HOLYOKE -- Public hearings will resume for two proposed recreational marijuana dispensaries Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the City Council Ordinance Committee meeting at City Hall.

Another company pitching a pot cultivation facility will get its initial Ordinance Committee review. Holyoke Gardens LLC wants to do business at 5 Appleton St.

To operate here, the companies need a special permit granted by the City Council and a license from the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission.

The Ordinance Committee began public hearings June 12 for two companies that have applied for special permits from the City Council to run recreational marijuana busineses -- East Coast Pharms and Canna Provisions Inc.

East Coast Pharms with Jorge Tirse of Gloversville, New York listed as the applicant is seeking a special permit to operate a dispensary for medical and recreational marijuana at 630 Beaulieu St.

The building would undergo a $2.5 million renovation and employ 22 people in its first three months and 28 by the end of the year, Tirse said.

The business would have three uses under the single special permit: recreational marijuana dispensary, recreational marijuana retail and a medical marijuana dispensary. Combined they would have the capacity to provide $10 million a year in product, he said.

Canna Provisions wants to open a recreational marijuana dispensary at 380R Dwight St. The firm consists of shareholders Eugene McCain of West Newton, Massachusetts and Arthur P. Becker of New York City.

The plan would include about 20 employees and a renovation investment of $1.25 million, officials said.

Holyoke Gardens wants to cultivate and produce marijuana and marijuana products for sale to licensed establishments in Massachusetts. What the facility produces would be sold to other businesses, not directly to the general public.

The company will employ three people at first. That will increase to 15 after the first year as the company renovates parts of the facility's 150,000-square-feet, he said.

The new company is reworking the former Norman Paper Co. mill. The property is owned by Benz Holdings LLC, of which Glenn E. Shealey here is an official. Benz Holdings is leasing the space to Positronic Farms of Holyoke, which is leasing it to Holyoke Gardens, Caputo said. Caputo is president of Positronic Farms.

Officials in Holyoke Gardens include Justin P. Goldberg of Easthampton, Irene Masse of Greenfield and Michael Lees of Belchertown, according to the group's application for a special permit.

The East Coast Pharms, Canna Provisions and Holyoke Gardens proposals include security plans approved by Holyoke police with the provision that such plans are a "living document" with the understanding changes can be required.

An Ordinance Committee meeting to consider another recreational marijuana company is being scheduled. Hothouse Holyoke is planning to open next door to Holyoke Gardens, at 5B Appleton St., with a business that would cook the weed into fruit snacks resembling beef jerky for sale in local stores.

Massachusetts voters legalized recreational marijuana by passing a ballot question in 2016. Voters legalized marijuana for medical purposes in 2012.

In Holyoke, Mayor Alex B. Morse has said the marijuana legalization could lead to jobs and tax and other revenue for the city.