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Alright! Finally some good news out of Florida.... @Vicki this ought to make you happy! :biggrin:
Florida: Court Strikes Down Legislative Ban On Medical Cannabis Smoking

A Florida Circuit Court judge ruled today that a legislatively enacted ban on the smoking of medical cannabis in private by qualified patients is unconstitutional.

Lawmakers in 2017 passed Senate Bill 8A — which sought to amend provisions in Amendment 2, a voter initiated constitutional amendment permitting the use and distribution of marijuana for medical purposes. Specifically, SB 8A prohibited the possession of marijuana “in a form for smoking” and barred the use of herbal cannabis except in instances where it is contained “in a sealed tamper-proof receptacle for vaping.” Seventy-one percent of Florida voters approved Amendment 2 in November 2016.

Backers of Amendment 2, including the group Florida for Care and longtime medical activist Cathy Jordan, challenged the ‘no smoking’ ban — arguing that lawmakers improperly sought to overrule the will of the electorate. Circuit Court Judge Karen Gievers today ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.

“Section 381.986, Florida Statutes (2017) unconstitutionally restricts rights that are protected in the Constitution, and so the statutory prohibition against the use of smokeable marijuana permitted by [a] qualifying patient is declared invalid and unenforceable,” the judge ruled. “Qualifying patients have the right to use the form of medical marijuana for [the] treatment of their debilitating medical condition as recommended by their certified physicians, including the use of smokable marijuana in private places.”

NORML has long argued against regulations that limit or restrict patients’ access to whole plant herbal cannabis. Many patients seeking rapid relief from symptoms do not benefit from cannabis-infused pills, tinctures, or edibles because they possess delayed onset compared to inhaled cannabis and are far more variable in their effects.

“This ruling is a victory for Florida voters and, in particular, Florida’s patient community,” NORML Deputy Director Paul Armentano said. “These legislatively enacted restrictions arbitrarily sought to limit patients’ choices in a manner that violated the spirit of the law, and cynically sought to deny patients the ability to obtain rapid relief from whole-plant cannabis in a manner that has long proven to be relatively safe and effective.”

The Court’s opinion in the case: People United for Medical Marijuana et al v. Florida department of Health et al., appears online here.

I was ecstatic for about an hour until Rick Scott put in an appeal. They just won’t stop fighting us. :(
 
Breaking News!!! John Morgan Wins Smokable Cannabis Lawsuit On Constitutional Grounds

James T. Mulder May 27, 2018

Judge Karen Gievers Ordered the following:

Section 381,986, Florida Statutes (2017) unconstitutionally restricts rights that are protected in the Constitution, and so that statutory prohibition against the use of smokable marijuana permitted by section 29 qualifying patient is declared invalid and unenforceable.
The marijuana definition incorporated in and protected by Article X, Section 29 (b) (4) includes the 2014 version of section 381.986 which has continuing viability by virtue of Floridian’s having put it in the Constiution. Qualifying patients have the right to use the form of medical marijuana for treatment of their debilitating medical conditions as recommended by their certified physicians, including the use of smokable marijuana in private places.
As the prevailing party, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover taxable costs on timely filed motion and order

.Read the full text of John Morgan’s final order in smokable cannabis case.
IMG_3252.jpg
 
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Well, dang...I have been waiting with bated breath to break the news about FL when this trial ended and here I go away for one lousy weekend and....BOOM! Its happened. hahahahahaha

Being an American who dearly loves and supports democracy, I am ecstatic that the FL legislature and Governor have been shot down in this initial round.

Yes, @Vicki, its being appealed. Of course it is and of course it will probably go through multiple rounds of appeals. But have heart.

As I have said before, the amendment incorporates by reference specific legislation for the definition of the term Marijuana and given that definition ("including all parts of the plant" or dang close to that wording") there is no way than any logical person can support the claims that flower and smoking can be prohibited by subsequent legislation and still be constitutional.

I LOVE that in the letter above, the judge indeed cites the legislation that provides the definition of marijuana for the amendment. Beautiful.

As we discussed before, the state government's position has absolutely nothing to do with health regulations and everything to do with the state trying to resist the will of the people as much as possible on this issue. Its BS and I'm glad they are being called on it.

P.S. - here is a link to the statute in question which, IMO, makes this crystal clear and the state wrong on all counts:

http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes...ute&URL=0300-0399/0381/Sections/0381.986.html

Here are key quotes under definitions:

(f) “Marijuana” means all parts of any plant of the genus Cannabis, whether growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant or its seeds or resin, including low-THC cannabis, which are dispensed from a medical marijuana treatment center for medical use by a qualified patient.


(g) “Marijuana delivery device” means an object used, intended for use, or designed for use in preparing, storing, ingesting, inhaling, or otherwise introducing marijuana into the human body, and which is dispensed from a medical marijuana treatment center for medical use by a qualified patient.
 
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This is from the Tampa Bay Times....who clearly do not know what a carriage return is. :doh:


