The Chicago Association of REALTORS®, the “Voice for Real Estate” in Chicago since 1883, represents 17,000 members from all real estate specialties including commercial sales, development, property management, appraisal, auctions and residential sales.
Learn how we help our 17,000 members. Membership options are available for licensed real estate professionals and those affiliated with the real estate industry!
REALTORS® Real Estate School offers all kinds of real estate licensing and training. Browse self-paced, online training or live classes in our modern, downtown classrooms!
How can we help your business succeed? Your membership includes multiple resource guides on industry topics, tools to increase your knowledge and market statistics to help your serve your communities.
How Legalization of Marijuana Affects RE Agents and Brokerages
Disruption is a major buzzword of our day. Although it’s most frequently paired with technological advances, market breakthroughs and new business models, the move towards marijuana legalization has proven to be a disruptive force in real estate, politics and the law.
Even though marijuana remains an illegal substance under federal law, over 30 states, including Illinois, have passed laws providing for the medical use of marijuana. Regardless of where you stand on the issue, the impact of marijuana use and production continues to be felt and discussed around the country. We put together a brief primer on what you need to know about marijuana, as an agent, managing broker, property manager or commercial representative.
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Tenants may request an accommodation by way of the federal Fair Housing Act or state law to smoke or grow marijuana on premises. Leases that ban all forms of smoking on the property will protect the landlord; landlords can permit the use of other forms of marijuana such as edibles or lotions in lieu of smoking the herb.
Every accommodation request should be considered separately to determine the proper course of action to protect the property, but also accommodate tenants.
EMPLOYMENT LAW
In Illinois, employers are not required to accommodate employees’ usage of medical marijuana; however, employers are barred from discriminating against employees due to their medical marijuana card status.
Independent contractors are allowed the freedom to conduct business activities as they choose, but brokerages may include guidelines in its independent contractor agreement on the brokers usage of medical marijuana. It is important that guidelines set forth expectations for their independent contractors, without imposing enough to reclassify them as employees.
COMMERCIAL CONSIDERATIONS
Marijuana dispensaries have specific real estate needs that also must comply with strict zoning regulations limiting where they can sell or grow the herb, including operating a certain distance from schools, parks and other public facilities. However, properties that fit both the real estate needs and the zoning requirements are often scarce.
Startups like the Chicago-based HerbFront (from the minds behind CartoFront) are helping commercial brokers and dispensaries to identify properties that meet these standards. Commercial real estate owners and brokers can also market their properties directly to cannabis entrepreneurs looking to open a business in their neighborhood, who are willing to pay top dollar for the right property.
HerbFront also operates a real estate investment arm, HerbFront Capital, LLC, which engages in lease backs to established cannabis operators seeking liquidity from their existing real estate assets or to partner with HFC in the purchase of validated properties for new facilities.
Because the marijuana industry comes with an abundance of uncertainty and risk, investing in real estate is quickly becoming a source of control for marijuana entrepreneurs. Aside from the wisdom of investing in real estate to build wealth, for these business owners, owning the real estate where their operations are headquartered is a smart way to safeguard their business investment — so long as the property values hold. Entrepreneurs invest a significant amount of money into their stores and grow operations, and they are starting to recognize that it may not make sense to put so much money into someone else’s building. Property ownership also protects marijuana businesses from skyrocketing warehouse rents after they’ve already invested tens of thousands of dollars to convert the space into a growing operation. This “hard asset mentality” helps cannabis entrepreneurs to avoid an otherwise financially crippling scenario that has become commonplace in the industry. Due to this movement, buildings zoned as “light industrial” are quickly becoming the most valuable properties in many cities.
Real estate also helps to solve the problem of banking in the cannabis industry. Accounts are expensive because of the immense amount of compliance work needed, and many banks won’t loan to marijuana entrepreneurs because the drug remains federally illegal, so purchasing real estate with cash profits is an increasingly popular (and relatively safe) option for business owners.
Watch the highlights from our past Forum on Medical Marijuana and Property Management
You can see how this popup was set up in our step-by-step guide: https://wppopupmaker.com/guides/auto-opening-announcement-popups/
We Apologize for the Inconvenience
Our phones are temporarily down. Please email membership@chicagorealtor.com for any immediate needs. We apologize for the inconvenience – thank you for your patience!
Precautionary Measures and Information Regarding COVID-19
Your health and safety is of the utmost importance to us. As COVID-19 is predominantly spread through close contact, out of an abundance of caution, all events through April 30 will be either canceled or postponed, except for Coffee with Your GADs, which will take place virtually. This includes our annual Sales Awards, which we are working to reschedule.
If you have registered for one of our upcoming events, look for an email with further details. All tickets for paid events will be automatically refunded. Please allow 3-5 business days to see the refund on your bank statement. Questions? Please reach out to our events team.
Precautionary Measures and Information Regarding COVID-19
As COVID-19 is predominantly spread through close contact, out of an abundance of caution, all in-person classes scheduled through April 30 will take place virtually.
RRES staff has reached out to those of you who have registered for an affected class with an option to transfer into an online option or reschedule for a later classroom date. CAR to You is available in the meantime to assist you with your education needs and we have a variety of classes being offered online and via webinar for your continued development.