Categories
Entertainment

Assessment: Invoice Robinson’s Rags-to-Riches Faucet Story

Every year, National Tap Dance Day is celebrated on or around May 25 — the birthday of Bill Robinson, the most prominent Black tap dancer of the first half of the 20th century. Seldom, though, do Tap Day events honor Robinson himself.

Since 2018, three of the contemporary scene’s most prominent tap dancers — Derick K. Grant, Jason Samuels Smith and Dormeshia — have been celebrating Tap Day in Harlem with a festival they call Tap Family Reunion, a few days of classes and a show they collectively choreograph and direct. This year, it’s all virtual, and the show, presented for the first time by the Joyce Theater, is streaming on demand on the theater’s website through June 3.

This one is about Robinson. It’s called “The Mayor of Harlem,” after the honorary title that Robinson earned as an informal philanthropist in his neighborhood: appearing at countless benefit performances, covering back rent and bail. It tells his rags-to-riches story.

Or, really, it tells a rags-to-riches story that could almost be anyone’s. Maurice Chestnut, as Robinson, adds some routine narration to danced scenes of the train ride to the city, the big break, the Hollywood years. The familiar structure is essentially scaffolding for a series of period-style dance numbers.

Fortunately, Chestnut is an excellent dancer. Unlike Robinson, though, he’s not much of an entertainer, and his letter-but-not-the-spirit version of Robinson’s signature staircase dance, performed on a squashed version of the staircase, has itself a squashed quality. In place of Robinson’s starched erectness and ease, Chestnut is coiled like a boxer. Later, when he drops the imitation and lowers his heels into his own more free-flowing style, it’s a release and a relief — a high point of the show.

But Chestnut doesn’t have to carry “Mayor of Harlem” alone. Along with an able jazz quartet led by the trumpeter Ryan Stanbury, the show features a six-member ensemble that actually handles most of the dancing — a tap chorus significantly more skilled and sophisticated, technically and rhythmically, than usually found on Broadway stages, when Broadway was open.

With its skilled hoofers and rote dramaturgy, “Mayor of Harlem” is nice but not so interesting, except in two respects. The first is its attitude toward Robinson. In the 1996 Broadway musical “Bring in ‘da Noise, Bring in ‘da Funk” — the seminal production in the youth of the directors of “Tap Family Reunion,” a show in which they performed and which taught them tap history — Robinson was portrayed as a race traitor and sellout, a figure named Uncle Huck-a-Buck.

The program for “The Mayor of Harlem” calls him “a man who made the best of circumstances.” His Hollywood years with Shirley Temple are presented blankly, without comment, but then, out of nowhere, the ensemble dances angrily in front of a stock slide show of Black protest and they and Chestnut raise Black Power fists as a voice-over tells us that Robinson was “one of the greatest champions of justice and equality this country has ever seen.”

There are missed opportunities here, since Robinson’s biography contains relevant evidence — like the time he was stopping a mugging and was shot by a white policeman. A more serious treatment of Robinson would consider his complexity and the conflicted views of him — how, for example, many of those benefit performances were for police charities.

This isn’t that kind of show, but it is important in another way. Tap chorus dancing is a neglected tradition, and “The Mayor of Harlem” is really about the ensemble, as all Tap Family Reunion productions have been. The focus on the chorus can have the somewhat deadening effect of treating background as foreground. This show is most exciting when a member of the chorus breaks out, as when Amanda Castro impressively incarnates Jeni LeGon in the Robinson-LeGon number from the 1936 film “Hooray for Love.” It could be the birth of a star.

But an art form isn’t only its stars. As much as I might miss the appearance of Grant, Smith and Dormeshia in front of the curtain — canceling out a production’s weaknesses with their brilliance, as Robinson did — they caught the importance of their behind-the-scenes work in the title of their first Tap Family Reunion show, “Raising the Bar.”

The Mayor of Harlem

Through June 3, joyce.org.

Categories
Health

The Return of Dwell Theater

As vaccinations and an announcement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have seen many use less masks, live performances are slowly returning. While Broadway won’t officially return until September, Radio City Music Hall will reopen on June 19 to host the final night of the Tribeca Film Festival (guests must be vaccinated). Across New York, venues like Park Avenue Armory and St. Ann’s Warehouse are already experimenting with socially distant open-air performances in an attempt to cautiously revive live theater.

