• MN Cannabis Market Monitor, Anoka City Dispensary & SF 4401 Omnibus Bill
    Jul 10 2026
    Will and Matilda break down Minnesota's fast-moving cannabis market: a brand-new OCM dashboard, farmer grants closing this week, the country's first city-run dispensary in Anoka, and the sweeping SF 4401 omnibus bill taking effect August 1, 2026. In this episode: OCM launches the Cannabis Market Monitor — monthly public data on sales, license counts, and product mix across adult-use and medical.CanGrow farmer training and loan grants are open through 4:30 p.m. July 13, 2026 for small MN cultivators.Licensing scorecard: ~240 licenses issued out of ~3,541 applicants, with 1,800+ still in qualified/preliminary status; statutory caps expired July 1, 2026.Anoka opened the nation's first city-owned recreational dispensary on Feb. 7, 2026 — months after non-tribal adult-use retail launched Sept. 16, 2025.SF 4401 (signed May 26, effective Aug. 1) merges medical and adult-use supply chains and creates a new macrobusiness license: up to 38,000 sq ft canopy and up to 8 retail locations.Hemp + cannabis co-location under common ownership; hemp retailers can sell large-format beverages (≥750 mL, ≥17 servings) in child-resistant resealable bottles.Wholesale flower topping $4,500/lb as supply lags retail demand — why shelf prices still feel high.Consumer science: myrcene, MN's most common terpene, and its "couch-lock" reputation; plus CanRenew equity grants and the Lucky Leaf Expo Minneapolis Aug. 28–29, 2026. Sources: OCM Cannabis Market Monitor announcementMinnesota Office of Cannabis Management (CanGrow)OCM licensing lottery overviewMarijuana Moment: Anoka's city-owned dispensaryMN Reformer: first non-tribal recreational dispensariesFoley Hoag: Walz signs SF 4401 omnibusStar Tribune: 7 changes to MN cannabis lawsCannabis Business Times: MN adult-use launchCannaMD: understanding myrceneLucky Leaf Expo Minneapolis 2026DEED CanRenew cannabis grantsVicente LLP: MN cannabis grant programs Subscribe: mncannabishub.com Full transcript Will: —and that's the thing, Matilda, you can actually SEE it now. Like, on a dashboard. Matilda: Wait, the OCM one? The Market Monitor thing? Will: Yeah. The Cannabis Market Monitor. They just rolled it out. Matilda: Okay so break it down for me. What am I actually looking at when I pull that up? Will: Sales numbers, license counts, product mix. Adult-use and medical, side by side. Matilda: Monthly? Will: Monthly. Public. Free. Matilda: Huh. That's... actually kind of a big deal. Will: For the first time, Minnesotans can see the market by the numbers, you know? Matilda: Right, because up until now it's been vibes. Like, "the market feels expensive," "shelves feel thin"— Will: Exactly. Matilda: —but now there's a receipt. Will: There's a receipt. I like that. Matilda: Okay but real talk, Will, is anybody outside the industry gonna look at it? Will: Ope, that's fair. Probably not your average shopper. Matilda: Right? Will: But journalists will. Advocates will. And when somebody claims something wild about the market, you can just... pull it up. Matilda: Accountability. Okay. I'll give you that one. Will: You betcha. Matilda: Don't. Will: What? Matilda: You don't get to "you betcha" me when we're talking about spreadsheets. Will: Fine, fine. Moving on. Matilda: Move on. What else is OCM cooking? Will: CanGrow. The farmer grants. Matilda: Which are for— Will: Small Minnesota cultivators. Training grants, loan grants. The application window's open right now. Matilda: How long? Will: Deadline is July 13. 4:30 in the afternoon. Matilda: Oh that's like— Will: Days away. Yeah. Matilda: Will, that's THIS week. Will: I know, I know. So if you're a small grower, or you know one, mn.gov slash ocm. Don't sleep on it. Matilda: Okay that's genuinely useful. That's the kind of thing that doesn't get in front of the people who need it. Will: Right. The big operators have lawyers watching for this stuff. The little farm up north does not. Matilda: Up north with a laptop and a spotty connection. Will: Exactly. Matilda: Alright. Licensing. Where are we? Will: So as of June, OCM's issued around 240 licenses. Matilda: Out of? Will: About 3,541 applicants. Matilda: That is a gap. Will: It's a big gap. And there's still like 1,800-plus sitting in that qualified or preliminary status. Matilda: Waiting. Will: Waiting. Matilda: Okay so hold on. When people complain that the rollout is slow, that's the number they're pointing at. Will: That's the number. Matilda: But — and I'm gonna push back a little — issuing a license isn't the same as opening a store. Right? Will: Right, totally. Matilda: Some of those 240 aren't operating yet either. Will: Correct. So the shelf you're standing in front of at a dispensary is a lagging indicator of a lagging indicator. Matilda: That's bleak. Will: It's Minnesota nice bleak. Matilda: Okay and the caps — the statutory license caps — those expire July 1? Will: Expired. July 1, 2026. So OCM now gets to reassess whether to raise them, based on how the ...
