This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Cherry Punch cannabis plants grow in a room with yellow light at the CTPharma cultivation facility in Rocky Hill, Connecticut, on December 13, 2022. There’s Uber Eats, Instacart and Amazon among many other services that bring food or goods to your home. Soon, the home delivery business in Connecticut will be expanded to cannabis. The state, which just recently allowed a handful of retail cannabis stores to open, has so far issued eight provisional licenses for cannabis delivery services . Amanda Ostrowitz, who runs a company called Slap Ash, has been granted one of those licenses, as well as two retail cannabis licenses. How her business will work is between an “Uber Eats model” and a “Domino’s model.” Uber Eats, and similar delivery services, don’t actually prepare any food. They pick up the food where it’s prepared and bring it to your door and, on the surface, it would seem like a similar delivery model for cannabis products would make sense. But there are legal restrictions in Connecticut which make it more complicated than that. “Connecticut does not allow the delivery companies to hold their own inventory. What […]