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Law Maryland MMJ

Current state of final licenses issued. Note the dearth of dispensaries....I expect many dispensaries licenses to be issued at the next MMCC mtg in Nov.


Licensed Growers
  • Curio Cultivation LLC (Baltimore County)
    License No.: G-17-00004
    5 W. W. Aylesbury Road
    Lutherville, MD 20193
  • ForwardGro LLC (Anne Arundel County)
    License No.: G00001
    5000 Sands Road
    Lothian MD 20711
  • Freestate Wellness (Howard County)
    License No.: G-17-00006
    7221 Montevideo Road
    Jessup, MD 20794
  • Green Leaf Medical LLC (Frederick County)
    License No.: G-17-00008
    6797 Bowman’s Crossing
    Frederick, MD 21703
  • Grow West MD LLC (Garrett County)
    License No.: G-17-00009
    111563 National Pike
    Grantsville, MD 21750
  • Harvest of Maryland (Washington County)
    License No.: G-17-0003
    35 South Street
    Hancock, MD 21750
  • HMS Health LLC (Frederick County)
    License No.: G-17-00012
    4106 Harvard Place, Unit B2
    Frederick, MD 21703
  • Holistic Industries INC (Prince George’s County)
    License No.: G-17-00005
    9220 Alaking Court
    Capital Heights, MD 20743
  • Kind Therapeutics USA LLC (Washington County)
    License No.: G-17-00013
    504 E. First Street
    Hagerstown, MD 21740
  • Maryland Compassionate Care and Wellness (dba as Grass Roots) (Carroll County)
    License No.: G-17-00002
    5300 Taneytown Pike
    Taneytown, MD 21787
  • Shore Natural Rx LLC (Worcester County)
    License No.: G-17-00011
    11903 Peerless Road
    Bishopville, MD 21813
  • SunMed Growers LLC (Cecil County)
    License No.: G-17-00010
    127 Worsell Manor Road
    Warwick, MD 21912
  • Temescal Wellness (Baltimore City)
    License No.: G-17-00007
    2200 Girard Avenue
    Baltimore, MD 21211


Licensed Processors

  • AFS Maryland LLC (Worcester County)
    License No.: P-17-00010
    310 E. Market Street
    Snow Hill, MD 21863
  • Blair Wellness Center (Worcester County)
    License No.: P-17-00001
    12010 Industrial Park Road, Unit 6
    Bishopville, MD 21813
  • Chesapeake Alternatives LLC (Queen Anne’s County)
    License No.: P-17-00005
    152 Comet Drive
    Centerville, MD 21617
  • Curio Wellness LLC (Baltimore County)
    License No.: P-17-00003
    5 W. Aylesbury Road
    Lutherville, MD 20193
  • Holistic Industries, INC (Prince George’s County)
    License No.: P-17-00002
    9220 Akaking Court
    Capital Heights, MD 20743
  • Kind Therapeutics USA LLC (Washington County)
    License No.: P-17-00007
    504 E. First Street
    Hancock, MD 21750
  • Maryland Compassionate Care and Wellness
    (dba as Grass Roots) (Carroll County)
    License No.: P-17-00004
    5300 Taneytown Pike
    Taneytown, MD 21787
  • Pharmaculture Corporation (Allegany County)
    License No.: P-17-00008
    11201 PPG Road
    Cumberland, MD 21501
  • Pro-Green Medical LLC (Frederick County)
    License No.: P-17-0000657
    11 Industry Lane
    Frederick, MD 21703
  • Rosebud Organics LLC (Montgomery County)
    License No.: P-17-00009
    9404 Fox Hollow Drive
    Potomac, MD 20854

Licensed Dispensaries

  • Cannabus LLC dba Potomac Holistics (Montgomery County)
    License No.: D-17-00003
    1408 Physicians Lane, Suite 211
    Rockville, MD 20850
  • K & R Holdings INC dba Kannavis (Frederick County)
    License No.: D-17-00002
    3362 Urbana Pike
    Ijamesville, MD 21754
  • Wellness Institute of Maryland (Frederick County)
    License No.: D-17-00001
    4606 Wedgewood Boulevard
    Frederick, MD 21703
 
Here is what this article ISN'T saying.....of 102 prelim dispansary licenses, after a year, the State of Maryland has only issued 4....that's FOUR EACH....final dispesary licenses. And at that, two of them are in Fredrick, one in far west Allegany County, and one in Rockville/Gaithersberg area. FOUR out of ONE HUNDRED AND TWO!!