John Morgan tells Gov. Scott: Drop appeal in smokeable medical marijuana case

By Elizabeth Koh
Published: May 29, 2018
Updated: May 29, 2018 at 12:58 PM

Orlando lawyer and medical marijuana advocate John Morgan urged Gov. Rick Scott on Tuesday to reconsider pursuing a ban on smokeable cannabis, after a Leon County circuit court judge ruled it was unconstitutional late last week.In a press conference with reporters, Morgan said the governor is responsible for the state’s decision to appeal and flouting voters’ desire to smoke the drug for medical use privately.“What everyone needs to understand is that Gov. Scott could remove that appeal today if he wants,” Morgan said. “Gov. Scott should say enough is enough: ‘I am going to allow the people’s will to be done.’ ““The most direct method to get relief is smokeable marijuana,” Morgan added. “This is not a political issue.”Judge Karen Gievers, in a 22-page decision, ruled Friday that the state’s ban on smoking medical marijuana was unconstitutional and that the Legislature’s ban on smoking medical cannabis conflicted with voters’ approval of a constitutional amendment that broadly legalized it in 2016.In concurring with plaintiffs’ arguments that the voter-approved definition and ballot language implied a right to smokeable medical marijuana, Gievers rejected arguments asserting the state had the authority to set limitations on smoking for health and safety concerns.But the state filed an appeal shortly thereafter, putting an automatic stay on the ruling as it goes to the 1st District Court of Appeal.“This ruling goes against what the legislature outlined when they wrote and approved Florida’s law to implement the constitutional amendment that was approved by an overwhelmingly bipartisan majority,” state Department of Health spokesman Devin Galetta wrote Friday.But Morgan cast the decision to appeal the ruling as a misguided political choice that Scott should reconsider amid his ongoing U.S. Senate campaign against Sen. Bill Nelson.He called on voters — including veterans, alluding to Scott’s perpetually-worn Navy hat — to contact the governor and urge him to end the state’s legal challenge.Scott “is going to have to explain to veterans and really sick people and people who have really bad injuries why you kept this going,” he said. “Pam Bondi is just his lawyer… Rick Scott is the boss and the buck stops there.”If he drops the appeal, “I think he gains 5 points overnight,” Morgan said. “Gov. Scott is playing with political wildfire for something he doesn’t have to do.”Morgan also blamed the pharmaceutical industry and opioid makers for wanting to drag out the case and trying to suppress the medical marijuana industry, accusing them of being threatened by a more effective product. “Gov. Scott is going to have to make a decision whether he is going to put politics over people or he’s going to put campaign contributions from the pharmaceutical industry over compassion,” he said.Morgan said Tuesday he was willing to wait a few weeks for Scott to heed his call before potentially moving to expedite the case to the state Supreme Court.“If a person is terminally ill, you can move to expedite trials, hearings, the whole process,” he said. He noted the diagnosis of 68-year-old Cathy Jordan, one of two patients who are among the plaintiffs in the suit. Jordan has Lou Gehrig’s disease and illegally grows marijuana in her own backyard to smoke.Morgan said he believes the ballot language, the statement of intent and the support of more than 71 percent of voters is ironclad, regardless of the court’s ideological tilt: “I believe that if (late Supreme Court Justice Antonin) Scalia was alive, he’d side with us.”
 
This is from the Tampa Bay Times....who clearly do not know what a carriage return is. :doh:


John Morgan tells Gov. Scott: Drop appeal in smokeable medical marijuana case

By Elizabeth Koh
Published: May 29, 2018
Updated: May 29, 2018 at 12:58 PM

Orlando lawyer and medical marijuana advocate John Morgan urged Gov. Rick Scott on Tuesday to reconsider pursuing a ban on smokeable cannabis, after a Leon County circuit court judge ruled it was unconstitutional late last week.In a press conference with reporters, Morgan said the governor is responsible for the state’s decision to appeal and flouting voters’ desire to smoke the drug for medical use privately.“What everyone needs to understand is that Gov. Scott could remove that appeal today if he wants,” Morgan said. “Gov. Scott should say enough is enough: ‘I am going to allow the people’s will to be done.’ ““The most direct method to get relief is smokeable marijuana,” Morgan added. “This is not a political issue.”Judge Karen Gievers, in a 22-page decision, ruled Friday that the state’s ban on smoking medical marijuana was unconstitutional and that the Legislature’s ban on smoking medical cannabis conflicted with voters’ approval of a constitutional amendment that broadly legalized it in 2016.In concurring with plaintiffs’ arguments that the voter-approved definition and ballot language implied a right to smokeable medical marijuana, Gievers rejected arguments asserting the state had the authority to set limitations on smoking for health and safety concerns.But the state filed an appeal shortly thereafter, putting an automatic stay on the ruling as it goes to the 1st District Court of Appeal.“This ruling goes against what the legislature outlined when they wrote and approved Florida’s law to implement the constitutional amendment that was approved by an overwhelmingly bipartisan majority,” state Department of Health spokesman Devin Galetta wrote Friday.But Morgan cast the decision to appeal the ruling as a misguided political choice that Scott should reconsider amid his ongoing U.S. Senate campaign against Sen. Bill Nelson.He called on voters — including veterans, alluding to Scott’s perpetually-worn Navy hat — to contact the governor and urge him to end the state’s legal challenge.Scott “is going to have to explain to veterans and really sick people and people who have really bad injuries why you kept this going,” he said. “Pam Bondi is just his lawyer… Rick Scott is the boss and the buck stops there.”If he drops the appeal, “I think he gains 5 points overnight,” Morgan said. “Gov. Scott is playing with political wildfire for something he doesn’t have to do.”Morgan also blamed the pharmaceutical industry and opioid makers for wanting to drag out the case and trying to suppress the medical marijuana industry, accusing them of being threatened by a more effective product. “Gov. Scott is going to have to make a decision whether he is going to put politics over people or he’s going to put campaign contributions from the pharmaceutical industry over compassion,” he said.Morgan said Tuesday he was willing to wait a few weeks for Scott to heed his call before potentially moving to expedite the case to the state Supreme Court.“If a person is terminally ill, you can move to expedite trials, hearings, the whole process,” he said. He noted the diagnosis of 68-year-old Cathy Jordan, one of two patients who are among the plaintiffs in the suit. Jordan has Lou Gehrig’s disease and illegally grows marijuana in her own backyard to smoke.Morgan said he believes the ballot language, the statement of intent and the support of more than 71 percent of voters is ironclad, regardless of the court’s ideological tilt: “I believe that if (late Supreme Court Justice Antonin) Scalia was alive, he’d side with us.”

John Morgan is great.
 

More cannabis distributors expected to enter Florida


The cannabis business seems to be booming, with new dispensaries opening in all corners of Florida. More distributors are expected to enter Florida’s cannabis sector in the next year.

But there are challenges and restrictions around this emerging market. Attorney Matthew Ginder is senior counsel in the Cannabis Law practice group at the South Florida firm Greenspoon Marder.

“The federal illegality of marijuana carries with it risks. Whether it’s banking, tax treatment, just the risk associated with a substance the federal government still considers illegal,” said Ginder.

In January, New York marijuana investment firm iAnthus Capital Holdings bought a Florida operation called GrowHealthy for $47.5 million. Florida law requires medical marijuana companies to be based in the state but does not restrict outside ownership.

Meanwhile, a state law banning patients from smoking medical marijuana is unconstitutional, a Tallahassee judge ruled late Friday.

In a highly anticipated but not surprising decision, Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers found that a constitutional amendment approved by voters in 2016 that broadly legalized medical marijuana gives eligible patients the right to smoke the treatment in private.
 
The more I read about FL MMJ program the more convinced I am that the citizens of FL are being royally screwed while a bunch of corporate types are raking in the dough. Just too fucked up for words.


As marijuana dispensaries open their doors, Florida registers 5,400 new users per week

Call it the New Marijuana Math: 91,000 Floridians are buying 56 pounds of pot a week under the orders of 1,400 doctors. A year and a half after an amendment to the state constitution legalized medical marijuana, the fledgling industry is finally starting to show some muscle.

"On the one hand, we should have been so much further along with this," said Karen Goldstein, head of the Florida chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). "The amendment was so clear — medical marijuana is legal — but the legislature has muddied the water so much by creating regulations out of thin air.

