Skip to main content

Cannabis news -- Washington gets its first unionized marijuana shop

Washington gets its first unionized marijuana shop

It’s a first in Washington’s six-year legal marijuana industry -- the state’s first unionized retail store, and the owner couldn't be more thrilled about it. (Photo: KOMO News)

SEATTLE -- It’s a first in Washington’s six-year legal marijuana industry -- the state’s first unionized retail store, and the owner couldn't be more thrilled about it.

Have A Heart has signed a collective bargaining agreement with United Food and Commercial Workers Local 21, covering it’s 134 retail shop employees at its five locations.

Luke Wong is one of those newly covered employees.

“I’ve only really done serving jobs before this, it’s the same skill set but different products obviously," said Wong, who is the Belltown shop’s lead 'budtender'.

Marijuana is a far different product than any other and that’s what makes this unionization so special.

“We are not allowed to deduct any expenses that normal businesses are allowed to,” said Have A Heart CEO Ryan Kunkel, who founded the company in 2011.

The IRS allows business deductions for employer supplied benefits such as health insurance costs and retirement contributions, but not if the business deals with marijuana.

“Because we still traffic in a federally illegal narcotic in the eyes of the federal government, they will take our tax revenue, " Kunkel said. "However, they won't acknowledge what we have is a legal business -- therefore we don't get deductions.”

He was in a predicament, wanting to compete for good workers, but unable to deduct the benefits he could offer them. Now, the union is providing the benefits that Have A Heart could not deduct.

“This was one of the fastest negotiations we’ve had because the owner was neutral and let the employee do what they want," said UFCW 21 President Crosby.

He says there’s hasn’t been a situation he recalls where federal law hasn’t prevented workers to unionize in a business federal government considers illegal. He’s hoping for policy changes that will make it easier.

“I think that's our next step, we really need to talk about the regulatory structure needs to catch up to allow workers to organize in the cannabis industry," he said.

Kunkel says he owns 18 cannabis retail licenses in six other states and plans to let workers at those shops collectively bargain if they chose.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



http://komonews.com/news/local/washingto...juana-shop

from potads - All Forums learn more

Popular posts from this blog

Martha Stewart launches CBD line in crowded market - CNN

Martha Stewart launches CBD line in crowded market - CNN The hemp-derived, cannabidiol-rich gummies, soft gels and oil drops officially launched on Thursday after more than a year in development. The products are the result of the style maven's partnership with Canopy Growth ( CGC ) , the Canadian cannabis company with a multibillion-dollar backer in US alcohol giant Constellation Brands ( STZ ) . Stewart joined Canopy as an adviser in early 2019 for the express purpose of developing cannabis products for humans and their pets after being introduced to Canopy's founder by her friend Calvin Broadus Jr. -- the rapper and businessman better known as Snoop Dogg. His Leafs by Snoop cannabis brand is produced by Canopy. The initial Martha Stewart CBD products, which range from $34.99 to $44.99, will be sold online at Canopy's e-commerce site . The pet products are expected to debut later this year. "I was surprised to learn that while most people have heard of ...

The Half-Legal Cannabis Trap - POLITICO

The Half-Legal Cannabis Trap - POLITICO LOS ANGELES — Everything about Kelvin’s job in a neighborhood southwest of downtown seemed like any other assignment, if not a little more exciting. The 40-year-old, who had previously worked as an electrician, had been employed since 2015 by a private security company that contracted him out to guard marijuana dispensaries. In 2019, he was protecting one of the thousand or so cannabis stores in California’s biggest city—part of an industry that has grown less and less underground since 1996, when the state first legalized medical marijuana. Kelvin, who asked not to be identified beyond his middle name to avoid professional retaliation, doesn’t smoke pot, but says the gig felt like the future. He grew up in a time when other Black people he knew in Los Angeles would go to jail for possessing even small amounts of the drug. Now, customers could walk into shops like the one he was guarding, many of which can be identified by green crosses on...

Cannabis news worldwide -- Some Indian farmers are turning moon-gazers

Some Indian farmers are turning moon-gazers A growing number of cultivators opt for biodynamic techniques to give farming a zodiac twist Sarvdaman Patel , 69, stands between rows of legumes and parsley at high noon, but it is not the harsh sun that bothers him. He is obsessed with the moon. "It is currently in the Air sign which is ideal for flowering plants," he remarks, peering at the marigolds. Patel is no Bejan Daruwala. He is an Indian farmer who has been using biodynamic (BD) techniques for the last 16 years on his farm in Gujarat's Anand. The BD cultivation calendar is based on the moon's movement through each zodiac every two-and-a-half days covering all 12 signs every month. An unofficial estimate by the Biodynamic Association of India (BDAI) says about one lakh farmers in Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab and Uttarakhand practise biodynamic farming. However, most of the produce is sold under the generic 'organic' label as few consumers unde...