I have attended the last four meetings of the MMCC and its been a grave disappointment. There are currently 13 cultivators with final licenses and plants it the ground. There are 10 processors (concentrates, topicals, tinctures, etc). But four fucking dispensaries for the entire state at the moment a YEAR after prelim licenses were granted.

So, what's the hold up....who the fuck knows cause the MMCC ain't say shit. Look, these are store fronts and do not have the financial or human resources of a multi-million dollar grow facility. They have paid fees to the state as well has invested money in facilities acquisition, audited financials, background checks, security systems, etc, etc, etc. Money is out, but no money is yet coming in so I have to absolutely believe that over the past year, these dispensary operators have been HIGHLY motivated to complete and submit their compliance pre-requisites. If you listen to the assholes running this program for the state, all delays and resulting schedule are fully in the hands of the commercial operators. BULLSHIT.

So, these dispensaries have compliance pre-reqs needed to be submitted prior to granting a final license. Is the state asking me to believe that only four out of a 102 have been able to complete these pre-reqs? This begs a number of questions:

1. Are significant numbers of compliance submissions being rejected for being inadequate or flawed?
2. If so, is it any single or small group of compliance requiremenst that the bulk of the dispensary industry is having problems with and are therefore overly strict or too difficult for a small operator to meet?
3. If so, should the state not review these specific compliance requirements and identify ways to change them and help industry get set up while still protecting Maryland and its residents?
4. If its not rejections or delays in submittals, is the bottle neck with the state's review of compliance submissions. E.G. do they have enough facility inspectors or is this a bottle neck. Do they have enough accounting reviewers for audited financial statements or is this the bottleneck. Are background checks run by the state backed up and deliquent?
5. If none of the above, what is the bottle necks because any program manager worth a tinker's damn KNOWS where the hold up in their processes are and should be addressing them and as a government program should be transparent to the electorate on what they are and plans to resolve them.

I fucking HATE government. They are, IME, ALWAYS secretive, incompetent, inefficient, slow and seemingly under no pressure to change.

Waht we are going to see, if nothing changes in the next month or so, is growers with product (and hence LOTS of $$ invested) and nobody to sell it to. I believe we will be seeing the shit hit the fan as these larger players begin to complain.


Baltimore Preps for First Batch of Dispensaries

In North Baltimore’s bustling Hampden neighborhood, a medical marijuana dispensary dubbed Chesapeake Integrated Health Institute is setting up shop inside a former cabinet hardware store. A mile east, in Wyman Park, another dispensary, Medical Products and Services, is repurposing a former art and gem gallery.


Baltimore will see 11 dispensaries spread across its six districts. But so far, only three have made their locations public.
Both shops sit on parallel thoroughfares in areas zoned for commercial and residential use. But while their surroundings are similar, the dispensaries have drawn divergent responses from neighbors.

In Wyman Park, residents lined up by the dozens at community meetings over the summer to air security and crime concerns around the latter dispensary, co-owned by Alan Staple. “Medical cannabis is a new industry in Maryland,” Staple wrote in an email. “So naturally people have many questions.”

In Hampden, the response was comparatively calm. Merchants and community members met with Leah Heise, co-owner of Chesapeake Integrated Health Institute, to talk through concerns in person.

While the two shops are “both essentially in Hampden,” Heise told Leafly, “[Staple’s] dispensary crosses over two different community associations, Wyman Park and Hampden.”

She added, “Wyman Park has been a little bit more upset about the fact that a dispensary is coming into their neighborhood.”


RELATED STORY
What’s Behind All the Delays in Newly Legal States?

More than four years have passed since Maryland legalized medical cannabis. After numerous delays, the state is preparing to finally begin serving patients through 102 planned dispensaries. Each of Maryland’s 47 legislative districts can have two—more if a permitted grower is also licensed to dispense product.

The city of Baltimore will see 11 dispensaries spread across its six districts, the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission announced last spring. But so far, only three of those have made their locations public. Unlike in Michigan and other states, where operators must nail down locations and local government approvals before receiving a license, applicants for Maryland’s medical marijuana licenses weren’t required to site their stores first.

