Friday, April 12, 2024

Governor Hochul Announces Over 400 Adult-Use Cannabis Licenses Issued in 2024

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Cannabis Control Board Approves 101 Adult-Use Licenses, Bringing Total Adult-Use Licenses to 403 Issued in 2024 Thus Far

New Provisional Licensing Update to Speed Up Review Process

Governor Kathy Hochul today announced that the New York State Cannabis Control Board has issued 403 adult-use cannabis licenses in 2024 to bolster the legal market in New York. The Cannabis Control Board recently issued 101 licenses, building on significant progress to strengthen our state’s cannabis regulatory framework with the passing of several resolutions aimed at issuing new licenses, streamlining the adult-use cannabis licensing process, and enhancing critical enforcement measures.

“With the Cannabis Control Board’s issuance of 101 adult-use cannabis licenses, New York’s legal cannabis industry continues to make significant progress with over 400 licenses issued in 2024,” Governor Hochul said. “Strengthening New York’s equitable cannabis industry and ensuring the hard-working small business owners operating in the legal market have the licenses to open are the best way to protect the integrity of sales in New York.”

The Cannabis Control Board (CCB) recently voted to approve a resolution authorizing the issuance of a diverse range of 101 adult-use cannabis licenses across the supply chain, including microbusinesses, cultivators, processors, distributors, and retail dispensary locations. This resolution opens pathways for entrepreneurs and businesses to participate in the budding adult-use cannabis market, fostering economic growth and innovation.

In addition to issuing licenses, the CCB approved a resolution empowering the Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) to issue provisional adult-use cannabis licenses, with a goal of expediting the licensing process. This measure aims to provide provisional license holders with opportunities to begin operations swiftly while adhering to regulatory requirements, fostering a dynamic and competitive marketplace.

This key update will now allow provisional licenses to be awarded outside of regularly scheduled board meetings. Therefore, applicants will have the ability to go find their retail locations and come back to the Board when ready for final licensure.

A provisional license can be granted if an applicant has submitted all materials that are required as part of the license application for the license type they are seeking but have not yet secured a location for their licensed premises. The Board will still approve all final licenses before a licensee can begin operating. ​

Additionally, the CCB passed a resolution directing OCM to pursue the emergency adoption and revised proposed rulemaking around enforcement violations, hearings, and regulations. This resolution, titled "Part 133 - Violations, Hearings, and Enforcement Emergency Regulations," underscores the state’s continued commitment to safeguarding public health and safety.

The breakdown of the 101 license types approved includes:

  • Adult-Use Cultivator License: 25
  • Adult-Use Distributor License: 11
  • Adult-Use Microbusiness License: 22
  • Adult-Use Processor License: 8
  • Adult-Use Retail Dispensary License: 25
  • Provisional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary License: 10

Office of Cannabis Management Executive Director Chris Alexander said, “Our budding cannabis market takes another crucial step forward by strengthening our supply chain, and licensing 101 New York-based businesses who have the grit, skill, and ability to make sure our equitable market has the power to deliver the quality cannabis products New Yorkers expect to purchase when they walk into a legal dispensary.”

Cannabis Control Board Chair Tremaine Wright said, "These resolutions represent a significant milestone in our efforts to establish a robust and responsible adult-use cannabis market. By issuing this new batch of licenses, enhancing enforcement protocols, and introducing provisional licensing, we are creating a framework that prioritizes equity, transparency, and public safety."

New York State remains dedicated to fostering a thriving cannabis ecosystem that prioritizes small businesses, promotes economic prosperity, social equity, and responsible consumption for New Yorkers aged 21 and over. New York State continues to surpass equity goals (nearly 60 percent of licenses issued in 2024) outlined in the MRTA, set at 50 percent licensing for Social Economic Equity (SEE) applicants.

Riverdale Main Streets Alliance - Join us on Sunday, April 14 - Riverdale Community Clean-Up


 

Riverdale Community Clean-up:
Join us on Sunday, April 14 at 9:00am!

