canna law blog

California Cannabis Leasing: Federal Enforcement Is Not The Only Concern

The current state of enforcement in California tends to be dominated by headlines about the Department of Justice, Jeff Sessions, the DEA, and the Controlled Substances Act. And for good reason—under the constitution, federal law is the law of the land, and commercial landlords and tenant alike should study federal enforcement guidelines closely. Lease agreements

canna law blog

California Cannabis: Commercial Leasing Changes in New Emergency Regulations

Last Friday, California released another round of emergency regulations that essentially renewed the existing emergency rules, but with some updates, a fair amount of which affect commercial cannabis leasing. Here are some of the notable ones. “Premises” distinctions defined. SB 94 and AB 133, the statutes enacted in 2017 to implement and refine Prop 64,

canna law blog

California Approves First Commercial Cannabis Landlord Insurance Coverage

One of the most important elements of a commercial tenancy is insurance. Generally, the landlord maintains property insurance for damage to the building, existing improvements, and surrounding property, as well as liability insurance for bodily injury and property damage occurring on the premises. The landlord will typically pass the cost of that coverage on to

canna law blog

California Cannabis Legalization: CEQA and the Limitations of Local Zoning Authority

As we’ve discussed time and time again, California’s voter-passed cannabis legalization initiative, as well as all subsequent statutory and regulatory additions to that law, maintains local governments as the ultimate arbiters of whether and how commercial cannabis operations can take place within any given county or municipality in the state. The most prominent exercise of

canna law blog

Oregon Cannabis: Leases Galore

For any marijuana business not fortunate enough to own its land outright, there are few documents more important than the lease. Not only is the lease the only transactional document reviewed by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC) prior to licensure, but it sets fundamental operating parameters than can determine the success –and even life cycle

canna law blog

California Cannabis Leases – Five Keys to Doing Them Right

Commercial leases for cannabis businesses are unique and require special considerations for risk management during the tenancy. Commercial cannabis leases in California are prone to the following pitfalls inherent in a landlord doing business with a cannabis tenant, and these risks should be considered when deciding how to structure your landlord-tenant relationship: Accepting ownership in the cannabis

canna law blog

California Commercial Cannabis: Leases

Arbitration Versus Litigation We’ve written previously on arbitration and why it so often makes sense for cannabis business contracts, primarily because of enforceability issues stemming from cannabis being illegal under federal law. But in the realm of commercial real estate leasing, cannabis uses can present other unique challenges that require thoughtful solutions to disputes, and, more importantly,

canna law blog

California Cannabis Leases: The 101

We’ve written before on how commercial leasing for cannabis business is a uniquely different animal that requires special attention beyond a boilerplate commercial lease agreement. The new multi-agency rollout of California’s proposed medical cannabis regulations under the Medical Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act (“MCRSA“), as well as Governor Brown’s recent budget trailer bill to harmonize the

canna law blog

Bank Loans on Cannabis Property: Tread Carefully

My law firm represents a large number of cannabis operators in Oregon, Washington and California. Some of these operators own the land they trade on; others simply lease. Whenever we are lucky enough to meet the client before the onset of cannabis activity, our first question is often whether the target property is mortgaged, or

canna law blog

Marijuana Commercial Leases: This Industry Is Different, You Know

As so many of you know, few landlords are willing to rent to marijuana businesses. They are afraid of the very real possibility of losing their property in a federal civil asset forfeiture action. The federal government has been known to seize property being used for cultivating, manufacturing, or selling marijuana. In the last seven