“Because Maryland didn’t make you choose a location, you didn’t have to approach whatever the community association was until the time you had actually identified a property,” Heise explained.

Residents of Wyman Park were thus surprised to learn a dispensary was on its way. Most other neighborhoods are probably still unaware, as only operators in Hampden, Wyman Park, and South Baltimore’s Federal Hill neighborhood have announced they’re moving in.


RELATED STORY
Data Dive: Breaking Down Maryland’s Medical Cannabis Industry By Race & Gender

The city’s new zoning law, Transform Baltimore, handles dispensaries the same way it does retail pharmacies such as Rite-Aid and Walgreens, letting them operate in mixed commercial-residential areas. Zoning administrator Geoffrey Veale called it a “common sense approach” at a July meeting organized by the Wyman Park Neighborhood Association.

The characterization raised some eyebrows, especially among those who felt cannabis businesses should be held to a different standard.

“They left it as a retail goods establishment,” said Jack Boyson, the neighborhood association’s president. “The question is, where do we fit in? I think people are concerned about why are we having this in our backyard without any consultation.”


Baltimore’s Hampden district (peeterv/iStock)
Crime was an especially hot topic at the meetings. Gene Meyer, a resident who lives 120 feet from Medical Products and Services’ future site, pointed to a UCLA study that suggested a link between increased crime and dispensaries’ proximity to highway off-ramps.

(The research is far from conclusive. The same study concluded that density of dispensaries “was not associated with violent or property crime rates,” and a separate study by USC and UC-Irvine researchers has shown that neighborhood crime actually increased after the closure of dispensaries.)

https://www.leafly.com/news/politics/study-finds-closing-mmj-dispensaries-increases-crime
While some neighbors said they’d prefer a dispensary nearby to, say, a bar or music venue, others remain wary. People unfamiliar with how the businesses operate suggested the smell of pungent product would stink up the surrounding area, or that patients would consume in the parking lot outside.

“There was an array of emotion versus reason,” said Michal Makarovich, a local merchant and the vice president of the Wyman Park Neighborhood Association. “I think people, they know this is coming through. They’re OK with it, but they don’t want it in their backyard.”

The association pressed the Baltimore City Council to hold a public hearing on the issue in August. After hearing complaints, city officials said they’d consider an option to modify the zoning law by including a special application process for dispensaries and growers, a policy implemented in nearby Baltimore County.

https://www.leafly.com/news/politics/where-can-i-smoke-legally-in-a-legal-state
But in October, Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke said she and her colleagues determined that the plan ultimately wouldn’t work. The city’s zoning board had already approved the locations of Medical Products and Services and Chesapeake Integrated Health Institute.

“It’s incumbent upon each of the awardees to reach out and form partnerships and be a real part of helping the community.”
Darrell Carrington, Greenwill Consulting Group
“Even if we do change the law to require conditional use status—for example, before the zoning board or the City Council—we can’t do it retroactively,” said Clarke, whose district is home to both dispensaries.

An alternative solution has since emerged: memorandums of understanding between neighbors and dispensary operators. One is currently being finalized between Medical Products and Services and two neighborhood associations to address security, lighting, packaging of products, and even employee training, Makarovich said.

Heise said her shop’s MOU in Hampden will likely be similar, if they enter into one. Usually those issues are addressed early on in a dispensary operator’s business plan anyway, she said.

“Some of those concerns were based on the fact that [residents] don’t understand that the law prohibits people from consuming on-site,” Heise explained. “We’re no different than a pharmacy. It’s just getting the education out there and dispelling the belief that this is going to be akin to some type of opium den.”

https://www.leafly.com/news/politics/cannabis-regulation-in-the-wild-west-the-san-jose-takeaway
Darrell Carrington, a lobbyist who works with Maryland’s Greenwill Consulting Group, said MOUs with community groups allow dispensaries to forge bonds with locals, such as through financial agreements with nonprofits.

“I think it’s incumbent upon each of the awardees to reach out and form partnerships and be a real part of helping the community move forward with economic development,” he said.

