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Two Akron Sites, One in Canton Are Among First Approved for Marijuana Cultivation

This building near the corner of Rt. 261 and Home Avenue in Akron is to be the home of marijuana cultivation for Fire Rock Ltd., a Massillon-based company that also got approval from the state for locations in Canton and Columbus. The other Akron location is just south of Firestone Stadium, and is an empty lot.
KABIR BHATIA
/
WKSU
This building near the corner of Rt. 261 and Home Avenue in Akron is to be the home of marijuana cultivation for Fire Rock Ltd., a Massillon-based company that also got approval from the state for locations in Canton and Columbus. The other Akron location is just south of Firestone Stadium, and is an empty lot.
This building near the corner of Rt. 261 and Home Avenue in Akron is to be the home of marijuana cultivation for Fire Rock Ltd., a Massillon-based company that also got approval from the state for locations in Canton and Columbus. The other Akron location is just south of Firestone Stadium, and is an empty lot.
Credit KABIR BHATIA / WKSU
/
WKSU
This building near the corner of Rt. 261 and Home Avenue in Akron is to be the home of marijuana cultivation for Fire Rock Ltd., a Massillon-based company that also got approval from the state for locations in Canton and Columbus. The other Akron location is just south of Firestone Stadium, and is an empty lot.

Two of Ohio’s newly licensed medical marijuana cultivators plan to open facilities in Akron, and several more could be coming to Northeast Ohio as well.

The state has granted its first 11 licenses for small growers, who can cultivate up to 3,000 square feet. One of the facilities will be in North Hill, run by a Massillon company that also received approval for locations in Canton and Columbus. Another Akron site will be a few blocks south of Firestone Stadium, run by attorney Geoff Korff. He says he became interested in applying for a license after working with medical marijuana advocates on ballot initiatives in the past.

“While a lot of cities in Ohio were passing moratoriums and finding ways to not let these facilities come into their cities, Akron said, ‘We want to work with these groups.’ And they made it possible to locate our facility there and they’ve been supportive ever since.”

Korff says he’s budgeted about $1 million to turn the empty lot into a wholesaling facility, which means the plants will grow indoors and not be sold directly to the public.

“We certainly don’t want to just drop this in the middle of everybody and have no one know what we’re doing. So we intend to engage and, to some extent, we’ve already begun that process of trying to talk to the folks that live in that area and other surrounding businesses that we’re not engaging in this nebulous market. We’re very serious about what we’re doing.”

One additional small cultivator could be announced in the future. And later this month, state officials will announce up to a dozen larger growers, who can operate facilities as big as 25,000 square feet.

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit WKSU.

Kabir Bhatia joined WKSU as a Reporter/Producer and weekend host in 2010. A graduate of Hudson High School, he received his Bachelor's from Kent State University. While a Kent student, Bhatia served as a WKSU student assistant, working in the newsroom and for production.
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