"On the other hand, if you're old enough to remember the 1960s, when people could get serious jail time just for having a single joint, it's kind of amazing to see it handed to a customer across a store counter, and it's all right out in the open and totally legal."

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Medical%20Marijuana0143%20JAI%20(2)

Trulieve, a medical marijuana dispensary, is located at at 4020 NW 26th St. in Miami.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
When Floridians voted in 2016 to legalize medical use of the drug by an overwhelming 70 percent, gleeful marijuana activist and merchants around the country predicted half a million users would quickly sign up.

Slow movement by state regulators on everything from which companies could grow and sell marijuana to how patients could take it kept any weed gold rush in check. (Even the conservative legislature, no friend to marijuana in any form, fired off a letter to the Health Department last month accusing it of dragging its feet.) But by the end of May, the state Health Department's Office of Medical Marijuana Use said it was registering new users at a clip of 5,400 a week, and the time required to process registrations is down to about two weeks.

2:28
Uniting States of Marijuana: the country's evolving laws on cannabis


Results from the 2016 election brought about new rules on the use of recreational and medicinal marijuana in several states, with more than half now allowing for the later. Federal government leaders including president-elect Trump have voiced the Cristina Rayas McClatchy

"As the number of people with registration cards goes up, our business going up with it," said Eddie Ramos, who manages one of Miami-Dade County's four medical marijuana stores, or dispensaries, as the image-conscious industry prefers to call them. "We're serving 100 to 115 customers a day, seven days a week. Business is so good that Trulieve, the Tallahassee-based company that operates Ramos' dispensary and 13 others around the state, held a job fair last week trying to fill 100 positions.

An even more potent sign of the industry's health: In January, the New York firm iAnthus Capital Holdings bought the Lake Wales-based medical marijuana company GrowHealthy for $47.5 million even though GrowHealthy hadn't yet sold a single penny's worth of marijuana. (GrowHealthy still hasn't opened a dispensary, though it's now making deliveries across the state.)

Many industry analysts believe it will take another giant step forward if appellate courts uphold a Leon County judge's ruling last month that the state's ban on smoking medical marijuana is unconstitutional. The legislature, in writing the law implementing the constitutional amendment legalizing medical pot, said the only forms of it that could be used were oils (which can be vaped as well as eaten or applied topically), tinctures, sprays and edibles.

"The ban on smoking is really stupid," said Jonathan Leguizamon, a 28-year-old U.S. Army veteran who lives in Miami Lakes and is a regular user of medical marijuana. "For most people, smoking is the most familiar form of it. They're uneasy with a spray or a pill."

Leguizamon uses marijuana to help him cope with post-traumatic stress stress disorder that developed after an incident while he was stationed at a military camp near Basra, Iraq. No stranger to being shot at — Iraqi insurgents regularly shelled his camp, "sometimes as many as 50 times a day on American holidays, which they all had memorized," he recalls — Leguizamo finally lost it on an otherwise peaceful afternoon, so quiet he went outside the walls for lunch.

"The mortar rounds were coming in all around , and I saw one that looked like it was headed right or me," he said. "I thought, 'Oh my God, this is it, I'm dead,' and I hit the ground, which is about all I could do." The shell actually hit a little bit further up the grounds — but it inflicted unspeakably terrible wounds on another American soldier and a civilian bystander.

Medical%20Marijuana0115%20JAI

Ariana Delgado greets customers in the lobby at Trulieve, where customers wait to be seen by a patient consultant. Trulieve is located at at 4020 NW 26th St. in Miami.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
"I ran over, I tried to help them, even though I could see it was useless, but you just have to try, you can't do nothing," he said. "Then some buildings caught fire, it was so hot, and I had to get away."

It had been a terrible thing to go through, but in reality not so much more terrible than some other days in the war, and Leguizamon thought he had mostly moved past it. But several months later, not long before his scheduled departure from Iraq, he started having flashbacks whenever he heard a bell. Then the grisly nightmares began.

By the time he reached his unit's new assignment in Colorado, army doctors were treating Leguizamon for PTSD with all sorts of exotic drugs, none of which was helping. Finally a friend suggested: "Look, we're in Colorado, medical marijuana's legal here. Why don't you get a card and try it? They say it can help with PTSD."

Leguizamon, who had been a jock in high school, had no experience with pot. "My wrestling and football coaches always said it would mess us up, make us weak, and I believed them," he said. But nothing could be as bad as the flashbacks and nightmares, he reasoned, and gave it a try. The relief was quick.

"I got a euphoric high," he said. "But it wasn't just that. I felt happy, I felt motivated to do things, I lost my paranoia. I could get out of my house again. I could take my daughter to the park. I didn't have to watch my back."

Leguizamon, though, did feel trapped in Colorado. He and his wife wanted to return to South Florida, where they grew up, but there was no medical marijuana. He delightedly came back when the constitutional amendment passed — but the restrictions on smoking and the unavailability of the particular strain of marijuana he used in Colorado (Florida law permits growing only three of the nearly 800 known strains of the plant) disillusioned him.

2:06
Marijuana: Uncertain Medicine


Marijuana’s effects can vary from person to person, and scientists are not quite sure what to make of the common distinction users and growers make between cannabis sativa and cannabis indica. Courtesy of The New York Times

Soon he began supplementing his legal medical marijuana with illegal weed purchased on the street.

It's weird and unsettling for Leguizamon, who had no experience at the ins and outs of the dope business. "It was really pretty scary at first," he said. "It made me a bit paranoid again — night-time meetings, thinking it through tactically, how and where to park, being careful not to tell the seller what my vehicle looked like so I could get a look at him first. It was like being back in Iraq, but it wasn't a flashback....Florida needs to relax these rules and get some more variety and flexibility into its program."

The ban on smoking is just one of many speed bumps the legislature or the Health Department placed in the path of medical marijuana:

▪ Not only were users prohibited from growing pot for personal consumption, practically any company that wasn't an agribusiness giant was excluded by a requirement for a non-refundable $60,000 application fee.

▪ Eighteen months later, only five companies have been authorized to open dispensaries, and there are only 37 dispensaries to serve the entire state, mostly clustered in large cities along coastal areas. Many of the dispensaries do deliver over long distances — the Trulieve dispensary near Miami International will carry the drug as far as Key West — but the drug can be accepted only by the patient, not a friend or family member.

▪ Finding a doctor to approve a patient for medical marijuana — which the state requires — can be extraordinarily difficult, especially outside big metropolitan areas. Only a doctor who has completed a state course on marijuana can approve a patient. The course originally took eight hours to complete and cost about $1,000, and almost none of Florida's 46,000 licensed physicians signed up. Even when the state slashed it to two hours and $250, the response has been minimal.

