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Updated: 6 hours ago Editorial

Editorial: High drama at the CCC is bad for business

The personnel issues at the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission are about to get even more dramatic, with CCC Chair Shannon O’Brien now being reinstated to her leadership role two years after she was suspended and fired. Since July 2023, the regulatory agency has paid out at least $1.5 million to settle personnel disputes between warring factions at the agency. That money, which would have been better spent on literally anything else, was the result of countless self-inflicted wounds, as CCC leaders engaged in a power struggle that has produced only losers, particularly the businesses in the cannabis industry and the consumers who support them.

The most recent settlement of $304,591 is to be paid to former CCC chief communications officer Cedric Sinclair. He was suspended in December 2023 and was reportedly the subject of a smear campaign by O’Brien and other CCC officials, who said he bullied and sexually harassed employees at the agency. The settlement with Sinclair includes the CCC agreeing to release a statement thanking him for his time serving the agency. The news of Sinclair’s settlement came shortly after the agency reached a $42,500 settlement with a former employee and whistleblower Meghan Dube, who in her attempt to alert agency leaders to the personnel dysfunction, particularly in the human resources department, was instead ostracized and eventually suspended.

When Travis Ahern took over as CCC executive director at the start of this year, it could have kicked off a new era for the agency, although turning around a culture of chaos and toxicity is easier said than done. It’s hard to imagine O’Brien’s return will help. Even the judge who ruled she had been wrongfully terminated by State Treasurer Deborah Goldberg harshly criticized O’Brien’s leadership when she was head of the CCC board and acknowledged her reinstatement would cause short-term disruption.

As all this drama has been playing out, cannabis businesses are facing unprecedented pressures, largely due to oversaturation in the market and crashing prices, as WBJ Managing Editor Eric Casey writes in his story “Revolutionary collapse”. While the CCC’s internal dysfunction isn’t causing this problem, it’s not helping either. Onerous regulations that take way too long to reform, consumer protection concerns that go unaddressed for months, and the generally slow responsiveness to the needs of the industry have been real factors that have put further pressure on cannabis operating margins.

What is the solution to this ongoing drama and dysfunction? A proposed cannabis reform law passed by the Massachusetts House of Representatives in June, which has languished in the state Senate. The bill would significantly overhaul the CCC structure, lower the barrier to entry for medical marijuana retail, increase purchase limits for consumers, and finally address the selling of hemp products. We hope the Senate can move this bill forward with alacrity, because until a CCC overhaul is complete, the cannabis industry’s future will remain in turmoil.

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