Skip to Content →
CRUDE
← Episodes

Budding Industry: The Fight to Keep Cannabis Legal

By CrudeApril 24, 2026

By Whitney Branshaw

Photos by Holly Abel and Steve Waldron

Chevelle and Art Abel, co-founders of Greatland Ganja sign wave with their family. If the ban vote goes through, the Abels would have to shutter the doors of their legal cannabis business. 

Chevelle and Art Abel, co-founders of Greatland Ganja sign wave with their family. If the ban vote goes through, the Abels would have to shutter the doors of their legal cannabis business. 

Exactly one year ago today I wrote an article about the efforts of prohibitionists behind these initiatives that have made their way to the ballot in real time. Over the first year of legal cultivation, manufacturing and sales, the KPB and FNSB are now two of our largest producers of legal cannabis. Each community represents hundreds of people, including entire families that would be negatively impacted by shutting down the legal cannabis industry. If these initiatives are successful both communities will not only lose the safety and accountability of the legal cannabis industry, but they’ll also lose tax revenue and the economic stimulus it provides to other non-cannabis related small businesses throughout the area. Think contractors, electricians, construction workers, security firms, plumbers, painters, the list goes on. The abrupt end of the safe and successful legal industry would also make way for a large resurgence of the already ever-present black market side of the industry. The black market is alive and well in Alaska and without legal access that fire will end up burning even brighter.

Jan Waldron and Ann Fraser sign waving in Kasilof. 

Jan Waldron and Ann Fraser sign waving in Kasilof. 

Crude

Keep Exploring

All episodes
CRUDE
Podcast Title
Crude