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The Faces in NYC Cannabis: Degelis Tufts

January 20, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

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States close to legalizing recreational marijuana consumption are seeing pushes for inclusive ownership. One of the main pillars of the inclusive industry effort is women-owned businesses. The fruits of the movement’s labor are starting to show. The emergence of women-owned ventures is on the rise across the country – including a growing number of entities owned by women of color.

In the Northeastern United States, New Jersey and New York are both poised to legalize adult use cannabis in the coming months. In New Jersey, its medical program expanded to six additional dispensary licenses – one of which went to a women-owned entity. Additionally, the Garden State’s proposed legalization bill has a minimum 25% mandate for businesses owned by women, minorities or veterans.

In New York State, one of five of its initial medical cannabis dispensary licenses went to a women-led business. That result has not been lost on those in the state. Numerous groups and individuals alike have pushed on lawmakers to prioritize ownership access to women, among others underrepresented in all other industries.

An Opportunity Born Out of the 2016 Election Cycle

For Degelis Tufts, the last election cycle showed her the potential for cannabis. The product creator, executive and former investment banking analyst knew it was a movement she wanted to become involved in. Tufts explained to The Marijuana Times, “I believed it was un-American to not have the right to choose to consume. For me, it is a freedom issue and representative of our core values as a country.”

Using her temporary metallic tattoo manufacturing company, TribeTats, Tufts began by producing funny cannabis-themed Christmas cards. Tufts explained that the cards served as an entry into the market by having a product to sell at events. Or, as her business partner Kym Byrnes (aka Kym B) says, “If you want to be in cannabis, you gotta show up.”

Together Tufts and Kym B launched a CBD lifestyle brand, TribeTokes, which offers full-spectrum CBD vape cartridges, beauty products and other items. In addition to selling their own products, TribeTokes runs a CBD marketplace on its website, CBDizzle, which offers CBD products from other brands as well. “The website supports smaller companies that deserve to have their amazing products showcased,” Tufts said.

Going against the sales grain, Tufts and TribeTokes aren’t exclusive to e-commerce. The company also boasts a showroom in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District. “We view this as a way to create our own products as well as curate and support other brands we love,” Tufts told The Marijuana Times. In addition to product support, Tufts added how the location is close to organizations the company sponsors and participates in such as Revel, Women Grow and CannaGather.

The co-founders believe that they – and their customers – embody the company slogan, “Mindful, fit & lit”. However, that is not the extent of their goals. Instead, they aim to employ and support women in the cannabis community.

Navigating Consumer Education and Payment Processing

Informing the public about CBD and its benefits remains paramount across the industry. As such, educating people at industry events, online and in other capacities is a focal point for Tufts. She expanded on her position, “People are still learning what the uses of CBD are. On the recreational side, at least, there is not much confusion about what marijuana is used for.”

In addition to emphasizing the cannabinoid’s non-psychoactive properties, Tufts described how CBD should be viewed. “CBD should be incorporated into everyday life,” adding that “CBD should not be a supplement – it should be part of a lifestyle.”

Additionally, TirbeTokes struggles with banking like most businesses in the space. Thanks to section 280-E of the federal tax code, banking is all but impossible for cannabis businesses. Tufts calls the banking and payment processing woes “something on every entrepreneur’s list of pain points.”

Cannabis in New York City

Tufts noted her fondness for being in New York City’s cannabis community for a variety of reasons. “The community is educated, conscious and growing rapidly,” she stated. It doesn’t hurt that the city loves to consume cannabis. So much so that Tufts recalled a Seedo study which found New York City consumed more marijuana than any other city in the world.

That said, the entrepreneur called for more business in the state, noting the hurdles caused by federal and state regulations. Tufts offered up a solution: “We need more ancillary cannabis companies to be incentivized to open here in New York.” Tufts said the move would create additional jobs and revenue, creating a “win-win for all in New York City.”

Beyond business, Tufts makes it a point to go back to the community when stating her case for the city. Calling it “an exciting time”, she credits the numerous organizations and events that allow for education and networking to thrive.

Tufts made sure to give credit to the women in the space who are progressing the scene in New York City. She mentioned names like Lulu Tsui of Revel, Joann Bauer of Hidden Hemp and Estefania Valenica of Sanna CBD Yoga, just to name a few. “Each of these women is part of the ending of prohibition and will be part of history in New York City.”

Degelis Tufts saw an opportunity which aligned with her American values. In short order, she has been able to scale a business and become immersed in the cannabis community. With New York State poised to legalize recreational use in early 2019, Tufts’ call for additional ancillary companies could come to fruition. When it does, there is no doubt that she will be pushing for inclusive ownership.


The Faces in NYC Cannabis: Degelis Tufts
Source: Marijuana Times

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, interview, Leadership, New York City, women in cannabis

What Would Legal Cannabis Mean for New York City?

January 17, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

Earlier this year, New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo announced his support of a regulated program for recreational marijuana. Many believe it’s only a matter of time until cannabis is legal on the streets of America’s biggest city. But what effect would legalization have on the Big Apple? According to a city budgetary executive, it would be more than just a financial windfall.

