![]() ![]() Non-marijuana trash will go into the handcarts while marijuana waste will be mixed with a different material per state law. Jars does not want to use a dumpster for its garbage at the Lakeville Road store, preferring to use a handcart in order to better control access to the site’s waste. Approval conditions were the final approval of an odor control system, security plan approval. The plan was approved 5-1, commission member Jonathan Nold providing the lone “no” vote. ![]() Skymint’s approval conditions are security plan approval, installing a curb, adding pavement markings, including external lighting, making landscaping changes as directed by Planning Commission Vice Chair Leslie Pielack and meeting any additional requirements made by the fire chief and village engineer.ĪEY Capital had its second dispensary plan approved, this time for a 3,200 square foot Jars Cannabis retail store inside a 7,200 square foot building at 592 E. Skymint expects to have eight employees on site at any given time and three curbside pickup parking spots. Customers are required to present identification and sign in upon entry before accessing the showroom.Īccording to Grace, Skymint designed the site plan around servicing 170 people “per day at the busiest time at the busiest day.” As such the starting parking lot will accommodate about 23 people, though building capacity will be determined on the final building. While all dispensaries thus far have proposed - and in the case of Lume, implemented - a guided shopping experience, Skymint plans to let shoppers navigate the showroom at their leisure. I thought it would be a little moronic to be selling marijuana that you grow and then we clear a bunch of wooded area.” “We just did not want to get anywhere near ,” Peter Grace, associate general counsel for Skymint, said. The site plan was unanimously approved by the six members in attendance Kelly Arkles was absent. The building’s architecture is set to have a “board and batten” style, and the landscaping plans call for much of the existing woodland to remain in place. Hazel Park-based Skymint will build a 2,712 square foot retail building on the 2.55 acre 400 Glaspie St. ![]() industrial area and the first to require the construction of a new building. The two businesses are respectively the first dispensaries to operate outside of the Glaspie St. Oxford Village - The Village of Oxford Planning Commission approved two dispensaries at its Tuesday, May 3 meeting. Skymint bills itself as one the state’s largest marijuana employers, with more than 300 full- and part-time staff.Peter Grace, associate general counsel for Skymint, listens to Leslie Pielack, Oxford Village Planning Commission vice chair, discuss the landscaping plan for Skymint’s proposed adult use recreational dispensary for 400 Glaspie St. “Skymint Hazel Park will be a platform for us to continue pouring our hearts and energy into social movements we believe in, from federal legalization, decriminalization and expungement to the evolution of the city as an environment for new and thought-provoking arts and music.” “Detroit is such an important place in the history of culture and civil liberties in our country,” he said in a statement. Radaway said the company has a commitment to social equity, which includes financial support for marijuana decriminalization and legalization ballot initiatives, and efforts to release nonviolent cannabis offenders from incarceration. Skymint is an offshoot of a Lansing-based medical marijuana company called Green Peak Innovations, which opened its first dispensary in July 2019 in Bay City, according to the Lansing State Journal. There are about 10 Skymint locations in the state, including Ann Arbor, Lansing, Traverse City and Flint, with new openings coming to Big Rapids, East Lansing and Portage, according to the company’s website at. The company’s CEO, Jeff Radaway, said in a news release Wednesday that the new store will offer customers 40 percent off their full order from Thursday’s opening through Aug. ![]()
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