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    13 mins
  • MN Cannabis July 2026: OCM Dashboard, Lab Crunch, Omnibus & Anoka
    Jul 3 2026
    Matilda and co-host break down Minnesota's July 2026 cannabis landscape: OCM's public licensing dashboard, a testing-lab bottleneck, the freshly signed omnibus bill, and new municipal and tribal dispensaries. Plus a fair, non-hyped look at myrcene. In this episode: OCM dashboard: 240 licenses issued of 3,541 applicants; 1,332 preliminarily approved, 527 qualified, 387 denied.July 1, 2026 decision point: OCM can evaluate releasing licenses beyond current caps based on market data.Legend Technical Services ended cannabis testing around June 16, 2026 — MN drops from five labs to four (three fully licensed); expect July retail delays.Governor Walz signed the 2026 Cannabis Omnibus (HF 4203 / SF 4401) on May 26, merging medical and adult-use supply chains and creating a "macrobusiness" license effective Jan. 1, 2027.One owner can now hold hemp and cannabis licenses in the same space — a state bridge ahead of the federal 0.4 mg/container hemp-THC ban on Nov. 12, 2026.Anoka opened Minnesota's first municipal (city-run) dispensary Feb. 6, 2026; Osseo targeting a municipal store by year-end.Flame and Flora, a Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community dispensary, opened in Prior Lake on April 11, 2026 under the tribe's ordinance.Myrcene 101: the most abundant cannabis terpene (also in mango, hops, thyme) — muscle-relaxing and sedative effects documented in preclinical animal research from Federal University of Ceará.Upcoming events: Legacy Cup at Surly Festival Field (Sept. 26), Lucky Leaf Expo Minneapolis, and CannaFest at The Lowlands, St. Paul (Nov. 12). Sources: OCM license dashboard news releaseOCM news releases (testing lab update)Foley Hoag: Walz signs cannabis omnibusMPR News: new cannabis/hemp lawsMPR News: Anoka municipal dispensaryCBS Minnesota: Flame and Flora opens in Prior LakeLeafly: Myrcene terpene guideTwin City Cannabis: Legacy Cup & eventsLucky Leaf Expo MinneapolisCannaFest at The LowlandsOCM social equity applicant qualifications Subscribe: mncannabishub.com Full transcript Will: —and that's the thing, Matilda, like, the OCM dashboard finally being public? That's a big deal. People kept saying it was a black box. Matilda: Right, and now you can actually SEE the numbers. What was it, two-forty licenses issued out of over three thousand applicants? Will: Two-forty out of three thousand five hundred forty-one. And thirteen-thirty-two are preliminarily approved. Matilda: Okay so preliminarily approved means... what, exactly? Because I feel like every time we talk about this, the words change. Will: Fair. So preliminarily approved is basically, "you passed the first gate." Then there's a "qualified" bucket — five-twenty-seven of them — doing background checks and labor peace agreements. Matilda: Labor peace. That's the union piece, yeah? Will: Yeah. Basically the operator agrees not to interfere if workers wanna organize. It's a real hoop. Matilda: And how many got denied? Will: Three-eighty-seven denied. Which... is a lot of people who thought they were in. Matilda: Ope. That's rough. Will: It IS rough. But honestly, better to know than to keep dumping money into an application that's not gonna land. Matilda: Sure, but — okay, push back on you for a sec. Is a public dashboard actually helpful to a normal person? Or is it just, like, transparency theater? Will: Transparency theater. I love that. Matilda: I'm serious though. Will: No, it's a fair hit. For a shopper it doesn't change much. For an applicant or an investor, it's huge. You can see the pipeline. Matilda: Okay, I'll give you that. Will: And here's the piece I actually care about — starting July 1st, OCM can look at the market data and decide whether to release MORE licenses beyond the current caps. Matilda: Wait, that's this month. Will: That's THIS month. Like, right now. Matilda: So we could see the cap crack open. Will: Could. Not saying will. But that's the decision point everybody in the industry's