Medical%20Marijuana0274%20JAI

Patient consultant Andy Luis shows the medical marijuana merchandise to a customer at Trulieve, 4020 NW 26th St. in Miami.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
The time and expense for the course is unattractive to doctors, who don't see medical marijuana as a major part of their practice, said Miami osteopath Michelle Weiner, but there are other factors that discourage them as well — mainly, not knowing anything about the medical uses of marijuana.

"Even that course the state makes you take about the legal aspects of medical marijuana," she said. "And this is not something you learn about in medical school, because until recently it was illegal, so what was the point? You'll find very few physicians who know what can be treated with marijuana or the proper dosages, which is a shame because it's got a lot of potential medical uses."

Weiner herself took the course and has about 750 patients who use the drug. A pain-management specialist, Weiner became interested in marijuana when she realized its potential as an alternative to opiods, which are great at reducing pain but also addictive and often lethal.

"This was a no-brainer for me," she said. "And it's the perfect time for medical marijuana to become available as a painkiller, because the government is putting some pretty harsh restrictions on opiods. If people with chronic pain can't get a Percocet, they''re going to turn to the street, where maybe they'll get involved with a drug like heroin. What would you rather have, somebody using heroin or somebody using marijuana?"

The maze of regulations, coupled with the inevitable uncertainties of a new industry revolving around a substance that until recently was wholly illegal, has made the medical marijuana landscape a bit rocky. "At times, it's a bit like the frontier, people confused about where they are or what they can do," said NORML's Goldstein.

"I have people calling me saying, 'I was hoping to open a medical marijuana business there, should I move?' or 'I need marijuana to treat my convulsions, will I be able to get it if I'm visiting Florida?' We're getting there, though."

Certainly the Trulieve dispensary tucked away among the warehouses and rental car lots across from the Miami airport seems to be operating like a normal and reasonably efficient business, not a Cheech-and-Chong madhouse.

"That's the biggest misconception people have when they come in for the first time," said Ramos, the manager. "They think it's going to be like a vape shop. And instead everybody's wearing a uniform and talking like a professional." His customers run anywhere from 18 to 50 years in age, he said, though during the Herald's mid-day visit, a surprising number seemed middle-age and above.

Medical%20Marijuana0213%20JAI

The menu at Trulieve, a dispensary at 4020 NW 26th St., provides a list of prices. No insurance plan covers the cost of medical marijuana.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
Customers can enter the shop only by being buzzed in through a security door, and that only gets them into a small lobby with a receptionist and an armed security guard. (A state requirement, but not one the Trulieve staff objects to; they are, after all, sitting on a pricey stash of drugs.) Only with the state medical marijuana patient card can they get into the back room where the merchandise is stored.

They're admitted there three or four at a time. Inside they find two medium-sized glass counters, not unlike the ones you might see in a cell-phone store, overseen by several Trulieve staffers called "consultants" who look at their doctors' referrals. That will include an approval for supplies of 30, 45 or 70 days, along with any restrictions — for instance, only topical ointments to be rubbed on the skin — the doctor has laid down.

But often the customers have a fair amount of leeway in choosing the strain of their marijuana and the way it's taken. (Vaping? A drop of tincture under the tongue?) The consultants, some of them medical marijuana users themselves, are well-versed not only on the strains of pot but on all the hardware that can be used to deliver them. They happily demonstrate vaporizers and the little cups of ground marijuana bud or cartridges of oil extract that are used with them.

By the way, "bud" — the part of the marijuana plant that makes you high — is known in the industry as "flower." Five decades of hippie marijuana jargon has largely been jettisoned by a business anxious to separate itself from stoner image. Words like "lid" or "quarter" that were used to specify quantities are never heard inside Trulieve; even the ubiquitous "joint" and "blunt" have disappeared, although that may have more to do with Florida's ban on smoking the weed as with image remaking.

Medical%20Marijuana0083%20JAI

At present, medical marijuana cannot be consumed by smoking — although a recent court ruling may change that. Trulieve, a dispensary at 4020 NW 26th St., offers CBD (cannabidoil) capsules and tinctures.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
One thing that hasn't changed: the high. Almost everything sold at dispensaries contains THC (though at much lesser potency than the stuff you buy in baggies out on the street), the ingredient that gives marijuana its buzz. "Marijuana is marijuana, no matter what you're using it for," said one patient. "You can definitely get a little high with most of this stuff."

Most of the products at Trulieve run between $35 and $115, though some of the hardware, like a tabletop vaporizer, can go as (pardon the expression) high as $750. "I think the average purchase is somewhere between $100 and $150," said Ramos. A lot of first-time customers are dismayed to learn they can't use credit cards — marijuana is still illegal under federal law, and banks don't want to be involved — though the store has an ATM.

What it doesn't have: insurance forms or receipts. No insurance company covers medical marijuana.


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/health-care/article212181799.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/health-care/article212181799.html#storylink=cpy
 
I think just as importantly MJ legalization issues will play strongly in Scott's run for the Senate as any opponent with two brain cells will beat the shit out of him for supporting actions to thwart the citizens referendum passed constitutional amendment.

I mean, who the fuck would trust this guy to represent you when the last time you expressed your will (with a 72% approval rate) he immediately worked against you. And you pay him for that? No, no, no....IMO all anti-democratic politicians should go without respect for party.



Marijuana Legalization Could Turn Florida Gubernatorial Race
Florida’s three top Democratic contenders for governor have all come out in support of full, adult-use marijuana legalization.

In 2016, a wide majority of Florida voters approved a constitutional amendment legalizing medical cannabis. Two years later, the Florida Department of Health is still dragging its feet on implementing the law. Floridians are growing impatient. They don’t just want the state to follow through on medical cannabis, however. They also want marijuana legal for adult use. With anti-cannabis Republican Gov. Rick Scott on his way out of office, and a chance to flip the legislature, Democrats are recognizing that marijuana legalization could turn Florida gubernatorial race in their favor.

Florida Democrats Line Up To Support Legal Weed
Three of Florida’s top Democratic primary contenders for the governorship—Tallahassee Mayer Andrew Gillum, Winter Park entrepreneur Chris King and former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine—support adult-use cannabis legalization, reports The News Service of Florida.

A fourth contender, former Congresswoman Gwen Graham, backs decriminalization. She says she doesn’t endorse locking up people for possessing personal amounts of marijuana. But Graham’s refusal to support full legalization has renewed criticisms of her conservatism.

The three Democratic gubernatorial candidates who support legalization each have a different vision for how to go about achieving it.


