A man arrested outside of a smoke shop in Midtown.
Photo by Dean Moses
Authorities now have the power to fine landlords who knowingly rent commercial space to illegal smoke shops, according to new legislation that has just gone into effect.
Landlords will be notified in writing if they are renting space to an illegal cannabis business that is busted by authorities.ย Landlords who make no attempt to kick the tenant out are then susceptible to being hit with hefty fines if the illegal cannabis business reoffends.ย
Introduced by Council Member Lynn Schulman and sponsored by Council Member Carlina Rivera, among others, the pair brought attention to the new law on Monday outside of the Union Square Travel Agency Cannabis Dispensary. The legislation allows authorities to take aim at the landlords housing the illegal smoke shops, essentially allowing the NYPD, New York City Sheriffโs Office, and Office of Cannabis Management to have more freedom when it comes to enforcement.
โWhat happens is when the sheriff or the NYPD does a raid, the landlord gets a letter from the City saying youโre renting to an entity thatโs conducting illegal business and we want you to evict them,โ Schulman, who represents central Queens, said. โSo thatโs number one. Number two, they actually get another chance when thereโs a reinspection of that premises. Theyโll get another notice, and then after that, they may get fined.โ

Schulman likens the process to a two-strike system, one strike for the initial infraction and the second if the operator is not evicted. The first fine will begin at about $5,000 with the second doubling to about $10,000. According to Schulman, the fines will only stop if the landlord can show they are actually attempting to evict the business selling the illegal product.
The politicians estimate that there are about 8,000 illegal smoke shops currently operating in the Big Apple compared to the about 20 licensed stores statewide. Chief James…
Read the full article here
Leave a Reply