The Big Apple is where Bob Dylan cemented his place in folk history and Shawn Carter began his ascent from crack dealer to nine-figure rapper and business mogul. It’s where Jimi Hendrix solidified his status as a rock star and Jerry Seinfeld developed the backdrop for the most successful sitcom in American history.

Could New York also become the largest U.S. city with legal cannabis?

Signs point to yes. A New York State Health Department study released in July 2018 painted a positive picture of legalizing marijuana, and a NYC comptroller study projected a tax windfall of $336 million for New York City and $1.3 billion for the state. After calling the plant a “gateway drug” in 2017, governor Andrew Cuomo has gotten with the times and is now open to a recreational market in New York. State legislators are expected to discuss concrete plans for legalization in the next few months.

What could this additional cash buy for Empire City?

To find out, I talked to Daniel D. Miller, MPA, deputy executive director of New York City’s Board of Education Retirement System. He is responsible for developing policy guidelines and allocation strategies for over $6 billion in city assets.

Miller told me that legalizing cannabis would have a significant social impact on the city, in addition to its fiscal boon.

“Using the comptroller estimate as a baseline and accounting for savings from enforcement, legal marijuana would have a fiscal impact of $372.4 million on New York,” he said. “The additional revenue would impact communities disproportionately affected by marijuana arrests.”

The Financial Impact of Legal Cannabis in New York City

Miller explained how this extra money could make a serious difference in the city’s social programs.

“$20.6 million alone could be used to expand the city’s Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP) by 10,000 slots. This would keep at-risk youths off the streets and provide them with income during the summer.”

According to the program’s website, SYEP provides youth employees to city employers at no cost. The effect of an additional 10,000 employees in the city, even for just the summer months, would be significant.

Miller also said revenue from legal cannabis could help support NYC’s Comprehensive After School System, which currently runs 900 programs that 97,000 students participate in. These programs offer young people recreation and academic development that is critical to their success as adults.

“Increased funding also has the additional impact of saving parents money on for-profit after school programs,” he said.

But the city program that needs the biggest financial windfall is also its most significant: The NYC subway system, run by the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA). Over 5.5 million people squeeze into city subway cars every weekday. And as most of them will tell you – probably with a few four-letter words strewn in – the subway system is less than reliable. According to The New York Times, the MTA could need as much as $60 billionto get back to an acceptable service level.

Cannabis alone wouldn’t be a one-shot solution to raise this type of money. Almost nothing would, but combined with already-proposed steps like congestion pricing for drivers and fare hikes for subway riders, legal weed could be a key step out of the Manhattan-sized fiscal hole the metro is currently trying to claw its way out of.

Extra money could also make the subway more accessible to those who need to get around. Launched in the first week of January, the city’s Fair Fares program allows working New Yorkers at or below the poverty level to purchase discounted fare cards.

“The current Fair Fares budget allocates $106 million to launch the program for half-priced MetroCards for subway and local bus service,” Miller said. “With additional funding the city could double the number of city residents eligible to 1.6 million.”

What About Social Justice in New York City?

Outside of its additional tax revenue, the biggest impact legal cannabis would have on Gotham is by far on marijuana-related arrests, which disproportionately impact communities of color.

The New York Times summed it up perfectly in a headline from a May 2018 studyof the racial disparity in NYC marijuana arrests: “Surest Way to Face Marijuana Charges in New York: Be Black or Hispanic.” Their data found some alarming trends. Despite roughly equal rates of use among whites and minorities, on the island of Manhattan, being black makes you 15 times more likely to be arrested for marijuana.

NYPD has tried to defend this injustice by stating that more complaints about marijuana are made in neighborhoods with larger populations of blacks and Hispanics. But the Times debunked that claim: They found that cops in Brooklyn’s Canarsie neighborhood, which is 85 percent black, made arrests for marijuana four times more often than in Greenpoint, which is four percent black, despite both precincts receiving about the same number of calls from that lame old dude down the hall.

“Since stop and frisk has been severely reduced, marijuana possession has become the de facto issue between police and young people of color,” Miller said.

Fortunately, in 2018 the city took big strides towards throwing out this racist policy for good. Mayor Bill de Blasio announced in June that the NYPD would cut arrests for smoking in public by 50 percent, allowing people without a prior arrest for a violent crime to receive a summons instead of being handcuffed and taken to a station.

According to POLITICO, arrests for marijuana possession in New York City dropped 90 percent between September 2017 and September 2018. Legalizing cannabis would make the practice of arresting someone in New York for possessing the plant a thing of history, relegating it to America’s vast inventory of racist relics like Plessy v. Ferguson and the Three-Fifths Compromise.

Considering it would bring significant revenue to important public programs and do away with a law enforcement practice used unfairly against people of color, maybe it’s time for New York to let the Statue of Liberty’s torch illuminate more than just the path to freedom.

 

The post What Would Legal Cannabis Mean for New York City? appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


What Would Legal Cannabis Mean for New York City?
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: Cannabis Arrests, cannabis new york, Law & Politics, New York, New York City, New York City Cannabis, New York Marijuana, News, NYC, NYC Budget Director, NYC Cannabis, NYPD, weed in NYC

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