Last year the summer stick theater festivals were canceled across the board, but this season they’re coming back, albeit with some adjustments. The Massachusetts Williamstown Theater Festival will have all of its shows outdoors, while the Utah Shakespeare Festival requires masks and offers concessions only outdoors. While the summer art season won’t look quite like 2019, theater lovers are on the verge of a welcome awakening.

“Ring of Fire” at the Rocky Mountain Repertory Theater

This Grand Lake, Colorado theater is hosting its 2021 indoor season and opens with Johnny Cash’s jukebox musical “Ring of Fire,” which debuted on Broadway in 2006. The musical with cash classics like “I. Walk the Line and Folsom Prison Blues begin a season that lasts until September and includes Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Little Shop of Horrors. Starts June 4, $ 45; rockymountainrep.com.

“Out on the Main: Nine Solo Pieces by Black Dramatists” at the Williamstown Theater Festival
This prestigious Berkshires festival has shaped many future stars and premiered Broadway shows such as Bradley Cooper’s headlined production of The Elephant Man. When it returns for a personal season, the debut show will be the world premiere of “Outside on Main,” directed by Wardell Julius Clark, Awoye Timpo and Candis C. Jones and curated by playwright Robert O ‘. Hara. Each performance consists of three 30-minute pieces, all written by black writers for color performers. The season starts on July 6th. The festival tickets are priced at $ 100 each and will go on sale on June 22nd. wtfestival.org/shows-events/.

“Pericles” at the Utah Shakespeare Festival

This Shakespeare festival, which is part of Southern Utah University in Cedar City, will open its 60th anniversary season “Pericles.” This season, which runs from June to October, also features Shakespeare classics such as Richard III and The Comedy of Mistakes, as well as some off-topic themes such as Pirates of Penzance and Ragtime. The season kicks off June 21, with tickets starting at $ 9. bard.org.

“The Magic Flute” at the Glimmerglass Festival

This Cooperstown, NY opera institution is moving shows from their traditional theater to a redesigned outdoor area. The season kicks off with a new version of “The Magic Flute,” but what seems to be the jewel of the festival is “The Passion of Mary Cardwell Dawson,” a world premiere starring Denyce Graves about the life of the founder of the National Negro Opera Company in Dawson Year 1941. The season kicks off July 15, with tickets starting at $ 80 for a socially detached seat that can seat up to four people. glimmerglass.org.

“A Thousand Ways (Part Two): An Encounter” in the public theater

In December, the New York Public Theater made its debut with the socially distant piece “A Thousand Ways (Part 1): An Encounter”, which connected the audience to one another via a telephone line. “Part One” was created by Abigail Browde and Michael Silverstone of the Brooklyn Theater Company 600 Highwaymen and was the first in a trilogy. Now personal participants can experience “A Thousand Ways (Part Two)”. In this experimental work the participants are brought together and follow the instructions to create a private work. June 8th-Aug. 15, $ 15; publictheater.org.

“Send what up when it goes down” from BAM

The monumental work by playwright Aleshea Harris, which debuted on Broadway in 2018, testifies to the epidemic of the black death from racial violence. With a permeable boundary between audience and actors, the play enables an emotional experience of discussion and healing. The production is presented by BAM and Playwrights Horizons in association with the Movement Theater Company. Check the website for the June opening date; bam.org.

Categories
World News

Yuan Longping, Plant Scientist Who Helped Curb Famine, Dies at 90

After graduating in 1953, Mr. Yuan took a job as a teacher in an agricultural college in Hunan Province, keeping up his interest in crop genetics. His commitment to the field took on greater urgency from the late 1950s, when Mao’s so-called Great Leap Forward — his frenzied effort to collectivize agriculture and jump-start steel production — plunged China into the worst famine of modern times, killing tens of millions. Mr. Yuan said he saw the bodies of at least five people who had died of starvation by the roadside or in fields.

“Famished, you would eat whatever there was to eat, even grass roots and tree bark,” Mr. Yuan recalled in his memoir. “At that time I became even more determined to solve the problem of how to increase food production so that ordinary people would not starve.”