While Baltimore’s zoning rules for dispensaries may have spurred tensions, other cities have faced more significant zoning troubles. Detroit lawmakers made the process so restrictive that it appears nearly impossible to find a permitted location for a dispensary. In Seattle, “Little Amsterdams” – highly concentrated areas of dispensaries – sprouted up due to buffer zones for sensitive places like child-care centers and public parks. (Seattle lawmakers enacted a fix in early 2016, reducing the buffer zones while also setting a required minimum distance between dispensaries.)

https://www.leafly.com/news/politics/pueblo-scholarships-thanks-cannabis-taxes
In California, meanwhile, state regulators are requiring “local approval” in order to issue a cannabis business license— in part to encourage dispensaries to come to the table with neighborhood representatives.

While Clarke has admitted Baltimore’s lack of dispensary zoning rules was actually an oversight by the council, Carrington says the retail pharmacy designation for the businesses was actually “very forward-thinking.”

“Any place that you’ll would have a Walgreens or a CVS, you should be able to locate a medical cannabis dispensary as well,” he said.

As an owner, Heise said she would have appreciated the additional guidance of a more specific zoning law. Then again, she said, finding an appropriate location “is probably the number one most difficult task a dispensary owner faces,” particularly for those who rent their space. (Heise said she arranged to lease her location on Falls Road from a cannabis-friendly landlord. Her dispensary will be up and running in the “first quarter of 2018,” she wrote in an email. )


Makarovich, of the Wyman Park Neighborhood Association, encouraged communities with similar concerns to follow Hampden’s and Wyman Park’s lead. Set up in-person meetings, he said, and try to set terms with dispensary operators early on.

“There’s the zoning for it; there’s the law for it, from the city, from the state. It’s going to happen,” he said. “You can keep fighting and fighting, and getting on each other’s wrong sides, or you can try to work out the best deal you can have.”
 
of 102 prelim dispansary licenses, after a year, the State of Maryland has only issued 4....that's FOUR EACH....final dispesary licenses
With what is happening here in Michigan come Dec. 15th (the closing of the dispensaries) I fear we are going to see a whole lot of the same. Nothing has been said on how long each application will take to process. Or when we can rely on the dispensaries reopening. Or if. It's not a good scenario.
 

Maryland cannabis businesses cleared of conflict of interest, approved for launch



Medical marijuana regulators in Maryland have approved licenses for two cannabis businesses that were under investigation for potential conflicts of interest, after concluding that no evidence had been uncovered that should preclude the businesses from launching.

The Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission Monday approved growing and processing licenses for Doctor’s Orders, which plans to operate in Dorchester County, Maryland, and a processor license for Baltimore’s Temescal Wellness.

It also issued dispensary licenses to Allegany Medical Marijuana, Southern Maryland Relief in St. Mary’s County, and Peninsula Alternative Health in Wicomico County, bringing the total number of storefronts approved to sell medical marijuana to six.

“The Commission takes its role concerning the integrity of the medical cannabis program and a fair application process very seriously,” commission executive director Patrick Jameson said in an email, “and will continue to closely monitor any and all situations of non compliance to ensure the public trust.”

Related stories
In early August, commissioners asked businesses that had been awarded preliminary licenses whether they had personal or business ties to the independent experts who graded their applications.

That inquiry followed a Washington Post report that revealed close relationships between some reviewers and some companies that won preliminary licenses. The Post reported that a person listed as general manager of Temescal Wellness’ planned processing facility is married to a woman who had been hired to review applications. Both the reviewer and her spouse said they were unaware of each other’s affiliations.

Concerns regarding Doctor’s Orders centered on the role played by Maryland state Del. Dan Morhaim, who was formally reprimanded by the legislature this year for using his position as a lawmaker to influence marijuana regulation without fully disclosing that he was a paid consultant for Doctor’s Orders.

The legislature’s investigation found no evidence that Morhaim violated disclosure laws or used his public office for financial benefit. But it did conclude that the lawmaker had helped push policies that could have benefited Doctor’s Orders while he had an open line to regulators.

Industry officials say they expect medical marijuana to be available for purchase in Maryland by January, 2018.
 
Medical marijuana dispensaries need to form bond with skeptical local communities like Pikesville

Coming to our slice of Baltimore County in the very near future: a medical cannabis (marijuana) dispensary.

It’s been more than four years since the Maryland General Assembly passed a bill legalizing the sale of products for medical purposes made from cannabis. It is a proven pain-relief medication for individuals with extreme discomfort who have exhausted traditional opiate remedies and remain in excruciating discomfort.