Gillum’s campaign is putting the emphasis on the revenue Florida stands to gain from a regulated and taxed cannabis market. During a debate between the primary candidates in April, Gillum also said that legalization will halt the “over-criminalization of young people.”

Echoing Gillum, King is also making legalization part of his comprehensive criminal justice reform platform. “Florida should legalize and regulate marijuana to end the practice of over-criminalization predominately affecting communities of color,” the candidate said in an email. King also said he would invest tax revenue from cannabis sales in programs that “reverse the school-to-prison pipeline.”

Taking a somewhat different approach, Levine’s campaign said the candidate would back a legislative effort to legalize marijuana. That strategy would almost certainly require a Democratic state legislature. Without support from Florida lawmakers, Levine said he would “let the people decide,” likely through a referendum.

The more tepid proposals gave King an opening to chide his opponents. “Half-measures from conventional politicians such as ‘decriminalization’ or ‘following the will of voters’ are answers straight from the political establishment playbook,” King wrote.


Lawyer Who Sued Gov. Scott Over Smokable Medical Marijuana Says Legal Weed Is Make Or Break Issue For Democrats
Fresh off a legal victory over smokable medical marijuana, Florida lawyer John Morgan is warning Democrats not to oppose adult-use legalization. According to Morgan, candidates who oppose legal weed might as well oppose same-sex marriage.

“You’re dead. You’re DOA,” Morgan said.

Last year, Morgan sued Gov. Scott on behalf of Florida’s medical cannabis patients. Last week, a Tallahassee judge agreed with Morgan that the Scott administration’s ban on smokable medical marijuana was unconstitutional and a violation of voters intent.

The Florida Department of Health immediately appealed the ruling. And this week, Morgan called on Gov. Scott to drop the appeal.

All four Democratic primary candidates for governor support permitting medical cannabis patients to smoke marijuana.


John Morgan’s efforts are forcing Republicans to play their anti-cannabis cards. That gives Democratic challengers an opening on a key issue. Top candidates have already seized it.

More than 71 percent of Florida primary voters support medical cannabis legalization, and more than 60 percent are in favor of fully legalizing the drug.
 
The more I read about FL MMJ program the more convinced I am that the citizens of FL are being royally screwed while a bunch of corporate types are raking in the dough. Just too fucked up for words.


As marijuana dispensaries open their doors, Florida registers 5,400 new users per week

Call it the New Marijuana Math: 91,000 Floridians are buying 56 pounds of pot a week under the orders of 1,400 doctors. A year and a half after an amendment to the state constitution legalized medical marijuana, the fledgling industry is finally starting to show some muscle.

"On the one hand, we should have been so much further along with this," said Karen Goldstein, head of the Florida chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). "The amendment was so clear — medical marijuana is legal — but the legislature has muddied the water so much by creating regulations out of thin air.

"On the other hand, if you're old enough to remember the 1960s, when people could get serious jail time just for having a single joint, it's kind of amazing to see it handed to a customer across a store counter, and it's all right out in the open and totally legal."

Help us deliver journalism that makes a difference in our community.
Our journalism takes a lot of time, effort, and hard work to produce. If you read and enjoy our journalism, please consider subscribing today.

Medical%20Marijuana0143%20JAI%20(2)

Trulieve, a medical marijuana dispensary, is located at at 4020 NW 26th St. in Miami.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
When Floridians voted in 2016 to legalize medical use of the drug by an overwhelming 70 percent, gleeful marijuana activist and merchants around the country predicted half a million users would quickly sign up.

Slow movement by state regulators on everything from which companies could grow and sell marijuana to how patients could take it kept any weed gold rush in check. (Even the conservative legislature, no friend to marijuana in any form, fired off a letter to the Health Department last month accusing it of dragging its feet.) But by the end of May, the state Health Department's Office of Medical Marijuana Use said it was registering new users at a clip of 5,400 a week, and the time required to process registrations is down to about two weeks.

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Uniting States of Marijuana: the country's evolving laws on cannabis


Results from the 2016 election brought about new rules on the use of recreational and medicinal marijuana in several states, with more than half now allowing for the later. Federal government leaders including president-elect Trump have voiced the Cristina Rayas McClatchy

"As the number of people with registration cards goes up, our business going up with it," said Eddie Ramos, who manages one of Miami-Dade County's four medical marijuana stores, or dispensaries, as the image-conscious industry prefers to call them. "We're serving 100 to 115 customers a day, seven days a week. Business is so good that Trulieve, the Tallahassee-based company that operates Ramos' dispensary and 13 others around the state, held a job fair last week trying to fill 100 positions.

An even more potent sign of the industry's health: In January, the New York firm iAnthus Capital Holdings bought the Lake Wales-based medical marijuana company GrowHealthy for $47.5 million even though GrowHealthy hadn't yet sold a single penny's worth of marijuana. (GrowHealthy still hasn't opened a dispensary, though it's now making deliveries across the state.)

Many industry analysts believe it will take another giant step forward if appellate courts uphold a Leon County judge's ruling last month that the state's ban on smoking medical marijuana is unconstitutional. The legislature, in writing the law implementing the constitutional amendment legalizing medical pot, said the only forms of it that could be used were oils (which can be vaped as well as eaten or applied topically), tinctures, sprays and edibles.

"The ban on smoking is really stupid," said Jonathan Leguizamon, a 28-year-old U.S. Army veteran who lives in Miami Lakes and is a regular user of medical marijuana. "For most people, smoking is the most familiar form of it. They're uneasy with a spray or a pill."

Leguizamon uses marijuana to help him cope with post-traumatic stress stress disorder that developed after an incident while he was stationed at a military camp near Basra, Iraq. No stranger to being shot at — Iraqi insurgents regularly shelled his camp, "sometimes as many as 50 times a day on American holidays, which they all had memorized," he recalls — Leguizamo finally lost it on an otherwise peaceful afternoon, so quiet he went outside the walls for lunch.

"The mortar rounds were coming in all around , and I saw one that looked like it was headed right or me," he said. "I thought, 'Oh my God, this is it, I'm dead,' and I hit the ground, which is about all I could do." The shell actually hit a little bit further up the grounds — but it inflicted unspeakably terrible wounds on another American soldier and a civilian bystander.

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Ariana Delgado greets customers in the lobby at Trulieve, where customers wait to be seen by a patient consultant. Trulieve is located at at 4020 NW 26th St. in Miami.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
"I ran over, I tried to help them, even though I could see it was useless, but you just have to try, you can't do nothing," he said. "Then some buildings caught fire, it was so hot, and I had to get away."