Mr. Yuan soon settled on researching rice, the staple food for many Chinese people, searching for hybrid varieties that could boost yields and traveling to Beijing to immerse himself in scientific journals that were unavailable in his small college. He plowed on with his research even as the Cultural Revolution threw China into deadly political infighting.

In recent decades, the Communist Party came to celebrate Mr. Yuan as a model scientist: patriotic, dedicated to solving practical problems, and relentlessly hard-working even in old age. At 77, he even carried the Olympic torch near Changsha for a segment of its route to the Beijing Olympics in 2008.

Unusually for such a prominent figure, though, Mr. Yuan never joined the Chinese Communist Party. “I don’t understand politics,” he told a Chinese magazine in 2013.

Even so, the Xinhua state news agency honored him this weekend as a “comrade,” and his death brought an outpouring of public mourning in China. In 2019, he was one of eight Chinese individuals awarded the Medal of the Republic, China’s highest official honor, by Xi Jinping, the national leader.

Mr. Yuan is survived by his wife of 57 years, Deng Zhe, as well as three sons. His funeral, scheduled for Monday morning in Changsha, is likely to bring a new burst of official condolences.

Categories
Business

Low cost retail levels a comeback as buyers crave ‘treasure searching’

Buyers’ reflection can be seen in a window of a TJ Maxx store in Peoria, Illinois.

Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Any doubts that shoppers would return to discounters to browse shelves in search of bargains were allayed this week when TJX Companies and Ross Stores reported their first quarter earnings.

Sales of both companies surged above analyst estimates as consumers returned to their stores to search for new outfits, shoes, luggage and housewares as the lockdowns caused by pandemics wore off.

TJX and Ross cited pent-up demand from buyers, many armed with additional stimulus dollars in the past few months, but also a desire from many people to keep looking for good deals. The so-called treasure hunt in stores could be something that many consumers are craving for more than they were before the Covid health crisis.

“We believe the appeal of our fun treasure hunt shopping experience provides consumers with a compelling reason to shop with us,” said Ernie Herrman, CEO of TJX, on a teleconference on earnings. “In-store shopping doesn’t go away.”

“We see our stores as a desirable destination for stress-relieving consumers,” said Herrman, “and also a great place to shop when they’re looking for inspiration and discovering new things that are difficult to replicate online.”

“Our business model is now getting more resonance than it was before Covid,” he said.

A year earlier, TJX had more than halved net sales and posted a net loss in the first quarter as the pandemic forced the company to temporarily close more than 4,500 stores in the US and abroad. It was a devastating blow to the company that relies on in-store purchases. TJX has an online shoppable platform for some of its brands, including TJ Maxx, but not all.

Ross also posted a loss in the year-ago period when all stores closed from March 20, 2020 through the end of the quarter.

But this week, TJX made a comeback in the first quarter as net sales jumped nearly 130% from $ 4.41 billion last year to $ 10.09 billion and, according to Refinitiv, Wall Street estimates 8, Exceeded $ 62 billion. TJX is the parent company of Marshalls and TJ Maxx.

Although stocks fell after the blowout quarterly report, it was largely due to the ongoing fighting the company is facing outside of the United States. Due to Covid, TJX has still closed around 300 stores in Canada and Europe. In the second quarter, TJX forecast that its Canadian and European locations would remain closed for 17% and 7%, respectively, of the period.

TJX shares are down around 1% since the start of the year.

A pedestrian walks past a now hiring sign at the Ross Dress For Less store in San Rafael, California on April 2, 2021.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Ross revenue in the first quarter more than doubled to $ 4.52 billion, compared to $ 1.84 billion a year ago. That surpassed Wall Street’s estimates for $ 3.87 billion.

CEO Barbara Rentler said the company is particularly optimistic about its chance to gain market share from the growing number of retail store closures and bankruptcies that have occurred in recent years. In addition to his business with Ross Dress for Less, Ross also owns DD’s discounts.

For the full fiscal year ending January 29, 2022, Ross predicts comparable revenue growth of between 7% and 9% compared to 2019.

Ross stock has fallen less than 1% since the start of the year.

