Last week, we were proud to announce how the California Secretary of Stateโs office picked SimpliGov as aย government workflow automation provider. Besides being part of Sacramentoโs continued quest for efficiency, there wereย otherย new demands being put on state services that drove that decision.
One of the biggest (and most urgent)? The impact ofย cannabis product legalizationย on public services.
Due to the passageย ofย Proposition 64 in 2016, California was about to become โ as of January 1, 2018ย โย the biggest state in the U.S.ย to legalize the cultivation and sale of recreational marijuana for adults.
Legalization required government automation โ fast!
For the agencies charged with licensing and regulating this new trade, itโs aย ginormousย task. Analysts have projected the legal pot business in California to quickly become aย $5 billion industryย bringing inย $1 billion in yearly tax revenue. Soย the flood of work the Secretary of Stateโs office and other departments faced would be overwhelming for unmodernized processes.
How could the Secretary of Stateโs office use government automation to manage this tide? Californiaโs Secretary of State, Alex Padilla, answers this in the video below (which features a quote from our own Paul Hirner). Already, his department was launchingย automated workflows and online e-formsย allowing all California businesses to quickly and conveniently register trademarks and service marks.
That capability would be invaluable to cannabis-related businesses expected to submit a flood of service mark requests. As one legal punditย pointed outย last summer:
Given that California is the most populous stateโฆand that it is currently impossible to obtain a nationwide trademark for cannabis products, the California Secretary of State may be overwhelmed with cannabis related trademark applications on January 2, 2018.
Proposition 64 had, in fact, expandedย provisions of Californiaโs Model State Trademark law. Now it allowed the state to grant indicia like state service marks to businesses dealing inย โmedical cannabis and nonmedical cannabis goods and services.โ
For businesses looking to secure service marks for their weed-related wares, Californiaโs willingness to extend these protectionsย was a big deal. Though the overall legality and licensing issue remains clouded, as it has for years, the Secretary of State still needed to put a more effective system in place for dealing with service mark applications.
Processing those registrations is a major challenge when you ponder how there areย 1,300 medicinal marijuana dispensaries in California, many expected to apply for consumer licenses. And many will try to register their branded offerings as product segments are proliferating to include everything fromย oils to edibles.
The automated government forms and workflows the state employed would have to be easy to create and launch. E-forms would have to be able to self-guide registrants through the process of filling them out without live assistance. Plus, the platform supporting it all would have to deliver outstanding speed-to-market and scalability.
Being able to quickly customize and revise forms and workflows is especially vital in light of how policies may sometimes have to shift. For instance, Federal attitudes toward state pot legalization are potentially turning moreย adversarial. Therefore, any regulatory changes will have to be quickly reflected in whatโs communicated to constituents, and how the internal process operates.
Whatโs happening in California is only one example of why digital transformation isnโt an option or luxury for governments anymore. There are already some stats that tell the tale. Like the fact that the stateโs Bureau of Cannabis Controlย needed to keep working through the holiday seasonย to try to processย 1,400 pending license applicationsย for retail sales, distribution, testing facilities and other businesses.
Other states, includingย Michigan,ย Pennsylvania,ย and others, are dealing with licensing challenges around consumer and medical marijuana. In every state where legalization has happened, an increasing number of entrepreneurs and established companies are entering thisย flourishing segment. So self-service online forms and workflow automation tools are going to become more necessary than ever.
Want to find out more about how the California Secretary of Stateโs office is serving cannabis-sector businesses? Check out their new webpage,ย Cannabizfile.