watching. Matilda: Interesting. Okay, related — the testing lab situation. Explain that to me like I don't already know. Will: Yeah, so. Every cannabis product that hits a shelf in Minnesota has to pass third-party lab testing. Matilda: For potency, contaminants, all that. Will: Right. We had five labs. One of 'em — Legend Technical Services — stopped doing cannabis testing around June sixteenth. Matilda: So we're down to four. Will: Four. Three of which are fully licensed. Matilda: Cool, cool, cool. So the bottleneck just got tighter right as more product's trying to move. Will: You got it. Expect retail delays through July. Tighter inventory. Some SKUs just... won't be on shelves for a minute. Matilda: And that's not the dispensary's fault. Will: Not at all. That's supply chain. Wildflower North Loop, Green Goods in Bloomington, Edina Canna — any of 'em could hit gaps. Matilda: So if you walk in and your usual gummy's out — don't yell at the budtender. Will: Please don't yell at the budtender. Matilda: Minnesota ...
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    12 mins
  • MN Cannabis June 2026: Walz Omnibus, Anoka & Osseo Municipal Stores, OCM Licensing
    Jun 26 2026
    Will and the crew break down the busiest month yet for Minnesota cannabis — from Gov. Walz's landmark omnibus bill to the state's first city-run dispensary. Here's everything moving in the MN market as of June 26, 2026. In this episode: OCM has issued 240 licenses out of 3,541 applicants, with 1,332 preliminarily approved and 527 in "qualified" status finishing background checks and labor peace agreements.Gov. Walz signed the 105-page 2026 Omnibus Cannabis Bill on May 26, merging medical and adult-use supply chains so one facility can serve both.The new "macrobusiness" license replaces the medical combo license and caps indoor flowering canopy at 38,000 sq ft (down from 90,000).Starting Aug 1, hemp retailers can sell "large-format" THC beverages — 750 mL+ child-resistant bottles, 17+ servings at up to 5 mg THC each — bridging to the Nov 12 federal hemp-THC restriction.Anoka Cannabis Company, the state's first government-run store, opened Feb 6; Osseo is on deck as the second municipal store with Voyageur Cannabis Services.Flame and Flora opened in Prior Lake in April, owned by the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community on tribal land.Legend Technical Services, MN's oldest licensed cannabis testing lab, exited the industry — leaving only three full-panel labs statewide.OCM's CanGrow program has $2M for farmers entering the legal market; plus a myrcene deep-dive and a heads-up on the Legacy Cup at Surly Festival Field on Sept 26. Sources: OCM Lottery ResultsOCM Cannabis Market Monitor launchFoley Hoag: Walz signs cannabis omnibusMN House Session Daily: large-format THC beveragesMPR News: Anoka municipal dispensaryMJBizDaily: MN municipal dispensariesCBS News: Flame and Flora in Prior LakeCann.dev: MN cannabis licensing June 2026OCM CanGrow programPeer-reviewed myrcene arthritis studyMinnesota Monthly: Legacy Cup Subscribe: mncannabishub.com Full transcript Will: —and that's the thing, like, you can actually walk into a city-run store now and buy flower. In Minnesota. That's wild to me. Matilda: Anoka, right? The municipal one. Will: Anoka Cannabis Company, yeah. Opened back in February. Matilda: And it's literally the city? Like, the city of Anoka is your budtender's boss? Will: Pretty much. It's the first government-run cannabis store in the state. Flower, vapes, edibles, drinks — the whole deal. Matilda: Ope. That's a sentence I didn't think I'd hear in my lifetime. Will: Right? Matilda: I mean, good for them, but also... it's a little surreal. Your tax dollars are now, like, stocking shelves with gummies. Will: And Osseo's next. Matilda: Wait, Osseo too? Will: Yeah, Osseo's lining up to be the second municipal store. They're partnering with Voyageur Cannabis Services to actually run it. Targeting sometime mid-year. Matilda: Huh. Okay. So the model's spreading. Will: It's spreading. And on top of that you've got Flame and Flora — that