A marijuana cultivator and producer in Washoe County could lose its license after a complaint was filed, alleging it avoided paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes.
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The Cannabis Compliance Board voted unanimously to suspend the license for Green Cross of America, Inc. during an emergency meeting held Thursday night.
People of color make up nearly half of the Nevada marijuana industry workforce, but the executive-level positions for cannabis companies skew significantly whiter, according to a new survey.
Three Nevada marijuana companies that were facing possible revocation will keep their licenses after agreeing to settlements with state regulators.
Cannabis Compliance Board investigators found six employees working without required licenses at Nevada Medical Group.
Clark County Commissioners are allowing some marijuana businesses not subject to a court injunction to apply for special use permits.
The push to change the way Nevada employers handle the drug and prospective employees was met with significant resistance from the business community.
Nevada dispensaries sold nearly $425 million worth of recreational marijuana and pulled in nearly $70 million in tax revenue in the state’s first full year of sales, officials announced Tuesday.
Recreational marijuana sales became legal in Nevada on July 1, 2017. In the year that’s passed, cash has flowed, businesses have grown and no major controversies have surfaced.
Nevada’s fledgling marijuana industry has taken off significantly faster than state officials anticipated. Now state regulators are scrambling to catch up.