State will "explore new options" for cannabis incubator after Catonsville outcry
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Published July 03, 2025

CATONSVILLE, Md. — Governor Wes Moore announced Wednesday that the state of Maryland will look for a new location for a planned cannabis business incubator, following community opposition to using a former National Guard armory in Catonsville. "Upon further review of this project, I have concluded that the state should explore new options for its location," Moore said in a Wednesday morning statement.
The governor instructed state agencies "to identify locations that are not within close proximity to residential communities and schools," in contrast to the vacant state-owned building on Mellor Avenue, which is near Catonsville Elementary School, a trail, apartments and neighborhoods.
The state had been developing plans to convert the former armory into a cannabis incubator to support small businesses - "microlicensees" - in Maryland's developing cannabis industry, and to support historically disadvantaged vendors, with "resource support and programming."
"I think it's great, I give a lot of credit to the governor, Wes Moore. I think he heard a large public outcry from the community," said Tom Quirk, a former Baltimore County councilman and Catonsville business owner. Quirk, who has been among the project's more vocal opponents, expressed concerns about the lack of community involvement in the planning process.
"I have no issue with cannabis, personally. My issue is public transparency, public engagement, public communication. None of that happened," Quirk said.
While some residents didn't mind the project and welcomed putting the empty building to use, others strongly opposed it. About 800 people signed an online petition against the cannabis incubator.
Jon Merryman, who lives not far from the site, welcomed the governor's decision.
"It's great. That means they're listening to us. We're not just whining, we're giving good reasons for it not to be here," Merryman told WMAR-2 News.
The governor said state agencies would begin the search for a new incubator site immediately, promising transparency and fairness throughout the process.
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