opened in Prior Lake in April. Matilda: That's the Shakopee Mdewakanton one? Will: Yep. Owned by the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community, sitting on tribal land. Matilda: So in a couple months we got — government store, tribal store, and a bunch of private folks all trying to open at once. Will: It is a moment. It really is. Matilda: And meanwhile the OCM is just... drowning. Will: Well — drowning's one word. Working through it is another. Matilda: Will. Come on. Will: Okay, okay. The numbers ARE a lot. Matilda: Walk me through it. Because every time I look at the dashboard my eyes glaze over. Will: So mid-June, the Office of Cannabis Management — that's the OCM — they've issued two-hundred-forty licenses. Matilda: Out of? Will: Out of three-thousand-five-hundred-forty-one applicants. Matilda: Wait — say that again? Will: Three-thousand-five-hundred-forty-one people applied. Two-forty have actual licenses. Matilda: That is... a brutal ratio. Will: It's a ratio. But there's more to it. About thirteen-hundred have been preliminarily approved. Another five-hundred-twenty-seven are in this "qualified" status, doing background checks and labor peace agreements. Matilda: Okay so it's not like only two-forty got past the velvet rope. There's a pipeline. Will: There's a pipeline. There's also three-hundred-eighty-seven that got denied, and another seven-hundred-thirty-six that just didn't get picked in the capped-license lotteries. Matilda: Right, the lotteries. Because some license types are capped. Will: Capped, yeah. Matilda: Cool, cool. So you can do everything right and just... lose a raffle. Will: Welcome to regulated cannabis. Matilda: Uff da. Will: But — credit where it's due — OCM did launch this public Cannabis Market Monitor dashboard. You can actually go look at licensing, retail sales, production metrics. Like, the data's out there. Matilda: That's actually nice. Will: It's nice! It's transparent. I'll take it. Matilda: Okay so that's the licensing side. What about the big bill? Will: The omnibus. Matilda: The omnibus. Will: Walz signed it ...
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    16 mins
  • 2026 MN Cannabis Omnibus, THC Beverages & Anoka Dispensary
    Jun 19 2026
    Minnesota's cannabis landscape just got re-shuffled. We break down the 2026 Cannabis Omnibus Bill, the new THC beverage rules hitting bars Aug. 1, and the latest dispensary openings from Anoka to Prior Lake. In this episode: Gov. Tim Walz signed the 2026 Cannabis Omnibus Bill on May 26, 2026, merging Minnesota's medical and adult-use supply chains into one unified system.The new "macrobusiness" license replaces the medical combination license held by Green Thumb Industries and Vireo Health.Starting Aug. 1, 2026, hemp retailers can sell THC beverages in resealable bottles of 750 mL+ with 17+ servings — opening the bar and restaurant channel.A new "Ratio Hemp-Infused Cannabis Product" category lifts edibles to 10 mg per serving and 200 mg per package.Federal hemp redefinition takes effect Nov. 12, 2026; dual hemp/cannabis licensure gives MN hemp operators a runway into the regulated market.Anoka Cannabis Company — Minnesota's first municipally-owned adult-use dispensary — opened Feb. 2026 at 839 East River Road; Flame and Flora opened in Prior Lake on Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community land in April; Osseo is expected mid-2026.OCM is reviewing LPHE applications on a rolling basis; up to 25 cultivator, 12 manufacturer, and 75 retailer social-equity licenses may be issued before July 1, 2026.CanRenew will award $15M/year starting 2026 to social-equity communities, plus a Myrcene 101 terpene primer grounded in recent NIH-indexed research. Sources: Foley Hoag — Walz signs landmark cannabis omnibus billHarris Sliwoski — Minnesota's new cannabis and hemp lawsMPR News — Anoka municipal cannabis dispensaryCBS News — Flame and Flora opens in Prior LakeMJBizDaily — Minnesota's first municipal cannabis dispensaryMinnesota Office of Cannabis Management (OCM)Minnesota DEED — Cannabis business programsCannabis