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Tag: new york cannabis law

  • Another cannabis dispensary sues town over zoning rules | Long Island Business News

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    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • files lawsuit against Town of .

    • Claims town imposed illegal barriers despite state approval.

    • Lawsuit could set precedent for state vs. local cannabis rules.

    Frustrated by countless hurdles and denials from the Town of Southampton, the owners of a long-planned have taken the town to court. 

    The lawsuit filed in Suffolk State Supreme Court earlier this month by the dispensary Mottz Green Grocer and its state licensee , claims the town and several of its officials have “superseded their authority, implemented and enforced unlawful local laws, and imposed unlawful barriers” in keeping the business from opening. The complaint notes that no other businesses, even liquor stores or places that serve alcohol, are subject to the singularly onerous restrictions that the town has created for cannabis businesses. 

    Sean and Joe Lustberg / Courtesy of Mottz Green Grocer

    Lustberg and his brother Joe have spent more than two-and-a-half years on their new business, spending the last year trying to get town approval to open a new cannabis dispensary at a long-vacant bank building at 93 East Montauk Highway in . While the entrepreneurs have a greenlight from the state’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) to open, they’ve been denied approval from the town, which claims the location is too close to property owned by the Church of St. Rosalie, which hosts Our Lady of the Hamptons Catholic School. 

    While town zoning mandates that a cannabis dispensary needs to be at least 200 feet from a house of worship, any cannabis dispensary needs to be at least 500 feet away from a school. Though the OCM says the door-to-door measurement from a school to a dispensary building is the standard, the town’s chief building inspector measured from each property line, which rendered the planned dispensary location too close by about three dozen feet. 

    Besides the measurement discrepancy, the lawsuit chronicles other town actions that have cost the Lustbergs plenty of time and money, including the requirement of a special exception permit, limiting where a dispensary can locate, and additional regulations that run counter to rules established by the state. To further undermine the Lustberg’s venture, the town rezoned their leased Hampton Bays property in July to ‘hamlet commercial,’ where cannabis dispensaries are not allowed. 

    The lawsuit, filed by attorney Linda Baldwin, a former OCM general counsel now with Bronxville-based Vasquez Attorneys at Law, which has represented several cannabis dispensary licensees, outlines 11 town-imposed regulations that violate or are pre-empted by the state’s cannabis law. While State Supreme Court Justice Paul Hensley denied the plaintiffs’ motion for an immediate temporary restraining order on town enforcement, a hearing on a preliminary injunction is scheduled for Tuesday, Sept. 23. Hensley is the same judge who in July struck down the Town of Riverhead’s law that cannabis dispensaries have to be at least 1,000 feet from residential uses and can’t be within 2,500 feet of each other. 

    As was ruled in the Riverhead case, Baldwin contends that Southampton’s requirements conflict with state law. 

    “We believe the town is discriminating against Mottz and keeps changing the rules every time Mottz fulfills the town’s requirements,” Baldwin told LIBN. “This case asks the court to issue a judgment declaring whether the town had the authority to substitute its own rules for those already established by the state.”  

    However, Southampton Town Attorney James Burke said that the town had worked closely with the state OCM to make sure its code provisions were in line with the applicable state law.   

    “In this matter the town’s chief building inspector found that the site was within the required 500-foot setback from a school,” Burke said. “The provision is contained in both the state law and the town code. The town feels very strongly that the town code provisions are compliant with the state law, and the town is well within its rights to set these reasonable standards for the proper review of these respective cannabis dispensary applications.” 

    The Mottz lawsuit was the second cannabis dispensary suit filed against Southampton in eight days. On August 27, a suit filed by Brown Budda New York LLC claims the town has created arbitrary and capricious hoops to jump through to open its dispensary, which conflicts with state law. Though the town’s planning board gave Brown Budda site-plan and conditional approval of its special exception permit on July 24, the lawsuit claims the town’s actions have violated the business owner’s constitutional “due process” and “equal protection” rights. 

    Both lawsuits maintain that Southampton has discriminated against cannabis businesses by creating unreasonable and expensive obstacles that other businesses aren’t subject to. Baldwin believes the Mottz action could be a test case used to determine whether municipalities can the override the state by setting up special exceptions only for cannabis businesses and singling them out for special hoops to jump through. 

    “This case is a test case for whether the Town of Southampton’s or any municipality’s local laws are permissible…” Baldwin said. “This may be the first decision to really tackle just what the cannabis law says and doesn’t say and what will hold up and what won’t hold up.” 

    Meanwhile, the Lustbergs have invested more than $500,000 in their dispensary venture and delays in opening have likely cost millions in lost sales. 

