Legal marijuana employs 200,000 people across the country. Here's where the jobs are.

Rod McClelland used to be a barber. Then, he trained to be a glass cutter. But he never would have guessed where his cutting skills would take him next.

"I went from cutting hair, to cutting glass, to cutting buds," he says.

McClelland, 42, trims marijuana flowers full time in Desert Hot Springs, a California town that has fully embraced the legal pot industry. And he's one of thousands of people employed by cannabis businesses today in the United States.

When McClelland told his old barbershop buddies in Long Beach about his new scissor slinging gig, they had one big question.

“They were like, ‘How can I get into the business?’” he said.

The number of people employed by the cannabis industry is set to triple from 200,000 to 630,000 people by the year 2025, according to New Frontier Data.

These workers are entry-level hires like McClelland, trying out the marijuana business for the first time. They’re experienced growers overseeing hundreds of plants. They’re chefs concocting pot-infused candies and pastries.

That's to say nothing of the thousands of workers that depend on the pot industry for their livelihoods even if they never touch the plant, like security guards that watch over pot shops and lawyers that have built a practice around the legal trade.

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Marijuana proponents believe pot businesses can employ workers that are being laid off as the nation’s manufacturing and retail employment shrinks. Unions like the Teamsters see the marijuana industry as a promising source of new recruits.

And after President Donald J. Trump signaled his approval of the industry in April, marijuana employment seems poised for even more growth. While Attorney General Jeff Sessions rescinded Obama-era policies protecting state-legal marijuana companies in January, earlier this month Trump assured a Colorado lawmaker that the federal government will respect state law on pot – easing fears of a federal crackdown.

Legal weed, job creator

You can already find a job in the marijuana business in about half of all U.S. states. And the industry is growing across the country.

By 2021, Arcview Market Research and BDS Analytics predict that cannabis job creation in California will explode to 99,000 people, making it more than three times the size of the marijuana workforce of Colorado. Michigan will overtake Washington, while Florida and Massachusetts will overtake Oregon.

KEEP READING: Marijuana goes legal in California on Jan. 1 -- what you need to know

Those numbers actually understate how many people are employed thanks to legal weed. Like any other business, pot companies need financial expertise, legal counsel, real estate advice and a myriad of other professional services.

That's an opportunity that John Dillinger, a former IRS auditor turned marijuana CPA in California, has used to grow a pot-adjacent private practice.

Over the past eight years, the 59-year-old accountant has catered to cannabis customers, a sphere he says some CPAs avoid. Today, 20 percent of his clients are in the pot business.

“One of the local clients that contacted me was just so excited to find a CPA that would work with them,” he said.

But there's an even bigger impact, analysts like to argue.

People in states where medical or adult-use cannabis is legal can also thank the pot business for boosting demand for local goods and services in their city – spurring more developers to hire construction workers and more coffee shops to bring on baristas.

Combining all three groups – direct jobs like budtending, indirect jobs like accounting and induced jobs like construction – Arcview/BDS counted more than 170,000 jobs in the U.S. in 2017 that wouldn't exist if not for the cannabis industry.

Meet the weed workforce

The typical employee at a marijuana company is young, white and male, with at least some college education.

That's according to recent research at Colorado State University, which surveyed 214 cannabis workers in Colorado.

Those findings, at least as far as age and gender are concerned, jibe with what one Denver human resources firm has observed in the cannabis industry, too. The company Faces HCM recruits workers and runs HR for cannabis companies.

Co-founders Caela Bintner and Chris Cassese say they see all kinds of people working in the pot business, from young people starting out their careers as budtenders to Baby Boomers with advanced degrees switching from Big Pharma to marijuana.

Rolling back marijuana

For now, Trump has signaled that he'll respect state laws legalizing pot.

But if the Trump Administration should reverse itself again, the results would be striking.

Counting people that don't work directly with marijuana, if the whole industry disappeared tomorrow, 170,000 jobs or more would dry up. That's the equivalent of every agriculture job in the state of Colorado disappearing.

Here's another way to understand what's at stake: Look at California. In that state, there are almost twice as many people making aircraft parts as there are workers in the cannabis industry today.

But assuming there's no federal crackdown, cannabis is almost certain to overtake those aircraft parts manufacturing jobs by 2021, when the marijuana business will employ nearly 100,000 people in the state, according to Arcview and BDS Analytics.

The last time there were that many aircraft parts workers in California was 1998.

Of course, it's hard to imagine that the federal government could or would wipe out the legal marijuana industry completely.

“They would have thousands of arrests that they would have to make," said Dale Gieringer, Director of Cal NORML, a marijuana advocacy group. “It would be a huge project for them to undertake.”

Sure, federal agencies could stir up chaos by arresting business owners, he added, pushing some legitimate businesses underground. But a full crack down?

“It's not going to happen," Gieringer said. "The polling is really bad."

Legal weed is taking off quickly not just in spite of federal prohibition, but also because of it, says BDS Analytics principal analyst Tom Adams.

“My economist really blew my mind when we started talking about it,” Adams said.

The reason is simple: the drug can't cross state lines legally, which limits competition.

In other words, an edible cooked up by a chef in Portland, Maine doesn’t have to compete for shelf space with a chocolate bar concocted in Portland, Oregon. You can’t grow marijuana in Palm Springs, California and ship it to be sold in Palm Beach, Florida.

Instead, marijuana companies have to manage an entire supply chain in one state, from seed to sale.

And they have no choice but to hire local.

Amy DiPierro covers business and real estate news at The Desert Sun in Palm Springs. Reach her at amy.dipierro@desertsun.com.

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