Business Times — CanRenew grant recipientsLucky Leaf Expo MinneapolisNECANN Minnesota Cannabis ConventionNIH — β-myrcene anxiolytic effects studyNIH — 2025 entourage effect review Subscribe: mncannabishub.com Full transcript Will: ...so I'm standing in line at the co-op, right, and the guy in front of me is asking the cashier if they sell the THC seltzers yet. Matilda: At the co-op? Will: At the co-op. And she's like, sir, no, but have you tried our kombucha. And he goes, ma'am, that is NOT the same thing. Matilda: I mean... he's not wrong. Will: He's not wrong! But that's kinda where we are right now, Matilda. Everybody's confused about what you can buy, where you can buy it, and when it actually shows up on a shelf. Matilda: Yeah, and I think a lot of that confusion just got... I wouldn't say cleared up, but at least re-shuffled. Walz signed the big omnibus bill, what, a few weeks back? Will: May 26. The 2026 Cannabis Omnibus. And it's a big one — like, structurally big. Matilda: Okay so unpack that for me. Because every time somebody says "omnibus" my eyes glaze over. Will: Fair. So the headline is — Minnesota used to have two separate supply chains. Medical on one side, adult-use on the other. Totally different rules, different operators. Matilda: Right, which was always kind of weird. Will: Super weird. This bill basically merges them into one unified system. One supply chain, one rulebook. Matilda: Okay. And what happens to the medical guys? Because there were only, like, two of them, right? Will: Two. Green Thumb and Vireo. They had what was called the medical combination license. The new bill creates a thing called a "macrobusiness" license that basically replaces it. Matilda: Macrobusiness. Wow, somebody really workshopped that name. Will: I know. It sounds like a Costco tier. Matilda: It does! Like, you've got small business, medium, macro. Will: But functionally — those two operators now sit inside the same framework as everybody else, just at a larger scale. Matilda: Okay. So... does that mean more product variety for a regular person walking into a dispensary? Will: Eventually, yeah. The whole point is you don't have this weird wall where medical flower is over here and adult-use is over there with totally different testing rules and labels. Matilda: Got it. Okay, but I'll be honest — the part of this bill I actually care about? Will: What. Matilda: The THC beverages thing. Will: Of course. Matilda: Listen. I'm a consumer. Tell me what changes for me. Will: Okay so — starting August 1, hemp retailers can sell THC beverages in big resealable bottles. We're talking 750 milliliters or more, 17-plus servings per bottle. Matilda: Wait. Like a wine bottle. Will: Like a wine bottle. Exactly like a wine bottle. Matilda: Ope, that's actually huge. Will: Right? Because right now, if you go to a bar or a restaurant, you're getting these little single-serve cans. Which are fine, but... Matilda: But they're spendy. Like, eight bucks for a can? Will: Spendy. And from the operator's side, the margins are rough and the storage is a pain. Matilda: So a bartender can now pour a ...
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    16 mins
  • MN Cannabis Omnibus, OCM Dashboard & Osseo's Municipal Dispensary
    Jun 18 2026
    Minnesota's legal cannabis market just hit several major inflection points at once — a new public data dashboard, a sweeping omnibus bill, and the state's second municipal dispensary. We break down what's actually changing on August 1, 2026 and January 1, 2027. In this episode: OCM launches the public Cannabis Market Monitor dashboard with monthly retail sales, license counts, and planting/harvest data; ED Eric Taubel frames 2026 as "about market growth across the state."Minnesota scaled from ~49 non-tribal stores in January to ~148 licensed dispensaries by early April, with a record ~$22M in monthly sales in March 2026.Gov. Walz signed the 2026 Cannabis Omnibus on May 26 — merging medical and adult-use supply chains, expanding OCM authority to deny/revoke licenses, with most provisions effective Aug 1, 2026.New