    “We are fighting for fairness, not just for our business, but for every local entrepreneur who plays by the rules,” Sean Lustberg told LIBN. “We’re seeking expedited relief because the town’s actions are causing real harm in real time. This isn’t just a legal issue, it’s about accountability.” 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Cannabis shop planning Southampton opening at odds with town | Long Island Business News

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    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • plans to open the Hamptons’ first state-licensed dispensary on Sept. 16.

    • The dispensary lacks a required from .

    • Founder argues state law overrides local municipal codes.

    • Southampton warns it will take legal action if the store opens without local approval.

    A new  plans to open the first state-licensed dispensary in the Hamptons next week, but the Town of Southampton may snuff out those plans.  

    The new 1,000-square-foot boutique dispensary called Charlie Fox announced it will open at 471 County Road 39 in Southampton on Tuesday, Sept.16, though the business has yet to apply for or receive the town’s required special use permit.  

    Charlie Fox Co-founder James Mallios. / Photo by Gregory DelliCarpini Jr.

    Founded by public relations and branding veteran Julia Levi and restaurateur James Mallios, Charlie Fox made its debut in Manhattan’s Times Square in Dec. 2024, where the multi-level emporium opened to rave reviews. The New York Post dubbed Charlie Fox “the Bergdorf of weed,” and Elle Decor called it “the most luxurious cannabis shop of all time.” 

    After new owners took over the Times Square dispensary earlier this year, renaming it The Daily Green, Levi, who had already leased the Southampton location last fall, advanced plans to take the Charlie Fox concept out east. 

    “After the location changed hands and I received my own cannabis license, we chose to relocate the brand to the Hamptons,” Levi told LIBN. “I live and run businesses here, and Long Island’s emerging, farm-driven, wellness-focused cannabis scene fits Charlie Fox perfectly.” 

    However, while Levi says the dispensary received approval to open and operate from the state’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) last month, Southampton Deputy Town Attorney Kathleen Murray said that Charlie Fox hasn’t applied for the town-required special use permit to operate. 

    “While a licensee may have received permissions/approval from the state to operate, they still need local approvals to operate,” Murray said, adding that OCM requires licensees to sign an acknowledgement that they still must obtain any local approvals required prior to opening and operating. “If it opens without the town’s approval, the town will pursue all enforcement remedies available to it under the law.” 

    The Charlie Fox dispensary is also located in close proximity to the Tuckahoe School property, which would preclude it from opening, according to town regulations. 

    Cannabis gummies offered by Charlie Fox. / Photo by Charles Nordeen

    Murray said that about seven cannabis dispensaries have begun the process of applying for town approvals, with five formally applying to the town’s Planning Board for site plan and special exception approval.  Of those five, four have received approval from the Planning Board, she said. None have yet opened. 

    One of those that has received conditional Planning Board approval is suing the town for “unlawfully blocking” the business from opening. The lawsuit, filed in State Supreme Court by Brown Budda New York LLC last month, claims the town has created arbitrary and capricious hoops to jump through to open its dispensary, which conflicts with state law. 

    The Brown Budda lawsuit cites the state’s Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act enacted in 2021 that while municipalities “may pass local laws and regulations governing the time, place and manner of the operation of licensed  retail dispensaries and/or on-site consumption site, provided such law or regulation does not make the operation of such licensed retail dispensaries or on-site consumption sites unreasonably impracticable…” 

    While Brown Budda has yet to fulfill the town’s conditional demands to open, which its attorney says includes a $40,000 sidewalk, the owner of Charlie Fox maintains it doesn’t need a green light from Southampton to open.  

    When asked about the town’s cannabis dispensary requirements, Levi claims that state law preempts any municipal codes, and that when municipalities opted in to allow cannabis stores, they agreed to give up the right to approve licensees and understood that they could only prevent a store from opening in very narrow circumstances. 

    “When the state legislature passed legalization, it was specifically concerned that municipalities were too susceptible to corruption given the huge tax dollars at stake,” Levi said. “It is well established that the state legislature was worried that towns would ‘play favorites’ or worse, bully and force social licensees into economic concessions.” 

    Meanwhile, Levi and Mallios are moving ahead with their plans, partnering with Vema Construction and Home Studios on the Charlie Fox store build and design, which highlights “the allure of nautical charm through natural materials, vintage details, and seaside-inspired elements,” according to a company statement. 

    “Too many dispensaries felt intimidating or transactional,” Levi said. “We wanted to create a brand that felt personal and approachable and see that reflected that in the store design and customer experience…Sit back in our lounge area and chat about the offerings with oldies soul spinning in the background. I wanted Charlie Fox to not only appeal to my generation, but my 74-year-old dad and his friends too.” 


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    David Winzelberg

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