Please meet at KRVC: 505 West 236th Street

All we do, depends on you!
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

Please email laura4bronx@gmail.com to sign up

Questions? Email us at rmsabx@gmail.com
Our mailing address is:
Riverdale Mainstreet Alliance
444 W 258th St
Bronx, NY 10471-2102


Reminder: Spring into Networking with The Bronx Chamber of Commerce

 


Thursday, April 18, 2024

6:00pm


Location:

Rosa's at Park

2568 Park Avenue

Bronx, NY 10451


Join The Bronx Chamber of Commerce for a Spring evening of networking. Enjoy bites and beverages as you build your business connections, learn about Bronx Chamber member programs, and how the Chamber advocates for members.


Learn more information by visiting www.bronxchamber.org or contacting events@bronxchamber.org.


Registration is required.


Members: $25.00

Non-Members: $30.00


Register - Click Here

Bronx Chamber of Commerce 
1200 Waters PlaceSuite 106Bronx, NY 10461

DEC and OGS Remind New Yorkers to Keep 'Lights Out' to Protect Migrating Birds

 

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State-Owned and Managed Buildings Take Measures to Reduce Light, Prevent Bird Collisions

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and Office of General Services (OGS) today remind New Yorkers to take action to protect migrating birds as they navigate night skies by participating in the ‘Lights Out’ initiative. Joining national and international efforts, State buildings participating in Lights Out will keep non-essential outdoor lighting from affecting the ability of birds to migrate successfully throughout New York. 

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Basil Seggos said, “We all play a role in protecting the environment and wildlife and the national Lights Out initiative is a simple way to help a variety of bird species survive and thrive during the busy migration season. DEC is proud to join our New York State partners to lead by example and take actions to reduce bird collisions.” 

New York State Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner Jeanette Moy said, “Reducing excessive outdoor lighting is an easy and practical step we can take to minimize one of the many dangerous obstacles birds face during their long annual migrations. OGS is proud to join with DEC and our other partners in state government to help our avian friends safely navigate to their spring nesting sites and wintering grounds.”

Many species of shorebirds and songbirds rely on constellations to help them navigate to and from their summer breeding grounds through the state. Excessive outdoor lighting, especially in adverse weather conditions, can cause migrating birds to become disoriented, a phenomenon known as fatal light attraction. According to the National Zoological Park and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, fatal light attraction has led to collisions with windows, walls, floodlights, or the ground and the death of an estimated 365 to 988 million birds annually in the United States.  

 

Lights Out directs State-owned and managed buildings to turn off non-essential outdoor lighting from 11 p.m. to dawn during the spring migration April 15 through May 31, and also during the peak fall migration, Aug. 15 through Nov. 15. State agencies are also encouraged to draw blinds, when possible, and turn off non-essential indoor lighting during Lights Out times. In addition to benefiting migrating birds, Lights Out promotes sustainability and provides a cost-savings to the state. 


DEC encourages birding enthusiasts to visit I BIRD NY for more information on where and how to observe birds, upcoming bird walks, a downloadable Beginner's Guide to Birding (available in Spanish), information on the annual I BIRD NY Challenge, and additional educational resources. The New York State Birding Trail map is also available at www.ibirdny.org and provides valuable information on each site such as location, available amenities, species likely to be seen, directions, and more. Digital information on the Birding Trail will be updated periodically, so budding outdoor enthusiasts are encouraged to check back often. 

 

DEC manages and oversees five million acres of public lands and conservation easements and plays a vital role in both protecting New York’s natural resources and providing opportunities for people to enjoy the outdoors. From fishing on scenic streams, hiking and rock climbing, swimming and boating, birding, and nature study, or simply relaxing in a tent under the stars, there are endless adventures to be found. Visit https://dec.ny.gov/things-to-do.


Massachusetts Construction Company Owner Pleads Guilty to Tax Crimes and Making a False Statement


Defendant Operated an “Off-the-Books” Payroll and Caused Over $2M Loss to IRS 

A Massachusetts man pleaded guilty to an employment tax scheme and making a false statement at an Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) hearing.

According to court documents and statements made in court, Mauricio Baiense, formerly of Quincy, owned and operated Contract Framing Builders Inc. (CFB), a Medford, Massachusetts, construction business. Baiense was responsible for paying to the IRS the payroll taxes withheld from CFB employees’ wages and for filing the quarterly employment tax returns.

From approximately April 2013 through December 2017, Baiense operated an “off-the-books” cash payroll for CFB. To generate cash for the payroll, Baiense wrote checks drawn on CFB’s bank account to purported subcontractors, which were in fact nominee entities that Baiense controlled. Baiense then cashed or directed others to cash approximately $11 million in such checks at a check cashing business.

