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Cannabis Business Insights | Monday, May 25, 2026
Cannabis security programs were once built around fear of what the industry might become rather than what dispensaries and cultivation facilities actually turned into. Early operators entered the market under heavy regulatory scrutiny, uncertain public perception and constant warnings about theft exposure. Many responded by investing in oversized guard programs, aggressive access restrictions and surveillance requirements that resembled controlled government facilities more than consumer retail environments. Several years later, much of that thinking has softened.
Executives responsible for cannabis security spending now face a more complicated balancing act. Security still carries regulatory weight, particularly in states where licensing authorities closely examine facility procedures and incident reporting. At the same time, dispensaries function more like established retail businesses than isolated high-risk sites. Customers expect a comfortable environment, employees expect consistency and operators want security personnel who can manage visibility without creating unnecessary tension at the front entrance.
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That shift has exposed weaknesses in the way many security vendors approach the cannabis market. Generic staffing packages rarely account for how a facility actually operates once daily traffic stabilizes. A suburban dispensary handling steady walk-in volume requires a different approach than a production facility managing restricted inventory movement or scheduled transport activity. Buyers increasingly question vendors that rely on fixed templates instead of evaluating customer flow, facility layout and neighborhood conditions before recommending coverage levels.
Regulatory inconsistency has added another layer of pressure. Several states introduced strict cannabis security requirements during early licensing phases, then relaxed portions of those standards after recreational markets matured. Some operators found themselves locked into expensive security structures that no longer matched realistic risk exposure. Others reacted too aggressively in the opposite direction, reducing oversight in areas such as visitor access, surveillance review or employee screening. Security providers that interpret compliance only at face value often leave operators struggling to balance cost control against inspection readiness.
The strongest providers now spend more time understanding workflow than selling deterrence. Entry sequencing, lobby congestion, camera positioning and staff movement patterns all influence how security functions inside an active cannabis facility. Buyers increasingly favor firms willing to revise procedures after deployment instead of treating post orders as permanent documents. Store traffic changes quickly once locations begin operating at scale. Security expectations also evolve once management teams understand where actual pressure points exist inside the business.
Cannabis-specific experience has become another major differentiator. Traditional commercial security companies may understand patrol coverage or monitoring systems yet still lack familiarity with cannabis inspections, dispensary visitor procedures or state-level reporting expectations. Operators also continue dealing with community concerns in certain municipalities where local approval processes remain politically sensitive. Vendors familiar with those conversations often provide more practical guidance during expansion planning and facility rollout discussions.
Within that environment, CLG & Associates has positioned its cannabis security work around facility-specific planning rather than rigid coverage models. Its leadership team entered the sector during the early stages of regulated cannabis expansion and developed experience across dispensary environments, surveillance oversight and access-control management tied to individual site conditions. The firm’s approach also appears built around ongoing adjustment instead of static deployment structures, allowing security procedures to evolve alongside traffic patterns, staffing changes and revised regulatory expectations. For operators trying to control spending without weakening compliance visibility, that measured approach carries more practical value than excessive physical presence alone.
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