The Public Safety and Neighborhood Services Committee voted Nov. 9 to recommend that the Board of Supervisors extend San Francisco’s temporary cannabis event pilot program by three years, from Dec. 31, 2023, to Dec. 31, 2026.
Sponsor Supervisor Rafael Mandelmann said the move is intended to buy time to work with state regulators and local stakeholders to make the pilot more accessible for smaller organizers. “We would extend that out for 01/01/2027,” Mandelmann said, framing the change as a practical pause to reduce regulatory friction for local businesses and festivals.
Sophie Hayward of the City Administrator’s Office and the Office of Cannabis summarized the challenges that event producers face under current state rules: applicants must first secure a state event‑organizer license, create secure fencing and staffing to enforce age restrictions, and build consumption areas that are either visible or fully obscured — often requiring expensive structures. “We need to put in some more work to make this a program that provides a real opportunity for our local industry professionals,” Hayward said.
Nikesh Patel, director of the Office of Cannabis, noted the pilot is codified under police code section 16.21.5 and that roughly seven permits have been issued to date; OEWD’s Ben Van Houten described potential economic benefits for tourism and nightlife if the city can identify compliant sites and reduce costs for smaller operators.
The committee heard brief public testimony from Ali Jamalian, chair of the Cannabis Oversight Committee, who urged extension while the city develops location‑based permits and state changes to support smaller events. The committee voted to send the ordinance to the Board with a positive recommendation.
Next steps: the Board of Supervisors will review the ordinance; DPH/OOC/OEWD staff will continue interdepartmental work to identify locations and regulatory changes that could expand opportunities for smaller cannabis event operators.