Cannabis Macrobusiness License tier takes effect January 1, 2027 — and what that means for small operators and social equity applicants.Osseo opens Minnesota's second city-run dispensary mid-2026 in the former Osseo Press & News building (7,480 sq ft) with Voyageur Cannabis Services, following Anoka's Feb 6 launch.Moorhead Horizon Middle School East incident: 12 students sickened by THC strips at 300 mg each (60× MN's 5 mg legal serving limit); investigators recovered 1,900+ THC carts and $73K cash.Star Tribune profiles women-led MN dispensaries including Pot Mama's (Shayna Hoechst) and Lot W Dispensary (Brittney Peterson) — and the capital access barrier.CanGrow grant window open: $10K–$50K training/TA grants and $2.5K–$50K farmer loan financing (up to $150K with match). Plus: WNBA removes cannabis from banned substances, and a myrcene research update. Sources: OCM news release — Cannabis Market Monitor launchCannabis Market Monitor dashboardFoley Hoag — 2026 Cannabis Omnibus summaryMN House Session Daily — HF cannabis billMJBizDaily — MN municipal dispensaryStar Tribune — women shaping MN cannabisKSTP — Moorhead 300mg THC strip incidentOCM CanGrow grantsNIH/PMC — myrcene researchNIH/PMC — β-myrcene driving studyMarijuana Moment — WNBA cannabis policy Subscribe: mncannabishub.com Full transcript Will: —and that's the thing, like, the dashboard actually exists now, you can just go look at it. Matilda: Wait, the OCM one? The Cannabis Market Monitor? Will: Yeah. Mn-dot-gov slash OCM. They put it up, it's live, monthly retail sales, license counts, planting and harvest data, all of it. Matilda: Huh. Okay so the state is basically just... showing its homework now? Will: Pretty much. And Eric Taubel — he's the ED over there — he framed 2026 as, quote, "about market growth across the state." Matilda: Which, I mean, what else is he gonna say. Will: Right? "This year's about contraction, folks." Like, no. Matilda: "Please panic responsibly." Will: But the numbers actually back him up a little, that's the wild part. Matilda: Okay hit me. Will: So per the OCM dashboard and Cannabis Business Times — as of early April, around 148 licensed dispensaries operating in Minnesota. Matilda: One forty-eight. Will: One forty-eight. And back in January? Roughly 49 non-tribal stores. Matilda: Wait, so we tripled in like a quarter? Will: Basically, yeah. Matilda: Ope. That's a lot of new signage going up. Will: And March hit a record — about 22 million in monthly cannabis sales. Matilda: Twenty-two million. In one month. Will: One month. Matilda: Okay I want to push back a little, though. Will: Go. Matilda: Like, more stores and more sales is not automatically a healthy market, right? That could be everybody racing to the bottom on price. Will: Hm. Matilda: It could be a bubble. It could be a bunch of folks who are gonna be out of business by next spring. Will: That's fair. That's actually fair. Matilda: I'm just saying — "growth" doesn't mean "stable." Will: No, you're right. And honestly, that's part of why the dashboard matters. Because now we can WATCH it. Matilda: Yeah okay, the receipts being public is good. Will: Like, anybody — you, me, somebody applying for a license, somebody on a city council — can pull up the same numbers. Matilda: That's the part I actually like. Less vibes, more spreadsheet. Will: Less vibes more spreadsheet, that should be on a shirt. Matilda: Print it. We'll sell it at the cabin. Will: Okay so the OTHER huge thing — and this is the one I think changes the shape of the industry — Walz signed the 2026 Cannabis Omnibus. Matilda: When? Will: May 26. Matilda: Okay, just a few weeks ago. Will: Yep. Most of the provisions kick in August 1. Matilda: Alright. What's IN it. Will: Big one — they're merging the bifurcated medical and adult-use supply chains. Matilda: Meaning? Will: Meaning, before, if you were a medical operator, you basically ran a separate operation. Different supply chain, different rules. Now if you're medical-endorsed, you can serve patients AND adult-use customers out of one operation. Matilda: Oh. Okay that's actually ...