“We still expect a sequel [market] Stock gains who believe that off-price gains are winning because they don’t have e-commerce, not in spite of everything, “said Simeon Siegel, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets.

It is true that these companies faced more problems than other retailers during the pandemic due to their lack of online presence. The off-price business has traditionally been focused on the store experience, not the internet. Ross does not have an ecommerce site. The discounter chain Burlington Stores phased out its website in early 2020.

But now that consumers are regaining the freedom and confidence to leave the home and store, it may not matter so much.

“Hunting for a bargain and finding a bargain has returned with a little vengeance,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, in an interview. “I think the value segment could actually find itself with a really good influx of customers.”

The positive results from TJX and Ross caused the Telsey Advisory Group to raise its expectations ahead of Peer Burlington’s earnings report, which is expected on May 27.

For the first quarter of 2021, Telsey now expects Burlington to post earnings per share of $ 1, after a previous forecast of 62 cents. Net sales grew around 127% year over year to $ 1.81.

While maintaining an outperform rating on Burlington shares, the company raised its target price from $ 320 to $ 370 in a statement to clients on Friday. Burlington stock closed at $ 321.44 on Thursday, up 22% year over year.

The department store chain Nordstrom, which operates the off-price chain Nordstrom Rack, will also publish its quarterly results after the bell on Tuesday.

– CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

Categories
Politics

Biden to host George Floyd household at White Home

Rodney Floyd and Philonise Floyd, brothers of George Floyd, and Brandon Williams, nephew of George Floyd, check in at a security entrance at the Hennepin County Government Center on April 9, 2021 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Brandon Bell | Getty Images News | Getty Images

President Joe Biden will host George Floyd’s family at the White House on Tuesday, an administration official has confirmed to CNBC.

The visit marks the one-year anniversary of Floyd’s death, which triggered international protests against police brutality and racism in the criminal justice system.

Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, died after former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin held his knee on Floyd’s neck for about nine minutes.

Chauvin was found guilty of murder and manslaughter in April. His sentencing date is set for June.

The Floyd family’s visit to the White House comes as lawmakers attempt to create bipartisan legislation on police reform that could pass through both chambers of Congress.

The House passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in March. The police reform bill seeks to ban chokeholds, carotid holds and no-knock warrants as well as end qualified immunity.

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However, lawmakers have struggled to find a compromise that can win enough support in the evenly divided Senate.

Congress is set to miss the president’s deadline to pass the legislation by the anniversary of Floyd’s death. At least 10 Senate Republicans are needed for the bill’s passage due to the chamber’s filibuster rule.

“It would be a contribution to rebuilding trust in communities,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday with respect to the bill’s potential passage. “Obviously, there’s more that needs to be done beyond that; that’s not the only step — far from it.”

A point of contention in the negotiations has been on qualified immunity, which makes it difficult to sue individual officers.

Ten House Democrats are pushing congressional leaders not to scrap the provision seeking to end qualified immunity. But some GOP senators are concerned that ending it would make officers and departments vulnerable to a rash of lawsuits.

Categories
Health

College students protest necessary Covid vaccinations at faculties

Across the country, a growing number of colleges and universities have said vaccinations will be mandatory for the fall of 2021.

Now, hundreds of thousands of students will be required to get the Covid-19 vaccine, whether they want to or not.

For the most part, students will get vaccinated if it means campus life can return to a pre-pandemic “normal” by September. But not everyone feels that way.

Roughly 88% of college students plan to get the coronavirus vaccine and nearly 3 in 4 students believe vaccinations should be mandatory, according to a recent survey of more than 1,000 college students by College Finance.

More from Personal Finance:
Hundreds of colleges say Covid vaccines will be mandatory
Despite FDA approval, some schools say they won’t mandate vaccinations
Will your child’s school mandate Covid vaccinations?

However, Jackie Gale, a rising sophomore at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, is not one of them.

For religious reasons, Gale has never been vaccinated. The 19-year-old attended Alabama public schools and received a religious exemption from the Alabama state health department. 

The University of Alabama-Birmingham also exempted Gale from its vaccine requirements during the 2020-2021 school year but won’t apply the same exemption for the upcoming year, according to her lawyer.

