IN-DEMAND JOBS: Here are the 10 hottest well-paying careers in Illinois. PAGE 12
CONVENTIONS: What Chicago must do to win them back. PAGE 3
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As the ‘engine of the economy’ heats up again, tech advances are accelerating ahead of a lagging labor force. PAGE 15
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ChicagoBusiness.com/CrainsForum
Herd immunity: A moving target
How Chicago became the Silicon Valley of pot
Call Chicago the capital of Big Weed. The city is home to three of the five biggest public companies in the United States that grow and sell marijuana: Green Thumb Industries, Cresco Labs and Verano Holdings. “Chicago in a sense is Silicon Valley” for the pot business, says
Threshold for stopping COVID is higher in some areas BY STEPHANIE GOLDBERG
Cresco CEO Charlie Bachtell and its stock has increased 650 percent in the past 12 months. For the first time in a generation, Chicago is the early See WEED on Page 29
As COVID-19 inoculations accelerate, a weary public waits anxiously for vaccines to reach 70 percent of the population, a level widely associated with “herd immunity.” It’s not that simple. To neutralize a virus that has killed nearly 5,000 Chicagoans and sickened 250,000, immunity must spread across each of the city’s neighborhoods—with a higher concen-
MINDING THE GAP: Why so many health care workers are still unvaccinated. PAGE 3 tration in areas that have been hit harder during the pandemic. In other words, vaccinating any mix of 1.9 million residents won’t necessarily stop COVID-19. “Even if the overall average is showing we’re at 70 or 80 percent, See HERD on Page 23
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JOE CAHILL
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CREDIT
BY JOHN PLETZ
Kayvan Khalatbari, a cannabis consultant from Denver who advised Cresco on its original license application. In the six years since Illinois issued its first licenses to grow and sell marijuana for medical use, GTI, Cresco, Verano and privately held PharmaCann have emerged as industry giants, winning or acquiring licenses across the country as legalization took off. Fueled in part by the launch of recreational marijuana sales in Illinois last year, the Chicago-based companies have seen their fortunes soar. GTI’s revenue rose 151 percent last year,
JOHN R. BOEHM
Early obstacles helped turn local marijuana companies into giants