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US: Illinois court hears final lawsuit challenging marijuana social equity licensing lottery

Nearly seven years after Illinois lawmakers approved recreational cannabis legalization, applicants who lost out on coveted business licenses are still battling the state in court, alleging the law's rollout undermined its purported equity goals.

At the time of its passage in 2019, supporters of Illinois's landmark law touted it as the most equity-centric legalized cannabis program in the nation. But one of the centerpieces of that legislation—setting aside the majority of cannabis business licenses for "social equity" applicants disproportionately affected by the War on Drugs—proved more complicated than the law's authors had imagined, setting off years of litigation over the process.

The final lawsuit of dozens filed following the first cannabis licensing lottery in 2020 finally got its day in court last week, marking the conclusion of a yearslong legal saga testing the state's legalization policy. But it's also the last chance for the plaintiff, Well-Being Holistic Group, to have an opportunity for a dispensary license after all four of its applications lost in three lotteries.

"We just want a fair shot," the Rev. Otis Davis, said after a hearing in the case. "We're not asking for anything special, no special privileges, but what they promised from the very beginning… So we just saying, 'Hey, that the system is broken, then they should redo it, and they should give everybody a chance.'"

Read more at Marijuana Moment

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