Illinois CRTA (410 ILCS 705) creates Social Equity Applicant tiers offering scoring boosts, fee reductions, and a Cannabis Business Development Fund. Cook County recognizes state Social Equity licenses for dispensaries operating in unincorporated areas and suburbs that opted into cannabis sales.
Under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, applicants qualify as Social Equity if they live in a Disproportionately Impacted Area, have a prior cannabis-related conviction, or meet workforce thresholds tied to those communities. Illinois IDFPR and the Department of Agriculture run the licensing windows for dispensaries, craft growers, transporters, and infusers. Cook County does not run a parallel local equity license but waives general business permit fees for state-recognized Social Equity dispensaries in unincorporated areas under Cook County Board Resolution 19-3088. Suburbs choose their own posture: many Cook suburbs that opted in mirror the state Social Equity preference, while others impose only the standard zoning review under Ch. 102.
Misrepresenting Social Equity status to IDFPR, transferring ownership outside permitted equity holders within the lock-up period, or failing residency and conviction documentation triggers state license revocation, clawback of fee reductions, and Cook County permit denial.
Cook County, IL
Cook County amended Code Chapter 102 in 2019 to allow adult-use cannabis dispensaries, craft growers, infusers, processors, and transporters as special uses ...
Cook County, IL
Cannabis dispensaries in Cook County must comply with state zoning requirements. Dispensaries cannot be within 1,500 feet of another dispensary. Operating ho...
See how Cook County's social equity licensing rules stack up against other locations.
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