Regulation & Legislation

Chicago Bans Sale of Pot Candies

Hemp-based treats are technically legal

CHICAGO -- The Chicago City Council passed a law Wednesday banning the sale of marijuana-flavored lollipops, gumdrops and other treats, becoming the first major city to prohibit the confections that have appeared in convenience stores nationwide, said the Associated Press.

The candies are legal because they are made with hemp oil, an ingredient used in health foods and some household products. The oil imparts marijuana's grassy taste, but not the high.

"I can't imagine the degree and the extent to which people will go to make [image-nocss] a buckand to make a buck on kids, trying to get them to experiment with something that is going to be a lead-in to the use of marijuana," said Alderman Edward Burke, who sponsored the measure.

Chicago is not the only city weighing the issue. A New York City councilwoman plans to hold hearings on the candies this summer, and an Atlanta suburb passed a resolution opposing them, which caused merchants there to remove the treats from their shelves.

In Chicago, stores selling the candy will face fines up to $500 and possible suspension or revocation of their business licenses.

The candies are sold under names such as Purple Haze and Rasta. Companies that manufacture the products say the candies are geared toward adults and that they advise retailers to sell only to people 18 and older. "This is an adult product. I don't intend and I don't want kids to eat it," said Tony Van Pelt, president of Chronic Candy. "There are 78 million pot smokers [in the United States]. That's who I'm going after."

Van Pelt said he is considering legal action because a product with legal ingredients is being declared off-limits in Chicago. "I think this is crazy. There is nothing illegal about it. Freedom of choice is being attacked," he said.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a CSP member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Beverages

The beverage boom is transforming the soda fountain

As restaurants look to meet growing demand for specialty beverages, they are tapping equipment suppliers for new products

Fuels

OPIS’s chief oil analyst answers 6 questions on Iran

Denton Cinquegrana tells convenience and fuel retailers what to watch

Foodservice

Here are the restaurant segments most ripe for c-store competition

Convenience stores have plenty of runway to go head-to-head with restaurants on pizza, breakfast, fried chicken and more

Trending

More from our partners