It had been a terrible thing to go through, but in reality not so much more terrible than some other days in the war, and Leguizamon thought he had mostly moved past it. But several months later, not long before his scheduled departure from Iraq, he started having flashbacks whenever he heard a bell. Then the grisly nightmares began.

By the time he reached his unit's new assignment in Colorado, army doctors were treating Leguizamon for PTSD with all sorts of exotic drugs, none of which was helping. Finally a friend suggested: "Look, we're in Colorado, medical marijuana's legal here. Why don't you get a card and try it? They say it can help with PTSD."

Leguizamon, who had been a jock in high school, had no experience with pot. "My wrestling and football coaches always said it would mess us up, make us weak, and I believed them," he said. But nothing could be as bad as the flashbacks and nightmares, he reasoned, and gave it a try. The relief was quick.

"I got a euphoric high," he said. "But it wasn't just that. I felt happy, I felt motivated to do things, I lost my paranoia. I could get out of my house again. I could take my daughter to the park. I didn't have to watch my back."

Leguizamon, though, did feel trapped in Colorado. He and his wife wanted to return to South Florida, where they grew up, but there was no medical marijuana. He delightedly came back when the constitutional amendment passed — but the restrictions on smoking and the unavailability of the particular strain of marijuana he used in Colorado (Florida law permits growing only three of the nearly 800 known strains of the plant) disillusioned him.

2:06
Marijuana: Uncertain Medicine


Marijuana’s effects can vary from person to person, and scientists are not quite sure what to make of the common distinction users and growers make between cannabis sativa and cannabis indica. Courtesy of The New York Times

Soon he began supplementing his legal medical marijuana with illegal weed purchased on the street.

It's weird and unsettling for Leguizamon, who had no experience at the ins and outs of the dope business. "It was really pretty scary at first," he said. "It made me a bit paranoid again — night-time meetings, thinking it through tactically, how and where to park, being careful not to tell the seller what my vehicle looked like so I could get a look at him first. It was like being back in Iraq, but it wasn't a flashback....Florida needs to relax these rules and get some more variety and flexibility into its program."

The ban on smoking is just one of many speed bumps the legislature or the Health Department placed in the path of medical marijuana:

▪ Not only were users prohibited from growing pot for personal consumption, practically any company that wasn't an agribusiness giant was excluded by a requirement for a non-refundable $60,000 application fee.

▪ Eighteen months later, only five companies have been authorized to open dispensaries, and there are only 37 dispensaries to serve the entire state, mostly clustered in large cities along coastal areas. Many of the dispensaries do deliver over long distances — the Trulieve dispensary near Miami International will carry the drug as far as Key West — but the drug can be accepted only by the patient, not a friend or family member.

▪ Finding a doctor to approve a patient for medical marijuana — which the state requires — can be extraordinarily difficult, especially outside big metropolitan areas. Only a doctor who has completed a state course on marijuana can approve a patient. The course originally took eight hours to complete and cost about $1,000, and almost none of Florida's 46,000 licensed physicians signed up. Even when the state slashed it to two hours and $250, the response has been minimal.

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Patient consultant Andy Luis shows the medical marijuana merchandise to a customer at Trulieve, 4020 NW 26th St. in Miami.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
The time and expense for the course is unattractive to doctors, who don't see medical marijuana as a major part of their practice, said Miami osteopath Michelle Weiner, but there are other factors that discourage them as well — mainly, not knowing anything about the medical uses of marijuana.

"Even that course the state makes you take about the legal aspects of medical marijuana," she said. "And this is not something you learn about in medical school, because until recently it was illegal, so what was the point? You'll find very few physicians who know what can be treated with marijuana or the proper dosages, which is a shame because it's got a lot of potential medical uses."

Weiner herself took the course and has about 750 patients who use the drug. A pain-management specialist, Weiner became interested in marijuana when she realized its potential as an alternative to opiods, which are great at reducing pain but also addictive and often lethal.

"This was a no-brainer for me," she said. "And it's the perfect time for medical marijuana to become available as a painkiller, because the government is putting some pretty harsh restrictions on opiods. If people with chronic pain can't get a Percocet, they''re going to turn to the street, where maybe they'll get involved with a drug like heroin. What would you rather have, somebody using heroin or somebody using marijuana?"

The maze of regulations, coupled with the inevitable uncertainties of a new industry revolving around a substance that until recently was wholly illegal, has made the medical marijuana landscape a bit rocky. "At times, it's a bit like the frontier, people confused about where they are or what they can do," said NORML's Goldstein.

"I have people calling me saying, 'I was hoping to open a medical marijuana business there, should I move?' or 'I need marijuana to treat my convulsions, will I be able to get it if I'm visiting Florida?' We're getting there, though."

Certainly the Trulieve dispensary tucked away among the warehouses and rental car lots across from the Miami airport seems to be operating like a normal and reasonably efficient business, not a Cheech-and-Chong madhouse.

"That's the biggest misconception people have when they come in for the first time," said Ramos, the manager. "They think it's going to be like a vape shop. And instead everybody's wearing a uniform and talking like a professional." His customers run anywhere from 18 to 50 years in age, he said, though during the Herald's mid-day visit, a surprising number seemed middle-age and above.

Medical%20Marijuana0213%20JAI

The menu at Trulieve, a dispensary at 4020 NW 26th St., provides a list of prices. No insurance plan covers the cost of medical marijuana.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
Customers can enter the shop only by being buzzed in through a security door, and that only gets them into a small lobby with a receptionist and an armed security guard. (A state requirement, but not one the Trulieve staff objects to; they are, after all, sitting on a pricey stash of drugs.) Only with the state medical marijuana patient card can they get into the back room where the merchandise is stored.

They're admitted there three or four at a time. Inside they find two medium-sized glass counters, not unlike the ones you might see in a cell-phone store, overseen by several Trulieve staffers called "consultants" who look at their doctors' referrals. That will include an approval for supplies of 30, 45 or 70 days, along with any restrictions — for instance, only topical ointments to be rubbed on the skin — the doctor has laid down.

But often the customers have a fair amount of leeway in choosing the strain of their marijuana and the way it's taken. (Vaping? A drop of tincture under the tongue?) The consultants, some of them medical marijuana users themselves, are well-versed not only on the strains of pot but on all the hardware that can be used to deliver them. They happily demonstrate vaporizers and the little cups of ground marijuana bud or cartridges of oil extract that are used with them.

By the way, "bud" — the part of the marijuana plant that makes you high — is known in the industry as "flower." Five decades of hippie marijuana jargon has largely been jettisoned by a business anxious to separate itself from stoner image. Words like "lid" or "quarter" that were used to specify quantities are never heard inside Trulieve; even the ubiquitous "joint" and "blunt" have disappeared, although that may have more to do with Florida's ban on smoking the weed as with image remaking.

