About Timothy Bryon
Timothy Bryon Fair practices law in Vermont and is admitted to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. He has built a practice around regulatory and business matters tied to the cannabis industry, working with clients that range from start-ups to established operators. His work sits at the intersection of state regulation and federal court practice.
He completed law school before gaining admission to the Vermont bar and later to the Second Circuit. Early in his career he handled a mix of transactional and administrative matters, gaining experience in licensing processes, compliance systems and the regulatory steps companies must take to operate legally in a changing landscape. Those formative years shaped how he approaches client problems today.
Over time his work narrowed toward issues that frequently arise for cannabis businesses: state licensing, operational compliance, municipal approvals and contracts. He also works on corporate matters such as entity formation, commercial agreements and investor relations. In regulatory proceedings he appears before state agencies; in litigation he has the credentials to appear in federal appellate matters through his Second Circuit admission.
Colleagues describe Fair as methodical. He breaks complex rules into practical next steps. That approach shows in his drafting and in negotiations where a clear record matters. He is known for preparing materials that regulators and opposing counsel can follow, and for advising clients on how to set up internal compliance to reduce enforcement risk.
He maintains current professional memberships and participates in forums where state and local regulations are discussed. That participation keeps him engaged in the evolving standards that affect cannabis businesses across Vermont and neighboring jurisdictions. It also shapes the practical guidance he gives to clients about anticipating municipal concerns and meeting licensing conditions.
Fair currently serves at Vermont Cannabis Solutions, where he advises clients on the regulatory, transactional and operational challenges tied to cannabis enterprises. His office work involves licensing applications, contract negotiation and ongoing compliance counseling. He represents clients in administrative settings and prepares submissions for review by state agencies, and he is available for matters that require federal appellate credentials.
He continues to practice in Vermont and before the Second Circuit, focusing on the legal needs of cannabis-related businesses and the state regulatory processes that govern them.