“If they decide to give her a religious exemption, that will be the end of it,” said Hiram Sasser, executive general counsel for First Liberty Institute, based outside of Dallas. “If not, we will have to communicate with them through a lawsuit.”

“In compliance with applicable law, we do provide religious exemptions for immunization requirements,” a spokeswoman for the school said. The university does require students provide proof of immunization against certain diseases, although there is currently no Covid vaccine mandate for the fall semester.

For those enrolled in school, there are many vaccination requirements already in place to prevent the spread of diseases such as polio, diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough.

All 50 states have at least some vaccine mandates for students attending public schools and even those attending private schools. In every case, there are medical exemptions and, in some instances, there are religious or philosophical exemptions, as well.

Rutgers University, in New Brunswick, New Jersey, said it will now mandate Covid vaccinations for its 71,000 students.

“Adding Covid-19 vaccination to our student immunization requirements will help provide a safer and more robust college experience for our students,” Rutgers President Jonathan Holloway said in a statement.

“We are committed to creating a safe campus environment in fall 2021, and to support the health and safety for all members of the Rutgers community, the university has updated existing immunization requirements for students to include the Covid-19 vaccine,” a spokesman for the university added.

Sara Razi, a 21-year-old junior at Rutgers, is challenging that requirement.

I’m not anti-vax, I’m anti-mandate,” she said. “My education should not be restricted based on my personal decision to receive the Covid-19 vaccination.

Vaccinations are a personal and a private choice and students should have the right to choose whether or not they want to take a vaccine that is experimental.

Sara Razi

student at Rutgers University

“Vaccinations are a personal and a private choice and students should have the right to choose whether or not they want to take a vaccine that is experimental,” Razi added. “Therefore, a public institution like Rutgers should not have the right to dictate a student’s personal decisions.”

Razi, who has received other immunizations in the past, said she hasn’t decided yet whether she will get a Covid shot. In the meantime, she will be participating in a rally on campus, protesting the school’s mandate.

The political science major from Freehold, New Jersey, is also a member of Young Americans for Liberty, a libertarian group active on nearly 400 college and university campuses, including Rutgers.

Rutgers has said it will grant exemptions, for medical or religious reasons, although requests will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. 

“There are a lot of people who are hesitant, that doesn’t mean they don’t want to get the vaccinated,” said Brittany Kmush, assistant professor of public health at Syracuse University.

“This pandemic has become so politicized and it’s really unfortunate that health outcomes have been tied to political parties,” she added.

Colleges need to offer information and education so families can have their concerns addressed. “Just the opportunity to listen to people and give them a place to voice their concerns,” Kmush said, “that would be helpful.”

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Categories
Business

Defying Critics, Biden and Federal Reserve Insist Financial Restoration Stays on Observe

“We should be on our way to a fantastic American comeback summer, full speed ahead,” said Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, on the chamber floor this month. “From vaccinations to job growth, the new Biden administration has inherited favorable trends in all directions.”

“But in several ways, the choices made by the Democratic elected have helped slow the return to normal,” he added.

Critics have also questioned the wisdom of the Fed’s commitment to keeping interest rates low and buying bonds even as prices begin to rise. Pennsylvania Republican Senator Patrick J. Toomey said last month that while the Fed “claims this inflation spurt will be mild and temporary,” it “may be time for the central bank to consider the alternative.”

Mr Biden’s advisors say they continue to monitor the risk of consumer prices rising, forcing a swift policy response that could curb economic growth. They say these risks remain small and that they see no reason to change course on the president’s agenda, including the proposed infrastructure and social programs that the president claims will prop the economy for years to come. That agenda could prove to be tougher, even among Congress Democrats, if employment growth continues to disappoint and inflation rises higher than expected.

Fed officials also remain intrepid. They show no signs of a rate hike anytime soon and continue to buy $ 120 billion worth of government bonds every month. Officials have only given the earliest indications that they may tip toe off this emergency policy. They argue that their job is to manage risk and the risk of early aid withdrawal is greater than the risk of the economy overheating.

“I don’t think it would be good for the industries we believe will be successful if the recovery continues so that we can complete this recovery early,” said Randal K. Quarles, Fed vice chairman of oversight, at a hearing of the House of Representatives committee this week when lawmakers pushed it on looming inflation. The Fed is independent from the White House but is responsible for keeping prices in check.