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At present, medical marijuana cannot be consumed by smoking — although a recent court ruling may change that. Trulieve, a dispensary at 4020 NW 26th St., offers CBD (cannabidoil) capsules and tinctures.
Jose A. Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
One thing that hasn't changed: the high. Almost everything sold at dispensaries contains THC (though at much lesser potency than the stuff you buy in baggies out on the street), the ingredient that gives marijuana its buzz. "Marijuana is marijuana, no matter what you're using it for," said one patient. "You can definitely get a little high with most of this stuff."

Most of the products at Trulieve run between $35 and $115, though some of the hardware, like a tabletop vaporizer, can go as (pardon the expression) high as $750. "I think the average purchase is somewhere between $100 and $150," said Ramos. A lot of first-time customers are dismayed to learn they can't use credit cards — marijuana is still illegal under federal law, and banks don't want to be involved — though the store has an ATM.

What it doesn't have: insurance forms or receipts. No insurance company covers medical marijuana.


Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/health-care/article212181799.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/health-care/article212181799.html#storylink=cpy

I was just at Trulieve yesterday picking up some Chem Dawg and 9 Pound Hammer TruClear. They were packed, wall to wall people!! I can’t believe I was actually able to place an order online on a Friday and pick it up that afternoon. That’s almost unheard of! I always hit the ATM before I go.
 
These anti-democratic idiots in Tallahassee just won't give up. Love this one:

"Senior Assistant Attorney General Karen Brodeen arguing allowing smokable pot would send the wrong message"
Fuck her "message". This is about real people with real medical issues....its not a fucking political advertisement. "Messaging"...wow, they really need to pop their head out of their asses and look at what they are actually doing to their citizens.

Legality of smokable medical marijuana in Florida remains in legal limbo after hearing

The legality of medical marijuana patients using smokable medicine remains in legal limbo on Monday after a hearing in the State Capitol. The state wants smokable marijuana put on hold after a judge's ruling, while supporters want patients to get smokable marijuana as soon as possible.

Circuit Judge Karen Geivers ruled 10 days ago that smokable medical marijuana was permitted by the constitution and isn’t prohibited by the law the governor signed. The decision was automatically put on hold when the state appealed.

Monday, lawyers were back in court, arguing the stay should be lifted and smokable marijuana should be available as quickly as possible. Jon Mills is the Amendment 2 author.

“There is a high prevalence in the state of Florida and risk to those with debilitating medical conditions who are denied access," he said. The state pushed back, with Senior Assistant Attorney General Karen Brodeen arguing allowing smokable pot would send the wrong message.
 
Congratulations Florida MMJ patients! The politicians are not on your side, but the courts are!!

https://www.wftv.com/news/local/florida-judge-lifts-stay-on-smokable-medical-marijuana-1/763599875

Florida judge lifts stay on somkable medical marijuana!!!


A Florida judge has lifted a stay on smoking medical marijuana.

Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers on Tuesday upheld her May 25 ruling that the Florida Legislature's provision banning smokable medical marijuana is unconstitutional. The stay will officially be lifted on Monday. Gievers wrote that delaying her ruling any further would create irreparable harm to patients.

The Florida Department of Health had filed an appeal of Gievers' original ruling, which automatically put it on hold.

Even with the stay being lifted, smokable medical marijuana will not immediately be available for sale at treatment centers.

That's because FDOH must come up with rules for cultivation and distribution, which could take several months.

The department provided Channel 9 with the following statement Tuesday:
 
Congratulations Florida MMJ patients! The politicians are not on your side, but the courts are!!

https://www.wftv.com/news/local/florida-judge-lifts-stay-on-smokable-medical-marijuana-1/763599875

Florida judge lifts stay on somkable medical marijuana!!!


A Florida judge has lifted a stay on smoking medical marijuana.

Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers on Tuesday upheld her May 25 ruling that the Florida Legislature's provision banning smokable medical marijuana is unconstitutional. The stay will officially be lifted on Monday. Gievers wrote that delaying her ruling any further would create irreparable harm to patients.

The Florida Department of Health had filed an appeal of Gievers' original ruling, which automatically put it on hold.

Even with the stay being lifted, smokable medical marijuana will not immediately be available for sale at treatment centers.

That's because FDOH must come up with rules for cultivation and distribution, which could take several months.

The department provided Channel 9 with the following statement Tuesday:

Love this quote from the article:

"The use of medical marijuana is outlined in state law, which was passed by an overwhelmingly bipartisan majority of the Florida legislature."
Yes, but the electorate of FL voted OVERWHELMINGLY to pass a constitutional amendment and they intentionally voted for it as it was structured which clearly includes all forms of MJ. So fuck your unconstitutional law and regs.

These assholes got to go, mate. They just got to go.

Watch, before Monday the state will appeal to a higher court and get an injunction again.
 
More on this. By the by, almost all of these articles state that you are currently allowed to vape MJ. But this falls well short of the complete truth. You can vape MJ, as long as it comes sealed in a ceramic pod that can only be used with a $700 proprietary Volcano knock-off bag vape and who the fuck knows what's in the pods. Not full nug, I'll bet.

Come on, Morgan....keep spanking these a-holes.



Judge says Florida can't ban smokeable medical marijuana, gives Monday deadline for new rules


When 72 percent of Florida voters chose to legalize medical marijuana via a 2016 ballot initiative, most of them expected to be able to legally light up bongs, bowls, and blunts stuffed with newly-legal cannabis. Because nothing is ever easy in Florida, that wasn't the case: The Florida legislature outlawed smoking medical pot and instead only legalized eating edibles, vaporizing pot, or ingesting cannabis oil.

So Orlando medical-marijuana advocate and wealthy lawyer John Morgan sued the state, and last month, a Tallahassee judge ruled that the smoking ban was unconstitutional. Because Gov. Rick Scott is a petty tyrant, his administration appealed the ruling, therefore preventing the new rule from going into effect.

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Scott has received thousands of dollars in campaign funding from pharmaceutical companies, including a combined $33,000 from drug giants Pfizer, Novartis, and Teva Pharmaceuticals during his last re-election bid in 2014. The pharmaceutical industry is steadfastly aligned against medical-marijuana legalization. Critics say that's due to the fact that doctors in medical-marijuana states prescribe fewer prescription pills, including painkillers and anxiety meds, and often prescribe marijuana instead. (For what it's worth, many medical-marijuana growers in Florida are also well-connected politically.)

