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Douglas Broughton, left, and Glenn Hilliard of Newtown, Connecticut, package cannabis flower for wholesale to dispensaries at Broughton’s home in Wassaic on Dec. 19, 2025.
Photo by Nathan Miller
WASSAIC — Tucked into the hills just off Old Route 22, Douglas Broughton operates an indoor cannabis farm — and this spring, he plans to open a dispensary in downtown Millerton.
The Wassaic-based grower signed a lease Dec. 1 for the former Demitasse storefront at 32 Main St. He plans to reopen the space as the Black Rabbit Farms cannabis dispensary following modest renovations.
The work will include cosmetic updates and the installation of freestanding, custom-made display cabinets.
Broughton said he hopes to open in April, but red tape at the New York Office of Cannabis Management could delay the opening.
The Millerton storefront will mark another milestone for the 63-year-old farmer, who has been cultivating cannabis since the 1990s, when the plant was still illegal.

“I just loved the plant and how it grew,” Broughton said. “It’s a very alien plant — it seems like it came from a different planet.”
In the early 1990s, Broughton was bartending in Brooklyn and couch-surfing after becoming disenchanted with the television broadcast industry. As an Asian American, he said his dreams of becoming a leading man or primetime news anchor were dashed by what he described as discrimination in the industry.
Broughton, who was raised in Washington state, initially moved to New York City in the late 1980s, when a series of internships brought him out east. Rather than return home to complete his degree, he opted to stay and try to make it on his own.
By 1995, Broughton was regularly growing multiple plants on the roof of an apartment building in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, selling small quantities of the plant on the black market to customers at the bar where he worked.
“Bartending in the city is pretty good,” Broughton said. “It was just that I didn’t want to bartend.”
His chance to leave bartending came in 2000, when he met Joe Murray, known in New York City’s cannabis scene as “AJ Sour Diesel” for pioneering the Sour Diesel strain, prized for its strong effects and pungent odor.
Broughton said Murray helped expand the operation, allowing him to rely on cannabis cultivation as his primary source of income beginning in 2000.
Broughton moved to his home in Wassaic in 2016, where he operated a black market farm until New York state legalized cannabis and began accepting license applications in 2021.

He said his age was a factor in deciding to get a license and form a legitimate enterprise. Broughton, nearly 60 at the time New York legalized cannabis for recreational use, had been running illicit grow operations for decades and said the anxiety of avoiding law enforcement had worn him down.
“Every aspect of what you did had to be hidden,” Broughton said. “You couldn’t tell anybody.”
After legalization, however, he said he faces a different set of challenges brought on by bureaucracy and corporatism in New York’s cannabis industry.
Broughton said New York’s tax scheme hits small growers the hardest. He said he has to pay taxes on each plant he grows, and then again when he sells to retailers or, eventually, directly to consumers.
Despite those hurdles, Broughton said he is eager to bring a high-quality product to consumers in Millerton.
Over the past 30 years, he has developed a growing technique that relies entirely on artificial light and strict control of nutrients and moisture. He said he maintains a level of oversight that borders on obstinance.
“I’m more of a purist when it comes to this stuff,” Broughton said. “I’m not very forgiving.”
That rigidity pays off with better product, he said, even when it means destroying an entire harvest.
“We cut down an entire crop of amazing Sour Diesel like two years ago because we got mites,” Broughton said.
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A standing-room-only crowd fills Pine Plains Town Hall during a regular meeting of the Town Board on Thursday, Feb. 19. Pine Plains Police Sergeant Steven Camburn unveiled a potential new suite of software that will help officers communicate with non-English speakers in real time and aid in writing reports.
Photo by Nathan Miller
PINE PLAINS — Town officials announced that the police department will begin testing new translation and transcription software designed to help officers communicate more effectively with non-English speakers and improve efficiency in writing reports.
The software package — developed by body camera and electric stun gun manufacturer Axon — includes translation tools that interpret conversations in real time using the microphones and speakers in state-mandated body cameras. That technology would allow officers to communicate with people who can’t speak English without the use of a cellphone app, which officials said can be unreliable in areas with poor reception.
Sergeant Steven Camburn said he wanted at least two board members to view a live demonstration of the technology from Axon representatives, though a date for the demonstration has not yet been set.
Councilwoman Jeanine Sisco opened the invitation to community members, saying that interested volunteers could reach out to town board members or Camburn by email if they would like to attend.
Camburn outlined some of the benefits of the tools. The translation tools would eliminate cellphone translation apps, which he said were cumbersome and inconvenient in the field. Transcription tools aid in writing police reports, improving officers’ efficiency and accuracy, Camburn said.
“It will write the report pretty much more accurately than we can,” Camburn said.
The software would be provided through a 30-day trial with no money down and no commitments, Camburn told the board and residents in attendance.
After a brief description of the software, Camburn took questions from a capacity audience. More than 50 people filled Town Hall for the meeting in anticipation of further statements from the Town Board on a controversial proposed surveillance system in the town.
Community members sought clarification as to who has access to body camera footage and transcripts from officers’ interactions. Camburn said the data is only accessed on a case-by-case basis and every action is tracked. Axon and outside agencies cannot access the footage, he said.
“Axon is a closed system,” Camburn said. “They don’t sell anything.”
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Amenia Town Hall on Route 22.
Photo by Nathan Miller
AMENIA — The Town of Amenia has announced opportunities for residents to fill open volunteer positions on local boards and committees.
Two openings exist to serve as alternates for the Planning Board, and one exists to serve as an alternate for the Zoning Board of Appeals. Meanwhile, the Housing Board is seeking to fill one vacancy.
Positions are also open to assist with the Climate Smart Task Force, part of the Conservation Advisory Council, and the Enhancement Committee.
All positions are open to town residents. To apply, send a letter of interest and resume by email to the Town Clerk at dmklingner@ameniany.gov or by mail to Town Clerk, Dawn Marie Klingner, 4988 Route 22, Amenia, NY. 12501. The deadline for applying is Thursday, March 12, at noon, or until the position is filled.
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