New York Cannabis: The Variscite Injunction is Lifted

New York Cannabis: The Variscite Injunction is Lifted

The news tricked out slowly, then all at once: New York has settled the Variscite litigation, and the injunction prohibiting Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD) licenses in the Finger Lakes region has been lifted. The settlement was approved during the Cannabis Control Board (CCB) meeting on May 30, 2023, paving the way for new CAURD licenses to be issued.

For a brief refresher (a more detailed synopsis here), Variscite commenced litigation in September of 2022, seeking a judgment declaring the CAURD program unconstitutional based on the Dormant Commerce Clause. Judge Gary L. Sharpe granted Variscite’s motion for a temporary restraining order, enjoining the OCM from issuing CAURD licenses for the 5 regions listed in Variscite CAURD applications (Brooklyn, Central New York, Finger Lakes, Mid-Hudson and Western New York).

In March 28, 2023, the OCM’s motion to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit was granted, limiting the injunction to only the Finger Lakes region, Variscite’s first choice.

The settlement agreement between the OCM and Variscite (the Settlement Agreement) is itself really interesting, only because of the “relief” provided by the OCM to Variscite: that is, Variscite is guaranteed a “general (not social equity/CAURD) adult use retail dispensary license in the first group of such licenses to be awarded.” The Settlement Agreement also provides that if the “general” retail dispensary licenses are narrowed to geographic areas, Variscite gets to pick from it CAURD regions.

The other interesting component of Variscite’s advance award is that, even if Variscite’s application does not satisfy the revised adult-use rules and regulations or has a TPI that would otherwise disqualify its application, Variscite has the right to supplement and revise its application (including its TPIs), and still be awarded a license.

Variscite clearly bet that filing this lawsuit would result in the award of a retail dispensary license, and in some way, has “leveled up” by securing the “first” adult-use retail dispensary license. The fact that the licensure is effectively guaranteed is an unequivocal win.

Of course, the end of the Variscite CAURD saga is not the end of the current New York cannabis litigation, with the Coalition for Access to Regulated & Safe Cannabis and landlord lawsuits still pending. We also note that the opening of the adult-use application portal and license review (including the real estate rules and municipal notice regulations) will result in a slew of new regulatory litigation, not to mention the flood of business litigation that will ensue once significant investments are made into cannabis applicants. Stay tuned!

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