply impossible — for both financial and logistical reasons — for the emergency food network to absorb major cuts to this program. Yet that is exactly what we are facing.
In Massachusetts, the new federal eligibility and work requirements will cause up to 160,000 veterans, caregivers, former foster youth, older adults, and legal immigrants to lose SNAP benefits or see them significantly reduced over the next year. That represents an additional 15 percent of our neighbors across the Commonwealth losing their benefits.
These changes will roll out gradually as recipients complete their annual recertification, meaning the impact will build month after month — driving more and more people to local food pantries for help. And the new SNAP restrictions won’t happen in isolation; people will also feel pinched as Affordable Care Act health care subsidies expire and new Medicaid cuts take effect.
Addressing this urgent societal issue and the immense gaps that will be left in the wake of the SNAP cuts requires action — both collective and individual.
The Healey administration has continued the state’s strong commitment to addressing food insecurity. Its anti-hunger task force will soon offer recommendations on how to mitigate the impacts of SNAP cuts. It is critical that the Commonwealth increases its investment in the Massachusetts Emergency Food Assistance Program, which allows the state’s food banks to purchase and supply healthy food to local pantries.
Individually, every one of us can help by volunteering, advocating for policies that strengthen the state’s social security network, or donating to hunger-relief organizations. Join the mission to end hunger.
Massachusetts
Measles exposure possible in Boston, Westborough, officials warn – The Boston Globe
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health is working with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local partners to identify and notify those who may have been exposed, officials said.
“Measles is a highly contagious, airborne disease, which has increased significantly in the United States because of the unfortunate decrease in vaccination rates. It is also a preventable disease,” Public Health Commissioner Dr. Robbie Goldstein said in a statement. “This current situation serves as an important reminder of the critical role vaccination plays in protecting our communities.”
While Massachusetts has not had a measles case this year, the United States has seen the highest number of nationwide cases in more than a decade – nearly 2,000 in 44 jurisdictions, which included three confirmed deaths from measles, Goldstein said.
“Fifteen years ago, measles had been considered eliminated in the United States, but that tremendous progress is at risk,” Goldstein said. “Vaccines are one of the most important public health interventions ever – they are safe, effective, and lifesaving.”
Officials said the exposures may have occurred at Logan Airport Terminal B on Dec. 11 from 2:30 p.m. to 4:45 p.m.; at the DoubleTree hotel in Westborough from 3:30 p.m. on Dec. 11 to 9 p.m. on Dec. 12; and at Logan Airport Terminal C from 6 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. on Dec. 12.
“Those who could have been exposed and begin to develop symptoms of measles should call their healthcare provider before visiting an office, clinic, or emergency department,” public health officials said in the statement. “Visiting a healthcare facility may put others at risk and should be avoided if possible.”
Those who have had measles in the past or have received two doses of the Measles, Mumps, and Rubella (MMR) vaccine are unlikely to develop measles even if they were exposed, officials said.
Boston Public Health Commissioner Dr. Bisola Ojikutu also encouraged people to get vaccinated for measles.
“With multiple measles outbreaks across the country and increased travel around the holidays, now is an important time to ensure that you and your family are protected,” she said.
Ojikutu said two doses of MMR vaccine are 97 percent effective at preventing measles and provide protection against mumps and rubella. Children should receive the vaccine at 12-15 months of age and again before kindergarten, she said.
Children who are at least 6 months old and traveling internationally or to areas of the US with active outbreaks should receive an early dose of vaccine before traveling, Ojikutu said.
“It is never too late for children or adults to get the measles vaccine even if they are past the recommended age,” Ojikutu said.
Early symptoms of measles occur one to three weeks after exposure and may resemble a cold, with symptoms fever, cough, runny nose, and red eyes. A rash occurs on the skin two to four days after the initial symptoms develop and usually appears first on the head, officials said.
People with measles may be contagious up to four days before the rash appears and for four days after the rash starts, officials said.
State public health officials are urging anyone who has not been vaccinated or doesn’t know their measles immunization status to contact their healthcare provider to get vaccinated with at least one dose of the MMR vaccine.
“Measles vaccine given within 72 hours of exposure may prevent measles disease,” officials said in the statement. “Vaccination beyond this window will provide protection from subsequent exposures.”
Emily Sweeney can be reached at emily.sweeney@globe.com. Follow her @emilysweeney and on Instagram @emilysweeney22.
Massachusetts
Circle Furniture closes all stores in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
Circle Furniture, which has eight locations in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, appears to have suddenly closed all of its stores right before Christmas.
“All Circle Furniture Locations are CLOSED Till Further Notice,” a message on the company website states.
Circle Furniture has stores in Boston’s Seaport neighborhood, Acton, Cambridge, Framingham, Hyannis, Middleton, Pembroke and Portsmouth, New Hampshire, as well as a warehouse and outlet store in Acton. The Hyannis location had just opened in May.
The Boston Globe reported that employees found out about the closures on Friday via email.
“With a heavy heart, circumstance [sic] have gone against the business and we can no longer afford to continue operations, therefore all employees are being let go including your position effective Dec. 23,” the email reportedly stated.
The newspaper said the Acton-based furniture seller had about 65 employees. Companies with more than 50 employees are supposed to give 60 days notice before a mass layoff, but no Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN) filing from Circle Furniture had appeared on the state website as of Tuesday.
Circle Furniture on its website describes itself as “a family run business that has been around for almost 70 years.”
“We are dedicated to providing a wide selection of unique, quality furniture with a team of talented designers to help you every step of the way,” the company says. “Besides sourcing expertly crafted and beautiful furniture, we take strides to be an important part of the local community-both by working with local factories and supporting local charities.”
WBZ-TV has reached out to Circle Furniture for comment.
-
Maine1 week agoElementary-aged student killed in school bus crash in southern Maine
-
New Mexico1 week agoFamily clarifies why they believe missing New Mexico man is dead
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro, a 47-year-old physicist and fusion scientist, shot and killed in his home in Brookline, Mass. | Fortune
-
Detroit, MI1 week ago‘Love being a pedo’: Metro Detroit doctor, attorney, therapist accused in web of child porn chats
-
Health1 week ago‘Aggressive’ new flu variant sweeps globe as doctors warn of severe symptoms
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz and See How Much You Know About Jane Austen
-
Education1 week agoVideo: How We Tested Earplugs for Sleeping
-
World6 days agoPutin says Russia won’t launch new attacks on other countries ‘if you treat us with respect’