The Berkshires is about to get another marijuana store.

On Thursday, Canna Provisions received its final license from the Cannabis Control Commission to open a recreational marijuana store in Lee. The store could open in a matter of weeks, after the business passes its final inspection.

“It feels like a marathon,” said Meg Sanders, CEO and co-founder of Canna Provisions. “We’re almost at the finish line.”

The company is still awaiting a final license to open a store in Holyoke.

Canna Provisions is managed by Sanders and Erik Williams, who also run Will & Way, a Connecticut-based marijuana consulting firm.

Sanders was the CEO of Mindful, which grows marijuana, manufactures products and operates dispensaries in Colorado and Illinois. A long-time participant in Colorado’s marijuana industry, she moved to Connecticut to get into the East Coast marijuana market and is now buying a house in Lee.

Sanders previously worked for Revolutionary Clinics, which operates marijuana dispensaries in Cambridge and Somerville.

For now, Canna Provisions will buy marijuana from other growers, although the company is applying for a license to grow its own marijuana in Lee.

Sanders said her goal is to buy from small, locally owned microbusinesses and coops, once those businesses are up and running. When the company begins making its own products, it hopes to work with local chocolatiers, bakers, lotion makers and other suppliers.

“We believe there’s a ton of very talented cultivators in Western Massachusetts that we want to support, and if we can help them build a small business that they want to expand into, that’s our sweet spot,” Sanders said.

The store is decorated with antiques from local stores. A local woodworker crafted a locked display case.

Sanders said the store’s décor is meant to create a “more intimate and personal experience” that is “quintessential Berkshire.”

Eugene McCain is listed on Canna Provision’s application as an owner and partner. McCain was previously behind an unsuccessful ballot question that would have allowed a casino to be built on property he owns near Suffolk Downs. After that campaign, McCain was fined $125,000 by state campaign finance regulators for hiding the identity of donors.

Sanders described McCain as the company’s founder and a board member who does not have a role in day-to-day operations.

“The campaign finance issue was adequately explained to us, and there was also clear documentation of exactly what had happened,” Sanders said. “After taking a while to get to know Gene and understand him as a human being, it was clear to us that we can move forward with this company and with Gene as part of the company.”

The Berkshires provides an attractive location for marijuana shops, with a large tourist population year-round. Canna Provisions is located 45 minutes from Albany and just off the Massachusetts Turnpike, in the center of the Berkshires.

Other marijuana stores open in the Berkshires include Berkshire Roots in Pittsfield, Temescal Wellness in Pittsfield, Silver Therapeutics in Williamstown, and Theory Wellness in Great Barrington.