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    19 mins
  • Forest Lake's First Dispensary Opens, OCM Macrobusiness License & Myrcene 101
    Jun 17 2026
    Forest Lake just got its first dispensary, Minnesota's cannabis omnibus bill is reshaping the license landscape, and we dig into myrcene — the terpene behind that classic "couch-lock" feeling. Here's everything from this week's episode. In this episode: Forest Lake's first dispensary opened Monday, June 15, 2026, with Mayor Blake Roberts personally involved in the launch.Context on Minnesota's municipal dispensary wave: Anoka's city-run store is already open, and Osseo is preparing to launch the state's first government-run cannabis store.The 2026 cannabis omnibus bill (SF 4401 / HF 4203) creates a new "macrobusiness" license tier and begins merging the medical and adult-use supply chains under OCM.OCM is reviewing Lower-Potency Hemp Edible (LPHE) license applications on a rolling basis — the window runs through 4:30 p.m. on July 13.Where to watch the numbers yourself: OCM's public Cannabis Market Monitor dashboard publishes monthly licensing, sales, and cultivation stats.Terpene deep-dive: myrcene is typically the most abundant terpene in cannabis (also found in mango, hops, and thyme), with an earthy/musky aroma.Cultivars above ~0.5% myrcene tend toward calming, sedative effects; research notes anti-inflammatory and anxiolytic properties tied to the entourage effect.Shopper tip: ask your budtender for the COA and check the terpene panel — myrcene-dominant for sleep, limonene/pinene-forward for energy.Upcoming: CannaCon St. Paul, June 26–28, 2026 at the Saint Paul RiverCentre. Sources: Star Tribune: Forest Lake mayor opens cannabis dispensaryMinnesota Office of Cannabis ManagementOCM Cannabis Market MonitorCarpfish Creative: MN Cannabis Omnibus UpdateMJBizDaily: Minnesota's first municipal cannabis dispensaryMarijuana Moment: First government-run MN marijuana storeCannovia: What is myrcene?ACS Lab: Guide to myrceneBotanical Sciences: Myrcene terpeneNama CBD: What is myrcene?NECANN Minnesota ConventionStar Tribune Events: 2026 Minnesota Cannabis Convention Subscribe: mncannabishub.com Full transcript Will: —and that's the thing, you can't just drop a dispensary in a town like Forest Lake and not have it be a whole moment, you know? Matilda: Will, the MAYOR was there. Like, personally there. Opening day. Will: Mayor Blake Roberts. Monday. June fifteenth. Cut the ribbon on Forest Lake's first dispensary. Matilda: Yesterday. That was yesterday. Will: That was yesterday, yeah. Matilda: Ope, okay, so I want to sit with that for a sec because... a sitting mayor showing up to a cannabis store opening? Five years ago? Will: Wouldn't have happened. Matilda: Wouldn't have happened. Will: Not a chance. And it's not just symbolic, Matilda, it's like... the politics shifted under our feet and now the politicians are catching up. Matilda: But is he tied to the store, like business-tied, or is this a ceremonial thing? Will: That I don't actually know. The reporting I saw just said he was personally involved in the launch. I don't want to overstate it. Matilda: Okay, fair. Will: I'd rather say "I'm not sure" than make something up. Matilda: A rare quality in podcasting. Will: Skol. Matilda: But here's what I keep coming back to. Forest Lake gets their first store, and meanwhile we've got Anoka already running a city-owned dispensary— Will: City-RUN, yeah. Matilda: —and Osseo about to launch what's gonna be the first actual government-run cannabis store in the state. Will: That one still kinda blows my mind. Matilda: Right? Will: Like, the city OWNS the store. The city is the retailer. Matilda: It's wild. And I think people up north and out in the suburbs hear "municipal dispensary" and assume it's some Twin Cities thing— Will: It's not. Matilda: It's not. It's the opposite. It's the smaller cities going, you know what, we'll just do this ourselves. Will: And keep the revenue local. Which, honestly? Smart. Matilda: A government doing something efficient. In Minnesota. Doncha know. Will: Stop. Matilda: I'm just saying. Will: Okay but you bring up a real point though. Because we should talk about what's happening at the state level too, because OCM had a busy spring. Matilda: The Office of Cannabis Management. Will: The Office of Cannabis Management. So the legislature passed a cannabis omnibus bill this session — SF four-four-oh-one, paired with HF four-two-oh-three. Matilda: Mhm. Will: And the headline thing for me is they're creating a new license tier called "macrobusiness." Matilda: Macrobusiness. Define that for a normal human. Will: So... my read is it's basically a larger-scale operator tier. Bigger footprint than the existing license classes. Matilda: So... not the craft grower down the road. Will: Not the craft grower. Not the microbusiness. A step up. Matilda: Hmm. Will: And the OTHER big piece in that bill is they're starting to merge the medical and adult-use supply chains under OCM. Matilda: Okay THAT is actually a big deal. Will: That's a big deal. Matilda: Because right now if you're a ...