The voters give Mr. Biden good marks for his previous economic responsibility. A solid majority of Americans – including many Republicans – support the president’s plans to levy taxes on high wage earners and businesses to fund new spending on water pipes, electric vehicles, education, childcare, paid vacations, and other programs Conducted by online research company Survey Monkey through May 9th.

Categories
Business

Boeing, Deere, AT&T and extra

An ASL Airlines Boeing 737-400 freighter landing at Milan Malpensa airport.

Fabrizio Gandolfo | LightRocket | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

Boeing — Boeing shares edged roughly 3% higher after Reuters reported the aircraft manufacturer discussed increasing 737 MAX output to as many as 42 jets per month by late 2022. The news comes as Boeing seeks to recuperate from safety issues and the Covid pandemic.

Deere — Shares of the farm equipment manufacturer rose 1.3% after beating on the top and bottom lines of its quarterly results. Deere reported earnings of $5.68 per share on revenue of $11 billion. Wall Street forecast earnings of $4.52 per share on revenue of $10.44 billion, according to Refinitiv.

AT&T — The telecom company’s share price perked up 1.4%, rising for the second straight day after declining earlier in the week following the announcement of a spinoff deal involving WarnerMedia and Discovery. UBS upgraded the stock to buy from neutral on Friday, saying that the slimmed down company had a clearer pathway to improving cash flow growth.

VF Corp — Shares of the apparel name dipped about 9% following the company’s fiscal fourth quarter results. The parent company of North Face, Timberland and Vans reported revenue of $2.58 billion, which was ahead of the $2.5 billion analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting. But bottom-line results missed estimates, with the company earning 27-cents per share excluding items, two cents short of the expected 29-cent per share profit.

Oatly — Shares of Oatly last traded 11.2% higher at $22.46 Friday after the oat milk maker debuted Thursday. Oatly’s IPO was priced at $17 per share, with the first trade at $22.12 and a closing Thursday price of $20.20.

Deckers — The retail stock jumped 7.9% after growth from Deckers’ Hoka brand helped the company beat expectations for its fiscal fourth quarter. Deckers reported $1.18 in earnings per share and $561 million in revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were looking for 64 cents per share of $437 million of revenue.

Nvidia — Nvidia shares rose 2.6% after the company announced a 4-for-1 stock split, pending stockholder approval. Oppenheimer also reiterated its outperform rating on Nvidia shares. The technology company is set to report earnings Wednesday.

Palo Alto Networks — The cybersecurity stock rose 5.8% in midday trading after beating the Street on its top and bottom lines. Palo Alto Networks on Thursday reported earnings of $1.38 per shared, topping analysts’ expectations of $1.28 per share. The company also posted $1.07 billion in quarterly revenue compared with $1.06 billion expected by analysts.

Virgin Galactic — Shares of the space company rallied more than 6% after UBS upgraded the stock to buy from neutral on Friday. The Wall Street firm called for clients to take advantage of an opportunity the firm sees with shares down nearly 70% from their February highs.

— CNBC’s Yun Li, Pippa Stevens, Maggie Fitzgerald and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

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Categories
Health

Sure, Pot Is Authorized. However It’s Additionally in Brief Provide in NY and NJ

New York and New Jersey are all about growing legal weeds.

In Orange County, NY, plans to build a large cannabis cultivation and processing facility on the site of a defunct state prison.

About 25 miles south, across the border in New Jersey, an industrial complex that once belonged to pharmaceutical giant Merck is being converted into an even larger marijuana cultivation center.

In Winslow, New Jersey, about 30 miles outside of Philadelphia, a new indoor growing complex was just celebrating its first harvest.

The advent of legalized adult marijuana in New York and New Jersey is an entrepreneur’s dream. Some estimate that the potential market in the densely populated region will grow to over $ 6 billion in five years.

However, the rush to get plants in the ground at factory-style manufacturing facilities underscores another fundamental reality in the New York metropolitan area: there is already a shortage of legal marijuana.

In New Jersey’s decade-old medical marijuana market, the supply of dried cannabis flower, the strongest part of a female plant, has rarely met demand, according to industry lobbyists and state officials. At the beginning of the pandemic, when demand exploded, it became even scarcer, patients and business owners said.

