Minnesota’s marijuana regulatory agency will be led by Erin DuPree, who founded a low-dose THC company she will leave behind to oversee the state’s move to a legal market for full-fledged cannabis products.
Gov. Tim Walz on Thursday named DuPree the first executive director of the Office of Cannabis Management. Walz said his his appointee “is a proven and effective leader, who will be successful in standing up Minnesota’s new adult-use cannabis market and helping Minnesotans succeed in the industry.”
In that role, DuPree will take charge in refining and enforcing boundaries around aspects of marijuana from growth to sale. DuPree, 43, said in an interview that she has a firm grasp of the cannabis landscape having founded Loonacy Cannabis Co. and done other business consulting for about two decades.
“I'm a good fit because I am young enough to be able to connect with the people who are going to be actively entering this industry as we create it,” DuPree said. “But I'm experienced enough to deal with the real problems that businesses are going to run into trying to be a part of this industry. I am here to not only serve Minnesotans but to serve Minnesota businesses.”
Loonacy, which had a store in Apple Valley, offered low-dose hemp products, including edibles and beverages. It will close because Dupree will be moving to the regulatory side.
When she begins the assignment in early October, she’ll be building an agency from the ground up. She’ll start by filling an initial nine positions and eventually 150 employees.
“It is a big job,” said Rep. Zack Stephenson, DFL-Coon Rapids. He helped write the law that made possession and use of marijuana legal for adults 21 and older this August.
Rather than assign oversight to several agencies, the law’s sponsors created the new entity to set rules, review license applications and ensure what’s sold is within potency limits.
“They will immediately take over that and shepherd that process through so that we can have a legal marketplace up and running as expeditiously as possible so that that rulemaking process,” Stephenson said. “It's really going to set the framework for how our legal cannabis industry is going to look in Minnesota.”
While some American Indian tribes have begun selling marijuana products, a full retail market is likely a year or more away. State officials have said they expect broad sales to start in early 2025.
When the Office of Cannabis Management position opened in July, 150 people submitted applications. The field was narrowed substantially before Walz interviewed finalists and made his selection.
The job posting sought a director to guide efforts around compliance, licensure, social equity and relations with other levels of government.
Minimum qualifications included eight years of professional experience in regulatory oversight, public administration or other comparable service. At least two years must have been in a high management role. Knowledge of the cannabis and hemp industries is also key.
Other requirements included “strong writing skills and public speaking skills.”
A background check was required. The job pays up to $151,000 per year.
DuPree said while the move to a retail market is a heavy lift, Minnesota has the record of other states that legalized marijuana sooner to draw from.
“Some of the challenges that other states have had, we're going to try to avoid,” she said. “Being the 23rd state to legalize, we're lucky enough to look back on the other 22 states, see what has worked and what hasn't worked. And we don’t have to reinvent the wheel here.”