Illinois Administrative Code
Title 14 - COMMERCE
Part 651 - CANNABIS BUSINESS INCUBATOR AND SPONSORSHIP PROGRAMS
Section 651.20 - Cannabis Business Incubator Program

Universal Citation: 14 IL Admin Code ยง 651.20

Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024

a) Through the Cannabis Business Incubator Program, the Department may approve hosts that provide the following required services to a Social Equity Applicant intending to seek a license, or a licensee that qualifies as a Social Equity Applicant. All such services shall commence by March 31, 2020 and shall be substantially completed by March 31, 2021. The host shall:

1) agree to provide incubation services to a Social Equity Applicant intending to seek a license, or a licensee that qualified as a Social Equity Applicant for at least one year. Those services shall include mentorship;

2) provide a loan of at least $100,000, with the loan complying with the following conditions:
A) the interest rate shall not exceed 12% and the repayment term shall be no less than 5 years, with the first payment being due no less than one year from the execution of the loan documents. If the host charges fees in connection with the loan, then the annual percentage rate of the loan shall not exceed 12%;

B) if the Social Equity Applicant defaults on this loan, no penalties, fees, or costs shall be charged and the borrower's liability shall not exceed the principal balance and accrued interest; and

C) securing this loan with a controlling interest in the Social Equity Applicant's license (whether by agreeing to use the license as collateral or requiring a majority equity pledge of the borrower's owners, or by any other mechanism to secure control over a license upon default under the loan) is strictly prohibited;

3) in the event the host does not charge interest on the loan, hold no more than a 10% ownership interest in the licensee; and

4) abide by all other statutory restrictions on ownership, including, but not limited to, those expressed in Section 15-30(k) of the Act.

b) The Department shall review those hosts engaged in the incubation of a Social Equity Applicant intending to seek a license, or a licensee that qualifies as a Social Equity Applicant. Hosts with multiple licenses are allowed to combine the loan maximums of this Section into a lesser number of Social Equity Applicants. For example, a host that possesses 4 licenses may provide a total of $400,000 in loans to 2 Social Equity Applicants.

c) Incubation services shall be provided to a Social Equity Applicant engaging in a similar licensed cannabis activity as the host. For example, a medical cannabis dispensing organization that obtains an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License shall incubate a Social Equity Applicant that obtains or is seeking to obtain a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.

d) During the term of the incubation services, hosts shall not enter into agreements with Social Equity Applicants in which the host receives payment for the services provided to the Social Equity Applicant, including, but not limited to, legal fees. This prohibition does not include real estate agreements in which the Social Equity Applicant agrees to lease or license space from the host (or an affiliate of the host) at no higher than market rates for cannabis-related business. The term of any lease or license agreement must not exceed the time necessary to complete the incubation services unless the Social Equity Applicant has the option to terminate the lease or license after one year of incubation services without payment of any fee or penalty. Additionally, delinquency on real estate lease or license payments cannot be the sole cause to default on any loan or for any action that would impair the Social Equity Applicant's continued licensure. Once the incubation services are complete, the host shall provide the Department, for 5 years, with documentation of any agreements related to payments for services between the host and incubated business, including, but not limited to, revenue sharing agreements and service contracts. These agreements would result in the host acquiring ownership interest in the incubated business that may trigger the application of the ownership cap. (See Sections 15-36(d) and 20-30(j) of the Act.)

e) Hosts are prohibited from charging fees related to loans and services provided through the Cannabis Business Incubator Program.

f) Hosts shall be required to document all incubation-related services provided to Social Equity Applicants. These records shall detail the hours and types of services provided. Those services include, but are not limited to, mentoring, training, networking, assistance with real estate, and acquisition of financing. Additionally, hosts shall keep records on loans provided to Social Equity Applicants, loan terms, and history of repayment.

g) The organizational and ownership records must show that the revenue, profits or losses of the Social Equity Applicant are realized by those owners that satisfy the requirements of being a Social Equity Applicant. Contracts that provide for substantial economic benefit of a license to be realized by a third party shall not satisfy the social equity component of the Departmental staff review.

h) Application Process

1) Applications. Applications will be reviewed on a first-come, first-served basis, when the application is deemed complete in accordance with programmatic and application requirements.