The supply gap has narrowed as the nationwide supply of flowers and products made from a plant’s extracted oils more than doubled between last March and this spring. Still, patients and owners say pharmacies often sell popular varieties.

“There are very few stocks,” said Shaya Brodchandel, executive director of the Harmony Foundation in Secaucus, New Jersey and president of the New Jersey Cannabis Trade Association. “Almost no wholesale business. As we harvest, we bring it straight to retail. “

Harmony bought the former Merck property in Lafayette, New Jersey late last year and is awaiting approval to start construction, Brodchandel said.

Because marijuana is illegal under federal law and cannot be shipped across state lines, marijuana products sold in each state must also be grown and manufactured there.

The Bundesbankengesetz makes it nearly impossible for cannabis companies to get conventional funding, creating a high hurdle for small startups and a built-in advantage for multi-state and international companies with deep pockets.

Oregon, which issued thousands of grow licenses after legalizing marijuana six years ago, has an abundance of cannabis. But many of the other 16 states where non-medical marijuana is now legal have faced similar supply shortages as New York and New Jersey as production slowly increased to meet demand.

“Flowers are always short in a new market,” said Greg Rochlin, general manager of the Northeast Division of TerrAscend, a cannabis company operating in Canada and the United States that opened its 17th medical marijuana dispensary in New Jersey this month.

In New York, where the medical marijuana program is smaller and more restrictive than New Jersey’s, the product menu includes oils, tinctures, and finely ground flowers suitable for vaping. The sale of loose marijuana buds for smoking is banned, however, and only 150,000 of the state’s 13.5 million adults who are 21 years of age or older are registered as patients.

When demand was modest, there was little incentive to increase supply. Until now.

Adult marijuana sales could begin in New Jersey within a year and New York by early 2023, industry experts predict.

“I’d be a fool if I didn’t make the product,” said Ben Kovler, founder and general manager of Green Thumb Industries, a cannabis company with offices in both states.

“There isn’t much inventory,” he said at a moment when a “tidal wave” of demand was looming on the horizon. “It is unlikely that there will be enough supplies,” said Kovler.

His company, he said, is awaiting final New York State approval to begin construction on the site of the former Warwick, NY men’s Mid-Orange Correctional Facility, which closed in 2011.

The competitor Citiva is also building a new production center there. A cannabis test laboratory and a CBD extraction facility, urbanXtracts, are already in place.

“We call it a cannabis cluster,” said Michael Sweeton, Warwick’s city overseer.

“It’s the definition of irony,” he added of the reinvented role of a correctional facility that boomed during the war on drugs, imprisoning 750 men at the same time and providing 450 jobs.

New York officials said the state’s hemp farmers will play an important role in efforts to produce enough cannabis to satisfy what is set to quickly become one of the largest marijuana markets in the country.

With lower overheads and a lower carbon footprint, hemp farmers who grow cannabis for specific purposes could potentially undercut indoor plant prices for at least part of the year, authorities said. Hemp, which contains much less of the intoxicating chemical THC found in cannabis, is used to make CBD oil.

New York law also allows individuals to grow up to six marijuana plants for personal use. New Jersey law does not allow so-called home growth.

In the coming months, both states are expected to enact regulations to regulate the new industry. Everyone has classified legalization as a social justice imperative, spending a large portion of the expected tax revenue on color communities disproportionately harmed by inequalities in criminal justice.

Trying to balance the goal of building markets geared towards social and racial justice against the inherent dominance of multistate corporations with early stakes in the region will be vital, officials in New York and New Jersey said.

“They should have the ability to boost the market,” said Norman Birenbaum, New York’s director of cannabis programs, of the 10 medical marijuana companies that have already been licensed to operate in the state. But it shouldn’t come “at the expense of new entrants,” he said.

Jeff Brown, who heads New Jersey’s cannabis programs, said the market has room – and a critical need – for newcomers.

The current operators of the state, he said, “will not be able to supply the market for personal use.”

The granting of two dozen new drug licenses has been delayed by more than a year due to a legal challenge, and some of the 12 current operators, Brown said, have been slow to fully utilize their expandability.

