Through eight months of 2021, recreational marijuana retailers in Massachusetts have sold more than $140 million more in products than they did throughout the entirety of 2020 and total legal Bay State bud sales have now eclipsed the $2 billion mark.
The team behind a would-be $25 million equine center off Route 84 in Sturbridge, which would facilitate horse racing and other community events, is working to push the proposed project forward.
Christian McMahan, the former president of Wachusett Brewing Co. of Westminster, is teaming up with Tom Oliveri, co-founder of Wormtown Brewery in Worcester, to launch the sixth brewery headquartered in Worcester.
The Rose Room Cafe & Tonic Bar, a Webster restaurant known for its locally sourced cuisine, announced on Tuesday via a social media post it will expand to a second location, with a new restaurant called Andy’s Neighborhood Canteen.
The retail side of the alcoholic beverage industry in Massachusetts is in a "pretty chaotic" place as corporate interests vie for greater control of the marketplace here while COVID-19 restrictions recede and businesses and consumers alike adjust to changes in the industry, the head of the Massachusetts Package Stores Association said Monday.
Less than six months after opening its doors, adult-use Worcester dispensary and economic empowerment applicant New DÃa’s flagship location will reopen as an outpost of the California-based cannabis company Cookies on Saturday.
A cannabis cultivation company paid $1.5 million for a 42,000-square-foot facility at 14 South Pleasant St. in Ashburnham, according to the North Worcester County Registry of Deeds.
With the exception of certain municipalities taking the matter into their own hands, the lack of government direction on masks has left individual business owners and management to decide for themselves whether or not to require face coverings.
The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission has made its medical and adult-use regulations available in Spanish, the regulatory body announced on Monday.
More than 150 marijuana retailers have now been approved to open in Massachusetts, and operators are walking a fine line as they try to make themselves appealing to potential customers in an increasingly competitive market without running afoul of the state's restrictive advertising regulations.