Yet a badly messed-up rollout by a state licensing commission has delayed Maryland’s efforts to get this pain-relief alternative to patients with cancer and other severe, excruciating illnesses.

Only six dispensaries have been approved so far for the entire state out of 102 planned outlets. Disputes with communities are bogging down the process further.

In Pikesville, residents protested last month to the Baltimore County Board of Appeals about a dispensary seeking to set up shop in an empty shopping strip at Naylors Lane and Reisterstown Road.

People living in the nearby Pomona community are on edge.

They fear a cannabis dispensary will attract unsavory sorts who will loiter, create traffic problems and commit crimes.

Yet there’s little evidence to back up these fears.

Contrary to public perception, cannabis dispensaries are more akin to pharmacies than opium dens.

A county administrative law judge examined the neighbors’ complaints and found the dispensary, to be run by Temescal Wellness, would not harm the Pikesville community.

But even if the appeals board rejects Temescal’s zoning request, all it would mean is a different location for the dispensary in the Pikesville-Owings Mills-Reisterstown area.

So far, 29 states and the District of Columbia have legalized medicinal cannabis. Five more states are voting on legalization a year from now. It is a $6.7 billion legal industry in North America that is expected to grow by 200 percent over the next three years.

Similar “not-in-my-neighborhood” disputes in northwest Baltimore County have flared in the past over methadone clinics and halfway houses. Sometimes zoning controversies involved relocation of mega-churches or vast expansions of existing houses of worship.

In an earlier dispute a decade ago involving a methadone clinic in Pikesville, a community leader conceded, “I know they have to be somewhere. But it was not something I wanted on the borders of my neighborhood.”

The clinic faced a lengthy legal battle and eventually decided to close its Slade Avenue location and moved instead to Woodlawn.

Counties can set reasonable zoning restrictions on these types of enterprises, but they cannot outlaw them entirely.

Steve Schuh, the Anne Arundel County executive, tried to ban marijuana-growing facilities and dispensaries in his county but that was ruled illegal.

Shortly afterward, an Anne Arundel administrative hearing officer approved a dispensary on West Street in Annapolis, noting, “This is not pot; it is a medical product that has been stigmatized because it is made from a plant that people in the 20th and 21st centuries decided is dangerous.”

In Baltimore City, a cannabis dispensary facing community opposition in Wyman Park agreed to a written memorandum of understanding in which it pledged to add security, lighting, employee training and packaging of the cannabis products.

Forming an amicable bond with surrounding businesses and residential groups seems the best way to avoid a prolonged and divisive struggle that does no one any good.

The actual sale of medical cannabis isn’t likely to happen until after the start of the new year in January.

Even then, ongoing legal battles and zoning protests could further prevent seriously ill patients from gaining relief from these cannabis products in Maryland.
 
There is a back story here, but we aren't getting it. As far as "legal sales to soon begin"....they have been saying that for two years now.

Maryland’s top medical marijuana regulator resigns, with legal sales soon to begin

By Fenit Nirappil November 9 at 5:17 PM
Maryland has lost its second top medical marijuana regulator in two years — just weeks before legal sales are expected to commence.

Patrick Jameson, executive director of the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission, has resigned, a spokesman for Gov. Larry Hogan (R) said. Jameson said it was time to pursue other interests. His last day is Nov. 30.

Jameson, a former state trooper, oversaw the agency as it awarded licenses to medical marijuana growers, processors and dispensaries.

“It has been an honor to help sick people and launch a new lucrative industry in Maryland,” he said in a statement.

Maryland legalized marijuana for medical use in 2013, but the program’s rollout has been beset by delays and controversies. Companies began growing the drug over the summer, and products are expected to be available for purchase early next year.
 
I have a couple of thoughts about this (oh, what a surprise! LOL).

1. "“I think we could see product in November" I'll kiss her ass if we have product for sale in Nov....and its now Nov 12th. Every time they projected an opening date, they were wrong. I'll believe it when I see it.

2. Diversity is not the issue. The issue is politically and financially hooked up black citizens of Maryland didn't get what they think should be their piece of the pie. The Maryland Legislative Black Caucus is not interested in fighting for licenses for any other minority other than black people. This is not about diversity, this is not about eliminating past racial discrimination (in an industry that never existed before). No, this is solely about pork barrel politics and who gets which piece of the pie.