Baiense and another man then used a portion of the cash to pay some of CFB’s employees’ wages. Baiense did not report the cash wages to the IRS and did not pay the required employment taxes on them. Baiense also helped prepare at least one false employment tax return that underreported the actual wages paid to CFB’s employees.

In total, Baiense caused a tax loss to the IRS of approximately $2,824,577.45.

Finally, when questioned at an OSHA hearing regarding a workplace accident, Baiense made a false statement. OSHA was investigating the workplace death of an individual working for CFB. During the hearing and while testifying under oath, Baiense falsely claimed that the deceased employee did not work for CFB at the time of the accident.

Baiense is scheduled to be sentenced on July 25. He faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison for each of the seven counts of willful failure to collect or pay over employment taxes, five years in prison for conspiring to defraud the United States and three years in prison for aiding and assisting in the preparation of a false tax return. He also faces up to five years in prison for the false statement. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice Department’s Tax Division, Acting U.S. Attorney Joshua S. Levy for the District of Massachusetts, OSHA Region 1 Administrator Galen Blanton, Special Agent in Charge Harry Chavis Jr. of IRS-Criminal Investigation’s (IRS-CI) Boston Field Office and Special Agent in Charge Jonathan Mellone of the Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General in Boston made the announcement.

IRS-CI, OSHA and the Department of Homeland Security’s Homeland Security Investigations investigated the case with assistance from the Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General

Extradited Colombian National Sentenced To 14 Years In Prison For Conspiring To Import Cocaine Into The United States

 

Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that LIBIA AMANDA PALACIO MENA was sentenced to 14 years in prison for conspiring to import cocaine into the U.S.  PALACIO MENA pled guilty on December 21, 2023, before U.S. District Judge Lewis J. Liman, who imposed the sentence. 

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “Libia Amanda Palacio Mena's sentence marks a significant blow to drug trafficking networks, demonstrating our steadfast commitment to dismantling criminal enterprises.  Through the collaborative efforts of law enforcement, this Office and our partners uncovered the complex network Palacio Mena and others orchestrated alongside FARC operatives and other violent drug trafficking organizations.  This outcome underscores that those who conspire to flood our streets with narcotics will face stiff consequences for their actions.” 

According to court documents and statements made during court proceedings:[1]

PALACIO MENA conspired with her co-defendants and other individuals associated with the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (“FARC”) — a violent organization based in Colombia that was dedicated to the overthrow of the Colombian government and responsible for the production and distribution of the majority of the cocaine that eventually reached the U.S. — to source and distribute tons of cocaine destined for the U.S.  PALACIO MENA negotiated with individuals she believed to be narcotics traffickers from a Mexico-based drug trafficking organization (the “Mexican DTO”) seeking to establish a cocaine supply line from Venezuela to the U.S.  These individuals, however, were actually confidential sources working at the direction of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (the “DEA”).

In dozens of communications recorded during the investigation, PALACIO MENA presented herself to the Mexican DTO as a broker for large cocaine and weapons transactions.  PALACIO MENA touted her connections to, among others, Colombian political leaders, the FARC, and the Cartel of the Suns — a group of high-ranking Venezuelan officials who abused the Venezuelan people and corrupted the legitimate institutions of Venezuela to facilitate the importation of tons of cocaine into the U.S. in partnership with the FARC.  After exploring working with various drug traffickers and introducing the confidential sources to several possible partners for sourcing and transporting cocaine, PALACIO MENA ultimately introduced the confidential sources to one of her co-defendants, who agreed to use his political and logistics connections in Colombia to assist the venture.

In December 2021, to prove their bona fides and establish the quality of their supply, PALACIO MENA sold the confidential sources a five-kilogram sample of extremely pure cocaine from a FARC-associated farm outside of Medellín.  PALACIO MENA was arrested in Colombia in February 2022, in the midst of negotiating a much larger partnership with the Mexican DTO, which they envisioned entailing the shipment of approximately 500 kilograms of cocaine per week.

In addition to the prison term, PALACIO MENA, 50, of Medellín, Colombia, was sentenced to four years of supervised release.

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the DEA’s Special Operations Division Bilateral Investigations Unit and Bogota Country Office, as well as the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs and the Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section’s Judicial Attaché’s Office in Bogota.