Morgan initially sued last July. Plaintiffs Diana Dodson, who lives with HIV, and Cathy Jordan, who lives with ALS, both said they grew pot and then smoked it in violation of the state law. Judge Gievers ruled today that the legal stay was needlessly harming the two women.

"First, they cannot legally access the treatment recommended for them,'' Gievers wrote. "Second, they face potential criminal prosecution for possession and use of the medicinal substance."
 
People are celebrating and I keep telling them to chill. The state could screw it up again, and even if they don’t, it could take months before we can buy flower. They won’t listen, though, smh.
 
View attachment 3637
I despise Lord Voldemort!
Yep, they just won't give up and let their employers....the electorate...do what they clearly chose to do under a complete, direct, democratic vote.

Kick the fascists out of office down there.
 


MedMen inks $53 million acquisition of Florida cannabis cultivator, dispensary sites


MedMen Enterprises Inc., the country's leading cultivator, producer and retailer of state-sanctioned cannabis, announced yesterday that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire dispensary and cultivation assets from Florida based Treadwell Simpson Partnership and affiliates.

As part of the transaction, MedMen will acquire Treadwell Nursery's cultivation facility situated on 5 acres in Eustis, Florida and the right to open 25 medical marijuana dispensaries in the State of Florida.

"For nearly a decade we have been positioning ourselves to capitalize on enormous market opportunities like this," said MedMen Co-founder and CEO Adam Bierman. "This acquisition is right in line with our strategy of establishing a presence early on in high potential markets with limited licenses and large populations. Florida is the third most populous state in the country with a medical marijuana market estimated to reach $1 billion in annual sales by 2020. MedMen has built the best-in-class brand, and we continue to invest in premium assets that solidify our dominant position in the most important cannabis markets in the world."

MedMen employs more than 800 people and currently operates 18 licensed cannabis facilities in cultivation, manufacturing and retail in California, Nevada and New York. The addition of Florida expands the Company's reach to yet another key market in the fastest growing industry in the country.

As consideration for the acquisition, the Company will pay US$53 million, subject to a working capital adjustment, half of which will be satisfied in cash and the other half of which will be satisfied by way of issuance of common units of MM Enterprises USA, LLC (the "LLC"), a subsidiary of the Company (the "Redeemable Units"), which by their terms are redeemable for Class B Subordinate Voting Shares of the Company (the "Subordinate Voting Shares"). In respect of the cash consideration, the LLC will pay Treadwell Nursery US$6,625,000 on the closing date and on each of the dates that are three (3), six (6) and nine (9) months after the closing date. In respect of the Redeemable Units, the number of units will be based on the lesser of the closing trading price of the Subordinate Voting Shares on the Canadian Securities Exchange as of June 4, 2018 or the two-week weighted average daily closing price prior to the closing of the transaction.

The transaction is expected to close within 90 days and is subject to customary closing conditions, including receipt of state regulatory approvals. If certain regulatory approvals are not obtained, the Company and Treadwell Nursery will have the right to terminate the Agreement.
 
Well, there is a simple solution to this problem....don't vote for her, yeah? Other Dem's in the primary do indeed support full rec legalization, so the hell with Graham.

Florida governor candidate Gwen Graham is taking a cautious approach to cannabis reform
Posted By Xander Peters on Wed, Jun 6, 2018 at 2:24 PM

  • Photo via Gwen Graham/Facebook
You know the story of the tortoise and the hare: In theory, slow and steady wins the race.

On the issue of legalizing marijuana use in Florida, former congresswoman Gwen Graham is the tortoise, and the other candidates in the Democratic gubernatorial primary – former Miami Beach mayor Philip Levine, Winter Park businessman Chris King and Tallahassee mayor Andrew Gillum – are the hares. That is, for the sake of this story.

(Palm Beach billionaire Jeff Greene joined the Democratic race earlier this week, but has yet to voice his stance on marijuana reform.)

While Graham has so far endorsed decriminalizing cannabis for personal use and fully implementing the state's medical cannabis program, she hasn’t indicated support for recreational legalization. It’s an issue that separates Graham from the Democratic pack – aside from the fact that she’s the only woman, the rest of the candidates have articulated their enthusiasm for legalizing the herb. (Though Levine only recently steered toward that course after Orlando attorney and marijuana advocate John Morgan berated him in a press conference last week.)


But Graham says she has her reasons. In an interview on Tuesday, Orlando Weekly brought up the sticky topic – which is sure to be a key issue on the campaign trail leading up to the Aug. 28 primaries, and which has become a litmus test of sorts for progressive candidates in the Sunshine State and across the country leading up to the 2018 midterms.

“For me, I believe you accomplish change by incrementally approaching it and having a plan for how do you get there,” Graham says.

“The state of Florida has not fully implemented medical marijuana,” she continues. “I mean we need to get that fully implemented, and hav[e] people across the state of Florida having the opportunity to take advantage of medical marijuana.”

What’s she's tiptoeing around discussing is the decriminalization of cannabis for personal use, and implementation of medical cannabis is a brick in the road on the path to eventual full legalization, though Graham never goes so far as to say those exact words.

“We’ve seen challenges in other states that have legalized marijuana through referendum, and maybe that’s the path that Florida will go,” Graham says. “But for me, as someone that recognizes when you talk about getting something done, you actually want to have a path to do it – I think the path on this issue is to get medical marijuana fully implemented and start working towards broadening the decriminalization of marijuana and moving towards a discussion of legalization where the people of Florida are comfortable with that.”

She adds: “I don’t want to see anybody in prison for marijuana possession.”

But will it make a difference among progressive voters? That remains to be seen.

It's worth mentioning, however, that Graham currently has a "B" grade as a candidate from the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws – which is kind of like the opposite of a high National Rifle Association rating, unburdened with the violent dog whistles of gun lobbyist and former NRA president Marion Hammer.

It’s also worth mentioning that the medical cannabis amendment was approved by an overwhelming 71 percent of Florida voters in 2016. But even so, Gov. Rick Scott and his administration, as well as many of the rest of the GOP's elected officials in Florida, have managed to keep their foot on the bureaucratic brake when it comes to implementing the program.

The country’s perception of marijuana use as both a type of medication and as a run-of-the-mill everyday sort of thing is steadily evolving. According to a poll released earlier this week by Gallup, 65 percent of Americans now find it “morally acceptable” to smoke pot, as compared to the 31 percent who disagree with it on a moral level.

So will the slow and steady approach win this race – or will it be a sticking-point issue that leads to Graham's campaign eventually going up in smoke?

Just like the fable of the tortoise and the hare, it’s a race that's hard to call from this far out.
 

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