Personally, I don't give a flying fuck what they need to do to buy Glenn and the LBC's votes.....don't care. Just get the fucking industry open for business after FIVE LONG, ERROR FILLED, YEARS.


Maryland May See Medical Cannabis This Month, but Diversity Issues Loom Large

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — After a four-year wait to provide medical cannabis to patients, the drug could be available to Marylanders as early as this month, according to industry stakeholders.


“I think we could see product in November, with increase in December and a steady flow from all operators in the new year,” said Wendy Bronfein, the marketing director for Curio Wellness, a company in Lutherville, Maryland, awarded two licenses to cultivate and process medical marijuana.

However, racial diversity in the state’s medical marijuana industry is wanting, and some lawmakers said they are planning to introduce a bill early next session to grant licenses to African-American business owners.

A disparity study ordered by Republican Gov. Larry Hogan in April and due in December focuses on whether minorities who sought a license in the cannabis industry were at a disadvantage.

The study was prompted after the Maryland Legislative Black Caucus raised concerns about the lack of African-American involvement in the industry.

Of the 321 business owners granted preliminary licenses to grow, distribute or process the drug, 208 were white men or women and the remaining 113 identified as a member of a minority group or as multiracial. Of these, 55 — about 17 percent — were black men and women, according to the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission.


RELATED STORY
Data Dive: Breaking Down Maryland’s Medical Cannabis Industry By Race & Gender

“It’s shameful in a state like Maryland where we have one-third of the population of the state, one-third is African American,” said Delegate Cheryl Glenn, D-Baltimore, chairwoman of the Legislative Black Caucus.

“These licenses will go to, in large part, African Americans.”
Del. Cheryl Glenn

As the General Assembly’s January session approaches, members of the Black Caucus told the University of Maryland’s Capital News Service they have begun drafting a bill that would award 10 new licenses for growers and processors specifically targeted at African-Americans interested in the industry.

They will move forward with their legislation regardless of the outcome of a Hogan’s disparity study, Glenn said.

“I will bank on it that we’ll come away from the table with five new licenses for growers and five new licenses for processors that will be awarded based on the results of the disparity study. What does that mean? That means these licenses will go to, in large part, African Americans,” said Glenn.

A weighted scoring system will give businesses an advantage of being awarded a particular license if they have a certain percentage of African-American ownership, Glenn said.

A “compassionate use fund” will be part of the legislation in order to make medical marijuana affordable for patients in Maryland. The fund will be financed based on the fees that licensees in the industry must pay, Glenn said.

https://www.leafly.com/news/food-travel-sex/beautiful-marijuana-dispensary-designs-and-layouts
“Marijuana is still an illegal drug, according to the federal government. Your insurance will not pay for marijuana even though it is medical marijuana. So what does that mean? That means it becomes a rich man’s struggle. We’re not gonna have that,” said Glenn, whose mother died of cancer and is the commission’s namesake.

Marylanders who are insured through the state’s Medicare and Medicaid programs will not be covered for medical cannabis, said Brittany Fowler, spokeswoman for the Maryland health department.

The legislation has been numbered Senate Bill 1 and House Bill 2, and should gain initial approval as an emergency bill during a joint hearing by the House and the Senate during the first weeks of the session — which is scheduled to start Jan. 10 — Glenn said.

Members of the Legislative Black Caucus said they intend to use the upcoming election as leverage for the bill.

“Next year is election year, so timing is everything. I am very, very sure that this is going to be taken care of,” Glenn said.

Cannabis companies have said that the drug is likely to be available to patients this month.

ForwardGro Inc., the first licensed medical marijuana grower, successfully passed the state’s cannabis assessment this year, said Darrell Carrington, the medical cannabis director of Greenwill Consulting Group LLC.

Patients will be able to get cannabis in a variety of forms such as lotion, pills and transdermal patches, said Michael Klein, the chief operating officer of Wellness Solutions in Frederick, Maryland.

Maryland is considered to have one of the slowest medical cannabis rollouts in the nation.
The industry has been projected to open toward the end of the year, according to Brian Lopez, the chairman of the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission.

