“It’s much larger than we’d like it to be,” Pascale Bernard, the state Office Cannabis Management’s deputy director of intergovernmental affairs, said during a Tuesday meeting at Queens Borough Hall.
Borough President Donovan Richards then asked for a “guesstimate” on the number of illicit shops that have been the scourge of neighborhoods across the Big Apple and a thorn in the side of the budding legal cannabis market.
“I wouldn’t want to put out a number that is either inflated or deflated,” Bernard said.
“We recognize this is an issue,” she added.
She said a new state law recently approved by Gov. Kathy Hochul and the legislature will make it easier and “turn the tide” against the illegal shops.
Richards was not impressed by the lack of specifics at the meeting that included district managers from the borough’s community boards.
“They should at least have a guesstimate. I was trying to smoke them out,”‘ the borough president quipped.
Adams and city Sheriff Anthony Miranda said there are about 2,900 suspected stores illegally selling marijuana in the city.
By comparison, 55 of the 119 licensed shops statewide are in the city.
More than 20 shops were inspected on Tuesday — including the Bud & Beyond, at 386 Canal St. near West Broadway, and Big City Smoke Shop at 110 Church St.
The sheriff’s office, the NYPD and the Department of Consumer and Worker Production took part in the inspections.
Adams gave a pep talk to the cannabis cops at the city sheriff’s in Long Island City before the raids to stress the importance of the mission, including protecting youths who’ve been targeted by the illegal industry with colorful candy-looking packaging for cannabis edibles.
“Today, our administration is delivering on a promise to shut down unlicensed smoke and cannabis shops, protect our young people, and ensure that the future of legal cannabis burns bright in New York City,” Hizzoner said.
Adams gave a pep talk to the cannabis cops at the city sheriff’s in Long Island City before the raids to stress the importance of the mission, including protecting youths who’ve been targeted by the illegal industry with colorful candy-looking packaging for cannabis edibles.
“Thanks to Gov. Kathy Hochul and our partners in the state Legislature, New York City is now using the full force of the law across every borough to padlock and protect our streets. Legal cannabis remains the right choice for our city, but to those who choose to break the law — we will shut you down.”
Miranda said a majority of the locations visited Tuesday were closed after vast quantities of cannabis and illegal hallucinogens such as the “magic mushroom” Psilocybin were found on the premises.
He said residents as well as the illegal head shops took notice.
“We’ve gotten a great response from the community,” the sheriff said late Tuesday afternoon.
“As for the illegal cannabis shops, they know we’re coming. It’s a question of when.”
The new law gives authorities an immediate cease-and-desist and sealing order to keep the illicit shops closed pending an administrative review.
Previously, shops would reopen just days after a raid.