2) Those applications that have been received by the Department and are incomplete shall not be reviewed until a complete application is received. Receipt of an incomplete application will not reserve an applicant's position in the Department's review process.

3) A staff review by the Department will be conducted to determine whether all the required information is contained in the application.

4) The applications shall be reviewed for the presence and totality of the following elements:
A) A comprehensive mentoring strategy to provide the incubated organization with assistance with:
i) Development of business plans;

ii) Marketing;

iii) Networking;

iv) Security plans;

v) Product handling;

vi) Design of physical space;

vii) Real estate acquisition; and

viii) Acquisition of capital beyond the loan, as required by subsection (a)(3).

B) Loan interest charged.

C) Any ongoing assistance to be offered to the Social Equity Applicant beyond the initial year of incubation.

D) A schedule of fees and expenses that may be charged as part of the program.

E) Any mentoring of Social Equity Applicants that was done prior to application should be reported in detail including any of the comprehensive mentoring strategy components under subsection (h)(4)(A).

5) Length of Review. Provided that all the required contents of the application are complete and adequate, the Department will notify the applicant within 45 days after the receipt of the complete application of its preliminary approval or denial.

i) Preliminarily Approved Incubator Programs; Reporting and Final Approval. Incubator programs that receive preliminary approval shall provide semiannual reports to the Department using the form provided by the Department. These reports shall include descriptions of services rendered to Social Equity Applicants, status of loan repayment, the progress of the incubated Social Equity Applicant in achieving viability, and any other information requested by the Department. The Department will review the report for completeness and to verify whether the host has continued to provide the preliminarily approved services. Each satisfactory report will be deemed a verified report. If a host does not submit a report or the Department cannot verify that the preliminarily approved incubator services were provided on a consistent basis throughout the reporting period, the Department may exclude that period (or any appropriate portion of the reporting period) from consideration in determining completion of the 12-month incubator program requirement.

1) Incubator programs shall submit two semiannual reports to the Department that will be due on the following dates:
A) October 15, 2020; and

B) April 15, 2021.

2) If a Social Equity Applicant does not complete the Incubator Program, the host shall:
A) find another Social Equity Applicant to incubate. If the host chooses this option, time spent incubating Social Equity Applicants shall be aggregated in order to meet the one year program requirement;

B) proceed with the Cannabis Business Sponsorship Program; or

C) make a contribution of the lesser of either 3% total sales during June 1, 2018 through May 31, 2019 or $100,000 to either the Cannabis Business Development Fund or to a community college for a cannabis training or education program.

3) If a Social Equity Applicant ends its participation in the incubation program after 6 months but before one year, the Department may deem the program complete if the Social Equity Applicant provides the Department with information sufficient to verify that the host was willing to continue the program, that the Social Equity Applicant voluntarily ended its participation and was satisfied with the services being offered, and that the Social Equity Applicant or its principals received no consideration to terminate participation in the program;

4) After the second semiannual report has been deemed verified, the Department will issue the host a final approval letter verifying completion of the minimum requirements of the Cannabis Business Incubator Program.

j) Records Retention. Hosts shall retain records relating to the Cannabis Business Incubator Program for 5 years from date of submission of the final quarterly report or from the date of the final approval letter, whichever is later.

k) Compliance with Laws; Notice to Department. Notice of any change in host status or participation in the Cannabis Business Incubator Program shall be sent to the Department in writing within 5 business days after the change takes effect.

l) Access to Legal Authorities; Audits. A host must permit any agent authorized by the Department, the Illinois Department of Agriculture, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, the Illinois Attorney General, the Illinois Auditor General, or any other legal authority, upon presentation of credentials, to have full access to and the right to examine any documents, papers and records of the hosts involving transactions related to the Program. The Department, at its own discretion, may require hosts to submit to an audit of all documentation related to the Cannabis Business Incubator Program, including, but not limited to, all logs of time spent on mentorship activities.

Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Illinois may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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