“The industry is starting to move forward,” Lopez said late last month. “We hope we are going to have another 20 to 30 dispensaries by the end of the year and at that point we will have an industry that is starting to receive product consistently around the state. But with that we are going to also, I’m sure, see some growing pains.”

Maryland still faces a wide range of challenges as the industry starts up. The commission has not decided how to regulate how dispensaries will serve out-of-state patients, deal with the green waste from the cannabis, or address fraudulent activity within the industry, said Lopez.

“I’m sure we are going to hit road blocks, but we plan to work through them in a very consistent manner and with diligence,” Lopez said.

Maryland is considered to have one of the slowest medical cannabis rollouts in the nation, hampered by several delays that arose during the four-year process since it was legalized.


RELATED STORY
What’s Behind All the Delays in Newly Legal States?

Stakeholders in the industry have pointed to the lack of funding of the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission in its beginning stages, and to lawsuits filed against the commission, as major stumbling blocks.

In 2016, GTI — Green Thumb Industries — a Bethesda, Maryland-based company that was originally awarded pre-approved licenses as a grower, filed a lawsuit against the commission for retracting its licenses in order to create geographical diversity.

The commission, which as of mid-2017 had 10 new members, made the decision to retract the license from GTI after the Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh stated in 2016 that the commission must ensure geographical diversity when choosing applicants.

GTI attempted to work with the Black Caucus to reverse the decision during the 2017 General Assembly session through legislation, which would have awarded them a license, said Delegate Pamela Queen D-Montgomery, financial secretary for the Black Caucus.

The legislation failed in the last 90 minutes of the session and there were no additional medical marijuana growing licenses given to any companies owned by minorities, Queen said.

The Legislative Black Caucus earlier this year asked Senate President Thomas V. “Mike” Miller Jr., D-Prince George’s, Charles and Calvert, and Speaker of the House Michael Busch, D-Anne Arundel, to reconvene the General Assembly to Annapolis for a one-day session to pass a law expanding the medical marijuana industry. However, the request was denied.


RELATED STORY
Judge Says Maryland Marijuana Lawsuit Can Go to Trial

In another lawsuit against the commission, filed in October 2016 by Alternative Medicine Maryland, a predominantly African-American owned business, Judge Barry Williams ruled in May that if he finds that the commission unlawfully disregarded racial diversity during the application process for licenses he reserves the right to revoke the licenses of those who were pre-approved.

This could ultimately shut down the industry, according to John Pica, a lobbyist and attorney representing Alternative Medicine Maryland.

Frosh also had said it would be unlawful to seek racial diversity in the application process without there being a history of racial disparities in the nascent cannabis industry.

“While it is still too soon to say for certain when we can expect a final analysis, we are encouraged and grateful to collaborate with these offices as we pursue this important work,” said Medical Cannabis Commission Executive Director Patrick Jameson, who announced his resignation from the commission on Thursday.

Queen said she thinks that a major issue that negatively affected the industry was the poor funding the commission initially received from the state.

When the panel was created as the Natalie M. LaPrade Medical Marijuana Commission in 2013, its purpose was to oversee academic medical intuitions in distributing medical marijuana. However, the institutions were unwilling to distribute the drug because it is illegal under federal law.

In 2015, when the commission was recreated as the Natalie M. LaPrade Medical Cannabis Commission, they were given a greater responsibility to evaluate and certify businesses to grow, process and distribute the drug.

The commission received $140,795 in fiscal year 2015 and $2,540,331 in fiscal year 2017. The increase of funding over time was used to hire more employees, contractual labor, office spaces that can support the growing staff, travel expenses and to pay Towson University for scoring license applications for the industry, according to Maryland Department of Budget and Management.
 
From the above article:

"A weighted scoring system will give businesses an advantage of being awarded a particular license if they have a certain percentage of African-American ownership, Glenn said."

So, how is this not a straight up and down racist set-aside? Hmmm? Substitute any number of words in there for 'african-americans'.....and this statement becomes outrageous.

Sigh
 
Last edited:
From the above article:

"A weighted scoring system will give businesses an advantage of being awarded a particular license if they have a certain percentage of African-American ownership, Glenn said."

So, how is this not a straight up and down racist set-aside? Hmmm? Substitute any number of words in there for 'african-americans'.....and this statement becomes outrageous.

Sigh
Second verse...

