Before Keyva King’s sister Leticia died of lupus in 2014, Keyva watched the terrible, painful effects of the disease take its toll on her sibling for nearly two decades. Despite medical marijuana being legal since the ’90s in California, Leticia resisted using it and eventually suffered from opioid addiction after being prescribed pain pills to help manage the symptoms.

“I was there with my sister when she was in pain,” King recounted. “She was throwing up and couldn’t eat. There’s nothing in the world that can help you feel better in those moments.”

After Leticia passed, her sister started a nonprofit medical marijuana delivery service in California’s storied Coachella Valley. The tragedy instilled in King an ethos of compassion and dedication that continues to this day in the palace she has since created.

Leticia King (right) with her daughter Shacoya Lee/Photo courtesy of Keyva King

For those unfamiliar with the Coachella Valley, the desert landscape is most famous for the annual Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival and the resort mecca Palm Springs. It’s also home to thousands of retirees and snowbirds fleeing the cold winters of the northeast. As such, it has a large contingent of an older White conservative population, but King was openly welcomed.

Breaking Through a Reinforced Glass Ceiling

King spent the next five years networking and ultimately joined the Coachella Valley Cannabis Alliance Networking, through which she met lots of entrepreneurs, growers and distributors. She built a devoted client base largely through word of mouth.

Much of the affection patients feel toward King and her business are the result of her care and attention to their needs. With a high percentage of elderly people in the area, there were plenty of hospice and cancer patients to help.

“I ended up getting into friendships with a lot of my customers. They would call me; they didn’t have any family or friends,” says King. I would sit there with them as they tried different products and wait until they kicked in because I didn’t want to leave them with something that didn’t work for them.  So being able to help, and change someone’s life, is what I fell in love with.”

When talking to King, the first thing you’ll note is the combination of kindness and confidence in her voice. Those two qualities tell the story of what’s made her such a success as a Black woman in
an industry dominated by White men.

Just opening a dispensary is a groundbreaking feat for both women and people of color. According to Bloomberg Businessweek, of the top 20 publicly traded cannabis companies, only two are run by women and just 13 percent of board members are women. Pacific Standard Magazine notes that 81 percent of cannabis executives are White.

For King, gender was a much bigger issue than her skin color.

“At first, I was scared. I didn’t know how people would perceive me when I knocked on their doors to do a delivery. I didn’t want anyone to know my business was owned by someone Black, thinking we would get a backlash from it, but it was completely the opposite,” she explains. “I’ve been in the Palm Springs area for six years, and I’ve never dealt with racism.”

In fact, the patients she delivered to consistently congratulated her and wanted to know the secret to her success. But King’s accomplishments as an independent female entrepreneur was too often met with skepticism and, sometimes, outright sexism. “I’ve had guys who’d be like, ‘So is this your husband’s store?’ They downplay it and don’t give me credit or tell me I won’t get the opportunities I applied for on my own,” she says.

Despite these attitudes, King persisted, and hopes to become a model for changing the industry to be more inclusive of Black women.

“Women need to come to the forefront instead of being behind the scenes,” she opines. “How many women … stepped up to get in the industry, to actually be in retail? I’ve only met one or two female or Black dispensary owners, and I go to a lot of networking events. I’ve never been approached by a woman who wanted to get in the industry.”

She is quick to point out how deeply the power of White men in the cannabis industry has become entrenched. This is due in large part to the way venture capital works and the many rules that prevent people with past drug convictions from working in the legal industry, the unjust remnants of a war on drugs that has imprisoned Black people at six times the rate of White people despite similar rates of marijuana use.

King also notes there are changes that need to be made within the Black community when it comes to marijuana. “People are scared—scared of change, scared to make a difference. There’s no ambition or drive in the Black community around cannabis. I can tell you, hands down, I didn’t have the support for the four and a half, five years that I was going through this. When people found out what I did, everyone was like, ‘Oh, OK,’ and that was it.”

The biggest challenge to the businesswoman opening her own dispensary, however, was not directly tied to her race or gender; rather, it was the financial barriers she needed the most determination to push through. “The financial aspect is very difficult. Before I got the store I have now, I tried for another city but had to spend upwards of almost $20,000 just to get my application submitted, only to be denied,” she says.

Victory: Royal Highness ribbon-cutting ceremony
From left: Samuel King (Keyva’s father), Kiyah King (Keyva’s sister), Keyva King, Megan Stone (owner, High Road Design Studio) and Tammy Martin (executive director, Friends of the Desert Mountain)
Photo courtesy of Keyva King

Welcometo the Cannabis Queendom

When recreational marijuana became legal in California in 2018, King was honestly surprised but adapted her business to the new possibilities. For her, it was always about helping people deal with medical issues, and the dispensary represents a new avenue for doing just that. She was helped along by her experience in property management (real estate is one of the biggest challenges for any dispensary, thanks to ever-changing cannabis business zoning laws). Despite the financial hurdles and the years-long struggle to get where she is, King is now the CEO and general manager of her own dispensary, Royal Highness Cannabis Boutique, in Palm Desert’s historic El Paseo shopping district.

Royal Highness Cannabis Boutique/Photo courtesy of Keyva King

Royal Highness opened in April 2019, but King has also has big plans for the future: expanding to new storefronts, new states and offering delivery. She also wants to help pave the way for more Black entrepreneurs with equity programs such as the California Minority Alliance, run by cannabis industry pioneer Virgil Grant. Black dispensary ownership nationwide is incredibly low—just 1 percent in 2016, according to Leafly. The Alliance seeks to help expunge past records and help cities pass legislation for equity loans to minorities to increase those numbers. This Queen of Cannabis is ready to take on the industry and its inequalities, she’s planning a long reign. All while maintaining her focus on helping the local community and its cannabis patients in addition to the 12 employees who help run the business and make it all happen.