Cannabis Education
Social Equity in Cannabis: What It Means and Why It Matters
A plain-English guide to social equity cannabis: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.
·2 min read

Photo by Eduardo Valdes on Pexels
## The Short Answer
"Social equity" in cannabis refers to programs and licensing preferences designed to address the fact that cannabis prohibition disproportionately affected Black and Brown communities through decades of arrests, convictions, and economic marginalization. For adults 21 and older, consumers and prospective industry participants, social equity is both a policy framework and a lens for understanding why the regulated cannabis industry looks the way it does.
## The Historical Context
Cannabis prohibition in the US, from the 1937 Marihuana Tax Act through the 1970 Controlled Substances Act and the decades of enforcement that followed, was applied unevenly. Arrest rates for cannabis possession have consistently been higher in Black communities than white communities, despite similar use rates. A generation of felony records produced lasting employment, housing, and civic consequences.
When states began legalizing in the 2010s, the early industry participants, cultivators, retailers, processors, were heavily white, well-capitalized, and often outside the communities most affected by prohibition.
## What Social Equity Programs Try to Do
Social equity programs in state cannabis regulations typically include some combination of:
- **Prioritized licensing** for applicants from communities disproportionately affected by prohibition.
- **Reduced or waived fees** for social equity applicants.
- **Low-interest loans or grants** to address capital barriers.
- **Technical assistance** (legal, business, compliance support).
- **Geographic set-asides** (licenses reserved for specific communities).
- **Expungement and record-clearing** for prior cannabis convictions.
## New York's CAURD Program
New York launched the Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD) program in 2022, which prioritized licensing for applicants with cannabis-related convictions (or family members of those with convictions). The program has faced legal challenges and implementation complications, but it remains a central feature of New York's adult-use rollout.
## Why This Matters for Consumers
Consumer-side implications:
- **Where you buy matters.** Supporting social equity licensees directs revenue toward communities historically excluded from the industry.
- **Dispensary listings** often indicate social-equity-owned status.
- **Pricing may vary** between equity-licensed and non-equity-licensed retailers; both operate under the same product safety standards.
## Criticisms and Ongoing Issues
Social equity programs face legitimate critiques:
- Implementation delays and legal challenges have limited the number of equity-licensed businesses that have opened.
- Capital requirements still favor better-resourced applicants even within equity categories.
- Larger corporate cannabis operators have sometimes acquired equity-licensed businesses.
- Federal illegality prevents equity licensees from accessing SBA loans and standard banking.
## Where to Go Next
Related reading: [cannabis expungement](/blog/cannabis-expungement-how-past-convictions-are-being-cleared), [first time at a dispensary](/blog/first-time-at-a-dispensary-what-to-expect-and-how-to-prepare), and [cannabis careers](/blog/cannabis-careers-fast-growing-jobs-and-how-to-break-into-the-industry).
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*This article is consumer education for adults 21+. Nothing here is medical, legal, or financial advice. Cannabis laws vary by state, always verify your state's current rules and, for health questions, consult a licensed clinician. For regulated New York retail, verify licensing via the OCM QR-code system at [cannabis.ny.gov](https://cannabis.ny.gov).*