This has put a limit on the amount of cannabis that can be sold to patients in a single visit. Lines to enter stores tightened by Covid-19 regulations are common.

“You can’t always find the strain that is best for your condition,” said Ken Wolski, a retired nurse who now leads the Medical Marijuana Coalition, a nonprofit advocacy group. “And that’s a very frustrating thing for patients.”

Supply chain challenges have taken on a new urgency in New Jersey, where the state’s medical marijuana dispensaries are expected to be the first places adults can legally purchase cannabis without a doctor’s approval.

First, however, pharmacies must demonstrate that they have adequate patient care and facilities that can adequately accommodate both types of customers.

The New Jersey market has grown since 2019 when Governor Philip D. Murphy, a Democrat, approved a major expansion of a medical marijuana program that failed under his predecessor, Chris Christie, a Republican.

The number of pharmacies has tripled. 500,000 plants are currently being grown across the state, up from 50,000 in 2018, Brown said.

In March, 20,000 pounds of cannabis products were available in New Jersey, up from 8,000 pounds in March, he said.

Still, the price of flowers in New Jersey fluctuates between $ 350 and $ 450 an ounce before discounts. In California, the average price of an ounce of premium marijuana was $ 260, according to priceofweed.com, a frequently quoted price list.

“Popular products are running out and prices are still higher than we’d like to see,” said Brown. “The key to all of this is more competition.”

Last month, Curaleaf, which operates a pharmacy and two grow facilities in New Jersey, lifted the half-ounce limit on flower sales after a strong yield at its new indoor grow facility in Winslow, said Patrik Jonsson, the company’s executive regional president for seven northeastern states.

Workers at a similarly sized cultivation facility in Boonton, New Jersey, operated by TerrAscend, placed hundreds of plants in coconut-coconut bundles in early 2021 to begin a four-month growing and drying process. Tiered platforms are now filled with rows of light green and purple colored plants.

TerrAscend’s new pharmacy in Maplewood, New Jersey, attracted a number of customers within hours of opening earlier this month.

Stuart Zakim, one of the first in line, spoke to a cashier – the “Budtender” – about alternatives to the product he had originally requested but was told it was out of stock.

“You no longer wait in the dark for your dealer,” said Mr. Zakim, a longtime medical marijuana patient. “You are going to a beautiful facility.”

“The supply problem,” he added, “is really the biggest problem.”

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Business

Kathleen Andrews Dies at 84; Helped Give Ziggy and Others Their Begin

In the early days of the company, Mr. Trudeau recalled, he would visit the Andrewses to work on his nascent strip, as all the syndicate’s artists did.

“I would go and stay with them and help them pretend they had a viable business, which unbeknownst to me was very much in jeopardy,” he said. “I didn’t realize until much later how much trouble they were in, but Kathy knew. She was incredibly overqualified to simply keep the books.

“Jim would show up at breakfast in a coat and tie,” he continued, “and after having a few cups of coffee we would all head down to the basement, where he would loosen his tie and take off his jacket and start the day. Kathy would be upstairs with the books. Since there were so few dollars to count and so few features to edit, there was a lot of downtime and a lot of laughs, which is I think what kept them afloat. Together, Jim and Kathy were unstoppable.”

Mr. Andrews died of a heart attack at 44 in October 1980. Ms. Andrews joined the company six months later, and very quickly became chief executive of its publishing business, said her son Hugh, who would later hold that title. He recalled her signing every artist’s royalty check and sending it out with a personal note. “She knew everyone’s family and how they were doing,” he said.

“As the youngest of seven, she grew up sleeping three to a bed,” Mr. Andrews added. “She was a humble lady. Not being in the spotlight was not an issue for her as long as everyone was working.”

Universal Press Syndicate rebranded itself in the late ’80s as Andrews McMeel Universal. By then it had picked up Gary Larson, creator of “The Far Side,” as well as Bill Watterson’s “Calvin and Hobbes,” Dear Abby and Erma Bombeck. It is now the largest independent newspaper syndicate in the world. When Ms. Andrews retired in 2006, she was vice chairman.

In addition to her son Hugh, Ms. Andrews is survived by another son, James; a sister, Annabelle Whalen; and six grandchildren.