Cannabis Businesses Ready to Hire

Galloway, N.J. 鈥 Business owners and vendors collected student resumes, a photographer offered free professional portraits, and visitors to the April 5 Cannabis Career Fair and Business Expo walked away more educated about the programs in Cannabis studies offered at 番茄社区app.
More than 300 people attended the day-long event, held in the Campus Center and co-sponsored by 番茄社区app, the New Jersey CannaBusiness Association and NJ Cannabis Insider.
Expo visitors 鈥 many with resumes in hand 鈥 spent the day shaking hands with cannabis
business owners, filling out employment applications, and getting the scoop about
open employment.
Employers are looking for workers in 2022 at rates starting at $15 and $16 an hour. Salaried positions for managers in the cannabis field are between $70,000 to $80,000. The idea of the expo was to match cannabis job seekers with the information they needed.
鈥淚 think what Stockton is doing is phenomenal. I was so glad we came to Stockton for the Cannabis Expo last November because I left with 50 to 70 resumes 鈥 and another 30 people who scanned our employment code,鈥 said Anthony Lotti of Freehold, a vendor for Earth & Ivy at the Expo.
Lotti is one of three University of Penn alumni who developed Earth & Ivy, which also is an aspiring New Jersey dispensary licensee looking for workers when they open up their New Brunswick location.
鈥淪tockton did it right by getting all of these companies together under one roof at the Campus Center. This time I hope to go home with 100 resumes and when things open up this year, I鈥檓 going to go through these resumes and start calling every one of these people personally. This is a terrific venue,鈥 he said.
He said salaried positions for managers in the cannabis field at Earth & Ivy will
be between $70,000 to $80,000.
鈥淭he day that is licensing day, we will start interviewing,鈥 Lotti said.
Rob Mejia, Stockton adjunct professor in Cannabis Studies, said he is keeping his eye on April 11 which is the date the Cannabis Regulatory Commission is scheduled for a 1 p.m. special meeting 鈥 and possible vote on opening medical dispensaries. Nine townships in New Jersey so far have agreed to allow dispensaries, according to Mejia.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a small number considering New Jersey has 565 townships,鈥 Mejia said.
New Jersey voters overwhelmingly approved legalizing recreational marijuana in November 2020.
Sales have not started, and applications from marijuana growers, manufacturers and testing laboratory operators opened on Dec. 15 last year, and more than 500 applications were filed. In February, Gov. Phil Murphy said New Jersey is 鈥渨ithin weeks鈥 of having medical weed dispensaries sell recreational cannabis to adults 21 and older.
Mejia believes once New Jersey opens the dispensaries, it will see many of its first customers come from out of state.
鈥淣ew Jersey will see people coming from New York and Delaware. That鈥檚 always what happens. When one state opens a dispensary, people come from neighboring states,鈥 Mejia said, using California and Colorado as examples.
Mejia also moderated a panel that included Stockton student Alexia Grillos of Basking
Ridge and Stockton Class of 鈥20 graduate Michael Scaffidi of Hammonton, representing
Curaleaf, and Alwilda Navarro of Ascend Wellness Holdings and RuthElla Swing of TerrAscend
in New Jersey.
鈥淚 got my foot in the door by attending the fall expo at Stockton last November,鈥 said Scaffidi, who minored in Cannabis Studies at Stockton. 鈥淵ou have to get your name out there if you want to land that job. It鈥檚 a little tricky to get your foot in the door, but it all pays off when you see your career kick off.鈥
Scaffidi started at Curaleaf, a national medical and wellness cannabis operator, as a dispensary associate. He currently is the company鈥檚 Outreach Coordinator, a management position.
Grillos said her father suffered from terminal esophageal cancer and was unable to get on the list of people allowed to use medical marijuana before he died. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what got me started in the cannabis field,鈥 Grillos said.
She鈥檚 encouraged by advances in cannabis every day.
鈥淚 see the emergence of smoking lounges, and that鈥檚 one of the things that is important is to have a safe place to consume cannabis. Having a safe consumption area is something I would like to see all the townships do,鈥 Grillos said.
Stockton has more than 100 students minoring in Cannabis Studies and more than 160 students have graduated since the inception of the program in 2018, said Ekaterina Sedia, coordinator of the Cannabis Studies Minor.
鈥淪tudents are interested in taking a class on cannabis because there are so many related fields such as hemp, accounting, sales and marketing,鈥 Sedia said. 鈥淎 lot of business majors take the cannabis classes to get to see how a business is built from the ground up.鈥
CHRIS, the Cannabis & Hemp Research Initiative at Stockton, was founded to conduct hemp cultivation research, offer non-medical research opportunities to businesses, and develop cannabis and hemp educational materials.
The Cannabis Studies minor program also helps prepare Stockton students interested in jobs in the cannabis and hemp industries.
Sedia said Stockton students are being offered a chance to design a new logo for the New Jersey Cannabis Trade Association. Winners get a cash prize of $1,500 for first place, $750 for second place and $250 for third place. Students should submit new designs to Robert Mejia at Robert.Mejia@stockton.edu before June 30. Winners will be announced in September.
Robin Nolan, Stockton Class of 2019, found employment after graduation as a growth specialist at Verano Holdings, a national licensed cannabis cultivation facility.
Nolan, of South River, N.J., majored in Biology and added a minor in Cannabis Studies.
鈥淢y emphasis was in Paleobiology, which combines both methods and finds in the earth and life sciences, so when I heard about the cannabis courses, I immediately wanted to know the science side of it,鈥 said Nolan, of Basking Ridge. 鈥淚 wanted to know why people put their lives on the line, get arrested, and use marijuana. So, I took a New Jersey Medical Marijuana class.鈥
She credited Stockton with helping her land the job through the Cannabis Studies program.
鈥淪tockton鈥檚 classes on cannabis and the job fairs they provide were a big help. I had teachers at Stockton asking me how they could help me out or direct me to a job. I had more professors putting my name out for people to contact. It was amazing,鈥 Nolan said.
She鈥檚 also proud she learned so much about cultivating marijuana.
鈥淚 tell students to take one class. Start early, even if you don鈥檛 use cannabis,鈥 Nolan said. 鈥淭omatoes are in the same family. If you can grow a Jersey tomato, you can grow a great Jersey bud (the term used to refer to the cannabis flower before harvesting).鈥
The Continuing Education Department at Stockton developed the Online Certificate of Cannabis Studies for adults interested in the field.
Courses are priced between $79-$499 each for a total certificate cost of $1,995, said Diana Strelczyk of the Office of Continuing Studies
鈥淕etting a certificate is a no-brainer for adult education and has a cost savings,鈥 said Strelczyk who presented a slideshow about certificates being offered. 鈥淚f you have a college degree, taking one of the certificate courses is also a good way to see if you are ready to move on to a master's or a doctoral program.鈥
New courses being offered in the Cannabis Studies Certificate Program include Environmental Issues and Sustainability in the Cannabis Industry (March 鈥22), Social Justice and Cannabis (Oct 鈥21) and Risk Management and Insurance for Cannabis Businesses (Nov. 鈥21), Strelczyk said.
Companies represented at the event included: The Botanist, ATH NJ, HBK CPA, Colum$bia Care, Puffin, TerrAscend, NJ Cannabis Certified, Earth & Ivy, New Jersey Cannabis Trade Association, and LongviewStrategic.
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Media Contact:
Diane D鈥橝mico
Director of News and Media Relations
Galloway, N.J. 08205
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