Long Beach’s third medical marijuana shop is set to open Monday in Belmont Heights, with an official grand opening slated for later in the week.

One Love Beach Club, which bills itself as the city’s oldest medical marijuana dispensary, was among the original businesses that won a permit to operate back in 2010, before the city banned sales the following the year.

Since that time, One Love has operated primarily as a delivery service, said Matt Abrams, owner and CEO, who is also an attorney and does consulting work for marijuana businesses.

The shop, at 2767 E. Broadway, between Temple and Molino avenues, will offer an array of products for those with a medical card.

“We’ve been working with vendors for some time,” Abrams said.

The business is a family affair: Abrams’ father, mother and two brothers are also involved. In a written release, Jeremy Abrams—Matt’s brother—said the family interest in the medical value of marijuana began when their parents honeymooned in Jamaica 43 years ago.

“After many visits, they were considered ‘Jamerican’ and were shown ‘the island way’ of using Cannabis,” Jeremy Abrams, described as the manager/owner, said in the statement.

Taylor Anderson of the Long Beach City Attorney’s office confirmed that One Love has been issued one of 32 permits the city expects to dole out after voters passed Measure MM in November 2016, a referendum that paved the way for medical marijuana businesses to open in Long Beach.

Twenty-two of the permits were set aside for priority applicants (per the ballot language), while the remaining 10 were doled out in a lottery drawing in September. Several of the applicants are currently in the permitting process, Anderson said.

“There’s a significant number of requirements to open a business of this type,” she said.

The two other businesses that are now operating in Long Beach include:

The Green Room at 7th Street and Rose Avenue, which opened in late September.

Connected, at 5227 E. 2nd St. in Belmont Shore, which opened in October.

Long Beach is also looking at whether to allow recreational sales of marijuana, possibly in conjunction with existing medical marijuana facilities. After statewide voters passed a referendum allowing sales to begin Jan. 1, the city enacted a 180-day moratorium on recreational marijuana businesses to provide time to research a local policy. Officials are expected to consider policy recommendations by June.

Matt Abrams said One Love plans to apply if that happens.