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    13 mins
  • MN Cannabis Hub - June 12, 2026
    Jun 12 2026
    The Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) has unanimously approved an expedited application window for Tier 2 and Tier 3 cultivation licenses, set to open on August 1st, 2026, to address widespread product shortages across Minnesota's nearly 200 licensed dispensaries. This move aims to get more growers online by early 2027, promising increased variety, better stock, and more competitive pricing for consumers. Key Highlights: • The OCM is opening an expedited application window for cultivation licenses to combat the state's significant cannabis product shortages. • New dispensaries, Superior Greenery in Duluth and Lakes & Leaves Cannabis Co. in Rochester, are celebrating their grand openings. • Consumers are increasingly focusing on terpene profiles rather than just strain names or THC percentages to find desired cannabis effects. • Upcoming community events include the Grow North Cannabis Expo, a Cannabis & Community Cleanup, and a Home Grow 101 workshop. Topics: Office of Cannabis Management, OCM, cultivation licenses, product shortages, dispensary openings, Superior Greenery, Lakes & Leaves Cannabis Co., terpene profiles, entourage effect, consumer education, Grow North Cannabis Expo, home grow --- TRANSCRIPT ### MN Cannabis Hub Podcast Script Episode Title: The Cultivation Crunch: Why Shelves Are Thin and What's Next Date: June 12, 2026 Host: Alex Peterson Estimated Run Time: ~13 minutes (Intro Music: Upbeat, chill, lo-fi hip-hop beat. Fades slightly to background as host begins.) Alex Peterson: Welcome to the MN Cannabis Hub, your weekly source for Minnesota cannabis news, education, and community. I’m your host, Alex Peterson. It’s Friday, June 12th, 2026, and it feels like summer has finally settled in across the state. This week, we’re diving into the topic on everyone’s mind: the product shortages. We’ll break down the latest announcement from the Office of Cannabis Management aimed at fixing it. We’ve also got news on some exciting dispensary grand openings in Duluth and Rochester, and we’ll explore an industry trend that’s shifting how we shop for cannabis. Plus, a look at some great community events coming up. Let’s get into it. (Transition Music: A short, clean musical sting.) ### Segment 1: The Regulatory Roundup Time: ~3.5 minutes Alex: Alright, our top story this week comes from St. Paul, where the Office of Cannabis Management, or OCM, held its monthly board meeting. The main event was the unanimous approval of a new, expedited application window for Tier 2 and Tier 3 cultivation licenses. Now, for those who aren’t deep in the regulatory weeds, what this actually means is that the state is officially acknowledging the cultivation bottleneck we’ve all been feeling at the consumer level. For months, we've heard from retailers and consumers about inconsistent stock and favorite brands disappearing for weeks at a time. This is the OCM’s biggest move yet to address it. The new window, set to open on August 1st, will prioritize applicants who can demonstrate operational readiness within six months. The goal is to get more growers online, producing, and supplying our state’s nearly 200 licensed dispensaries by early 2027. This is a direct response to a major community pain point. The initial rollout of licenses, while focused rightly on social equity, simply didn’t account for the sheer volume of demand from Minnesota consumers. The result has been a frustrating cycle of supply shortages and, frankly, higher prices than many expected three years post-legalization. This move should, in the long term, lead to more variety, better stock, and more competitive pricing on dispensary shelves. We’ll be watching closely to see how many new cultivators get approved. For a full breakdown of the new license requirements and what this means for both aspiring growers and consumers, we’ve published a deep-dive analysis on our website. You can find that at mncannabishub.com/ocm-update. (Transition Music Sting) ### Segment 2: Dispensary Openings & News Time: ~2.5 minutes Alex: Speaking of dispensaries, let’s talk about some exciting growth on the ground. First, a huge congratulations to the team at ‘Superior Greenery’ in Duluth, who are celebrating their grand opening this weekend! Superior Greenery is a social equity licensee with a focus on craft, living-soil cannabis and products sourced exclusively from Northern Minnesota cultivators and manufacturers. Their opening is a huge win for the North Shore, bringing a much-needed independent and locally-focused retailer to the area. Doors open tomorrow, Saturday the 13th, at 10 a.m. And down south, the expansion continues. ‘Lakes & Leaves Cannabis Co.’, one of the state's larger multi-store operators, is opening its fifth retail location in Rochester next Friday. While they represent a different side of the market, their presence should help ease some of the supply pressures in the southern part of the state and ...
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    9 mins
  • MN Cannabis Hub - June 12, 2026
    Jun 12 2026
    June 12, 2026 episode covering OCM regulatory updates including new testing requirements effective July 1st, 47 new micro-cultivator licenses, dispensary expansion across Minnesota, pricing trends, terpene education, the cannabis delivery pilot program rollout, expungement program updates, and summer events. Visit mncannabishub.com for dispensary menus, product reviews, and the latest MN cannabis coverage.
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    7 mins