Cannabis Cup – MJ Shareholders https://mjshareholders.com The Ultimate Marijuana Business Directory Thu, 11 Oct 2018 21:00:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.4 If you had tickets to the now-cancelled Sacramento Cannabis Cup, read this https://mjshareholders.com/if-you-had-tickets-to-the-now-cancelled-sacramento-cannabis-cup-read-this/ Thu, 11 Oct 2018 21:00:43 +0000 http://www.thecannifornian.com/?p=16979

Anyone who bought tickets to legally use marijuana at the Cal Expo the weekend before Halloween may be eligible for a refund.

Hours after The Sacramento Bee reported Tuesday that the Oct. 27-28 Cannabis Cup concert/marijuana exhibition had been either canceled or postponed with next to no warning or announcement, organizer High Times Magazine sent an email statement confirming the postponement.

Refuting some claims that High Times did not plan to reimburse ticket buyers, the magazine says tickets to the October event will be honored at future Cannabis Cups “in that venue or elsewhere.” Alternatively, those seeking a refund can email CannabisCupHelp@hightimes.com.

“After multiple discussions with state and city leaders and extensive deliberations with all stakeholders, Cannabis Cup organizers have determined it is in the best interests of all parties to postpone the event,” reads the statement, sent to The Bee late Tuesday.

High Times also announced postponement of the “spooktacular” event on Facebook and Instagram on Tuesday night.

High Times says state Assembly Bill 2020 played a big role in the postponement, as it would allow “ample opportunity for all parties to work together towards a predictable long term compliance process for future cannabis events,” the company wrote.

AB 2020, signed by Gov. Jerry Brown on Sept. 26, authorizes temporary event licenses to be given for events held at any venue approved by local jurisdictions. Under existing law, legal cannabis sales at temporary events were only permitted at county fairground sites. AB 2020 goes into effect Jan. 1.

Sacramento Chief of Cannabis Policy Joe Devlin on Tuesday said the event had been postponed, with April 2019 the likely new target.

After the Cannabis Cup was pulled off a City Council committee agenda for Sept. 18, Devlin said it won’t be taken to City Council again until 2019.

The nixing of October’s Cannabis Cup event had appeared to fly under the radar prior to Tuesday night’s announcement. Sometime between Friday evening and Tuesday morning, all mentions of the event disappeared from High Times’ official website, and the link to a third-party ticket vendor page led to an error, without further explanation.

The Facebook event invitation for Cannabis Cup California remained active until Tuesday, with nearly 8,000 possible guests expressing interest. Some users commented on the page alleging the event had been canceled without warning and that High Times did not plan to offer refunds.

Tickets had been sold for about six weeks following the festival’s official announcement Aug. 24, at prices ranging between $50 and $420. Tickets were up for sale as late as last Friday, despite no music lineup being set for the two-day music festival.

The previous Sacramento Cannabis Cup event, in May at Cal Expo, became the first legal, permitted event allowing cannabis use in California since recreational use was legalized Jan. 1 of this year. There appeared to be minimal drama, as Lauryn Hill and Lil Wayne were among the headliners.

© 2018 The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.). Visit The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.) at www.sacbee.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

]]>
Sacramento Cannabis Cup abruptly canceled with only weeks to go https://mjshareholders.com/sacramento-cannabis-cup-abruptly-canceled-with-only-weeks-to-go/ Wed, 10 Oct 2018 23:00:12 +0000 http://www.thecannifornian.com/?p=16967

SACRAMENTO — Tickets had been on sale for about six weeks, but before Cannabis Cup California could set a music lineup or secure a permit, the half-music festival, half-smoke session has been either postponed or canceled.

It’s not clear yet whether anyone will get a refund.

The marijuana exhibition, originally set for Oct. 27-28 at Cal Expo and sponsored by High Times Magazine, has been scrapped for 2018, Sacramento Chief of Cannabis Policy Joe Devlin told The Bee on Tuesday.

The sudden absence of Cannabis Cup California on High Times’ official website seems to confirm the cancellation of October’s show.

“We have not taken that item before (city) council as of yet,” Devlin said. “I believe we’re going to be taking it sometime before the end of the year.”

The item in question is a permit for cannabis use on-site, a requirement for the legal consumption and sale of marijuana at such an event. The approval of a permit was pulled off the City Council’s law and legislation committee agenda for a Sept. 18 meeting.

The City Council committee won’t meet again until Oct. 23, just four days before the concert had been planned. Devlin said matters relating to Cannabis Cup won’t be on that agenda either.

The event will be tentatively rescheduled for April 2019, the city pot czar said. Marijuana enthusiasts who were planning on attending the “spooktacular” pre-Halloween bash will apparently be out of luck.

October’s event was canceled seemingly without any warning or announcement to potential attendees. An official website for the event that remained up as late as Friday afternoon was defunct as of Tuesday morning. Mentions of Cannabis Cup California can no longer be found on High Times’ website.

The homepage section titled “Upcoming Cannabis Cups” now lists no future exhibitions. Front Gate Tickets gives a “404 error” for the Sacramento event, but no explanation of cancellation.

There’s also no mention of postponement or cancellation on High Times’ official, still-active Facebook and Twitter feeds, which most recently promoted the event on Sept. 29. A Facebook event page remains live for the concert, with more than 7,700 users expressing interest.

Multiple Facebook users have alleged, without evidence, that High Times will not give refunds for the canceled show.

High Times has not responded to multiple requests for comment by The Bee since Friday. A phone number listed on High Times’ website for potential vendors at Cannabis Cup events was not in service as of midday Tuesday.

Tickets, anywhere from $50 to $420, went on sale as soon as the event was announced via social media on Aug. 24. It was billed as a “spooktacular return” to Sacramento.

The Cannabis Cup event in May at Cal Expo became the first legal, permitted event allowing cannabis use in California since recreational use was legalized Jan. 1. The approval passed by a 6-2 vote by Sacramento City Council members just three days before the event. High Times CEO Adam Levin said an error on the company’s part led the on-site consumption permit to be filed just 12 days in advance.

Prior to that event, Devlin told The Bee that May’s Cannabis Cup would generate an estimated $200,000 in tax revenue. He supported High Times as having “a distinguished track record of hosting safe, successful and compliant cannabis events.”

Devlin said Tuesday that May’s event pulled in closer to $60,000 in tax revenue.

“It’s not just about revenue,” Devlin said. “There’s also a conversation to be had around public consumption and where consumption is appropriate. We’re just now as a city beginning to have that conversation. And this is a piece of that conversation.”

This year’s earlier Cannabis Cup show in Sacramento announced its music lineup relatively last-second, two weeks ahead of the performance. Lauryn Hill, Lil Wayne, Gucci Mane, Rick Ross and others performed.

Devlin and a story published by The Bee at the time noted minimal drama inside Cal Expo gates earlier this year.

“There weren’t really any significant issues,” Devlin said. “If the council decides to permit future events, I believe that those events will also go very well.”

A Cannabis Cup without cannabis might sound like a serious drag, but it’s happened before in California, on the most unfortunate of days for weed enthusiasts. A last-minute vote by the San Bernardino City Council rejected a permit allowing marijuana use less than two days before the April 20 Cannabis Cup SoCal event. It proceeded as a music festival without legally permitted marijuana use or pot vendors.

October’s show theoretically could have proceeded as a normal music concert as well, but with no lineup announced, it appears no such show will hit Cal Expo the weekend before Halloween.

©2018 The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.)

Visit The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.) at www.sacbee.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

]]>