Illinois: Entrepreneur Plans Dispensary With Community In Mind

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
A former trader and kidney transplant patient plans to open a medical marijuana dispensary near Devon and Western avenues.

Bob Kingsley, whose 420 Capital Management was granted a coveted license from the state last month, said he plans to dump $400,000 into a building somewhere near the busy intersection.

But he declined to yet identify exactly where until he submits his proposal for approval from the city's Zoning Board of Appeals in May. He said he plans to send out letters to nearby property owners and hold community meetings.

"We'd like full support of the community, as well as the political leaders in the area," Kingsley said Wednesday. "It's an important thing for us. We want to be accepted. We don't want to be some place we're not wanted."

Kingsley said he plans to hire off-duty law enforcement officers as security at the dispensary when it opens.

The dispensary would also include a fingerprint scanner and two waiting areas - each with an armed guard - that patients would need to pass through before paying for their pot.

The dispensary, like the rest planned for the state, won't resemble the recreational marijuana stores in Colorado and Washington.

"It's not like a meat market where you pick out a steak," Kingsley said, adding that each patient's drugs would be pre-packaged.

He said he plans to hire employees from the neighborhood, especially veterans and the disabled.

At night, Kingsley said, the dispensary would have "casino-like security," with night-vision cameras and weight sensors in the floor.

He expects the 3,500-square-feet dispensary, called 420 Windy City, to be open 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

Kingsley said he first became interested in the medical marijuana industry after kidney failure ended his career at the Chicago Board Options Exchange in 1995.

Since then he's received two kidney transplants, the most recent from his son.

The dialysis over the years causes residual, intermittent pain in his feet - and pot helps, he said. He said he travels to Colorado as much as possible for marijuana treatment.

"This is going to bring business to the area," Kingsley said of the planned dispensary. "We're not going to offend anybody. You're not going to smell anything."

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Hi,

I received a kidney transplant 6 months and I also have fibromyalgia. My nephrologist and post transplant team thought CBD edibles and topicals were worth trying to deal with the chronic pain due to fibro. I recently started with cannabis CBD only edibles and was looking into medical CDB oils and topicals for the pain as well as stress. My tacrolimus came back in the 20 range and 2 days later 17 and the only new "drug" is the CBD. Have you heard of any interactions with cannabis CBD and tacro or other immunosuppressant drugs?

Thanks.
 
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