This prosecution is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (“OCDETF”) operation.  OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach.

[1] Communications, conversations, and statements discussed and quoted herein are described in substance and in part, and many of these conversations occurred in Spanish.

BRONX MAN INDICTED FOR SEXUAL ABUSE OF 4-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER WHICH HE VIDEO RECORDED AND SHARED ON SNAPCHAT

 

Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a Bronx man has been indicted for Predatory Sexual Assault Against a Child and related charges for the repeated sexual abuse of his young daughter, which he videorecorded and shared with other individuals on Snapchat. 

District Attorney Clark said, “The alleged actions of this father against his little girl are beyond the pale and are the definition of predator. Fortunately, an individual from out of state had the care and concern to report seeing videos of child sexual abuse on social media, and this was relayed to authorities who quickly put an end to the horror inflicted on the victim by someone who should have been her protector.” 

District Attorney Clark said the defendant, Derick Colon, 24, of 205 Alexander Avenue, was indicted on two counts of Predatory Sexual Assault Against a Child, two counts of firstdegree Criminal Sexual Act, three counts of first-degree Sexual Abuse, and Endangering the Welfare of a Child, for conduct that occurred on or about and between January 19, 2024, to January 21, 2024.  

He was arraigned on April 10, 2024, before Bronx Supreme Court Justice Brenda Rivera and was remanded. He is due back in court on May 7, 2024.

According to the investigation, on January 19, 2024, a report was made by an individual out-of-state that they had received videos on Snapchat which appeared to contain child sexual abuse material and this information was relayed to National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. The Federal Bureau of Investigation conducted an investigation which located the user of the Snapchat account in Bronx County. Members of the FBI and NYPD executed a search warrant at the address where the defendant was found with his four-year-old daughter. 

Further searches of the Snapchat account revealed a number of videos showing the defendant touching the child, as well as engaging in anal sexual conduct and oral sexual conduct with her. The defendant has been charged federally with the creation and possession of the child sexual abuse material. 

District Attorney Clark thanked the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the NYPD Special Victims Major Case Squad for their assistance.

An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt.  

DEC Reminds New Yorkers to Be BearWise this Spring

 

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Follow Best Practices to Reduce Potential Conflicts with Bears

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Basil Seggos today reminded New Yorkers to remove or secure outdoor food sources that may attract black bears. Throughout the spring and early summer months, black bears have depleted fat reserves and will search extensively for easily obtainable, calorie-dense foods, which can lead to an increase in the potential for human-bear conflicts near homes and residential areas, especially before the spring green-up when natural food sources for bears are scarce.

 

“Across New York, black bears are emerging from their winter dens and may seek out human-created food sources,” Commissioner Seggos said. “Repeat access to these food sources can make bears bolder, so I encourage New Yorkers to practice the BearWise basics to help keep bears wild and prevent the potential for human-bear conflicts.”

 

Those who maintain bird feeders should begin emptying and cleaning spilled seed from feeders, and let nature feed the birds from spring through fall. Garbage and recycling cans should be secured or stored in a sturdy building. This is also a good time to clean or remove all residual grease and food from grills and smokers. Pet and livestock food should be kept indoors and those with chicken coops or apiaries should consider installing an electric fence to protect flocks and hives. Lastly, neighbors should alert neighbors to any bear activity so they can take these same precautions.

 

New Yorkers are advised to never feed or approach bears. Feeding bears intentionally is dangerous and illegal. Bears that become habituated to being fed can become a threat to people and property.

 

By taking some time to practice the BearWise basics New Yorkers are helping keep bears away from people, homes, and neighborhoods, and that helps keep bears healthy, wild, and safe by removing any unnatural food attractants and encouraging neighbors to do the same. For more information on how to live responsibly with black bears, please visit DEC's webpage and Bearwise.org.

 

More information on reducing backyard bear conflicts is available on DEC’s YouTube page,

https://youtu.be/xM2Et5xAg14?si=Tfjhx1PkrZxgOfVt

 

More information on reducing bear conflicts while camping is available on DEC’s YouTube page,

https://youtu.be/hZTJBB8O5BY?si=ZaHwa89bc6f8s8d0

 

An interview with DEC Big Game Biologist, Brendan Quirion is available to download, https://extapps.dec.ny.gov/fs/programs/press/Fish&Wildlife/Black%20Bear%20Info.mp4