All Along the Watchtower
LYRICS

There must be some kind of way outta here
Said the joker to the thief
There's too much confusion
I can't get no relief

Business men, they drink my wine
Plowman dig my earth
None were level on the mind
Nobody up at his word
Hey, hey

No reason to get excited
The thief he kindly spoke
There are many here among us
Who feel that life is but a joke
But, uh, but you and I, we've been through that
And this is not our fate
So let us stop talkin' falsely now
The hour's getting late, hey

All along the watchtower
Princes kept the view
While all the women came and went
Barefoot servants, too
Outside in the cold distance
A wildcat did growl
Two riders were approaching
And the wind began to howl...


Peace everyone!
 
So, here is a bit of a back story....the dispensary involved, Wellness in Fredrick predicated their license application on being a 'real' medical organization to the point that you have to have an interview with their pharmacist before they will let you become a customer (she was very nice, I knew twice as much about the subject as she did).

I have no bloody idea what research they are doing on carts....and really think this is just window dressing for their license.

Maryland companies studying effectiveness of vaping for medical marijuana patients


By Brian Witte, The Associated Press

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — With Maryland set to make medical marijuana available within weeks, two companies have formed a partnership to study how well vapor-inhalation devices work for patients.

Curio Wellness, of Lutherville, and Wellness Institute of Maryland, of Frederick, will conduct a research-and-development study of cannabis oil-filled vapor inhalation devices, the state health department announced Friday. The devices, also known as vape pens, can be used to vaporize marijuana, or heat it without burning it.

The number of medical marijuana products are expected to be low at first, the health department said, compared to inventories of products in other states that allow it. It could take licensed growers and dispensaries several months to reach full inventory, after becoming operational.

“It’s also worth noting that, for this study, only the Wellness Institute of Maryland dispensary will be providing products to patients who were pre-selected by the companies,” said Brian Lopez, chairman of Maryland’s medical marijuana commission. “But all licensed and operational dispensaries are expected to have products available by early December.”

So far, 14 marijuana growers and 12 processors have been licensed in Maryland. Six dispensaries also have been licensed.

Medical marijuana will be available in the state for any condition that is severe in which other medical treatments have been ineffective, and if the symptoms “reasonably can be expected to be relieved” by marijuana. Patients with a chronic or debilitating medical condition that causes severe appetite loss, severe or chronic pain, severe nausea, seizures or severe muscle spasms also can have access, as well as people with glaucoma or post-traumatic stress disorder.

More on vaping
Maryland will allow not only physicians but nurse practitioners, dentists, podiatrists and nurse midwives to certify patients as eligible to receive marijuana.

Maryland’s medical marijuana program has been delayed by setbacks. The state first approved it in 2013, but the effort stalled because it required academic medical centers to run the programs, and none stepped forward. The law was changed in 2014 to allow doctors certified by a state commission to recommend marijuana for patients with debilitating, chronic or severe illnesses.
 
Well, Maryland's cannabis commission met last Monday and only today updated their website. No announcement, no PR release, nothing on the main page, but if you know to look at the Industry page and you knew that previously there were only six dispensaries (out of 102) that have been granted final licenses, then you would be able to see that we are now skyrocketing into business here in the Free State with a whopping nine with final licenses out of 102 with prelim licenses. Its a good thing the commissioners are volunteer because nobody should be paid a plug nickel for this kind of performance (oh, by the by, they have been at this for 5 frakin years!).

Oh, you need to look at the license numbers to figure out which three are the new ones as they put the list in alphabetical order....the better to obscure wtf they are doing??


Licensed Dispensaries


1.Allegany Medical Marijuana Dispensary (Allegany County)
License No.: D-17-00005
100 Beall Street
Cumberland, MD 21502
2.Cannabus LLC (dba Potomac Holistics) (Montgomery County)
License No.: D-17-00003
1408 Physicians Lane, Suite 211
Rockville, MD 20850
3. Growing Ventures LLC (dba Greenhouse Wellness) (Howard County)
License No.: D-17-00009
4801 Dorsey Hall Drive Suite 110
Ellicott City, MD 21042
4. GTI Maryland LLC (dba Rise Silver Spring) (Montgomery County)
License No.: D-17-00007
7900 Fenton Street
Silver Spring, MD 20910

5.K & R Holdings INC (dba Kannavis) (Frederick County)
License No.: D-17-00002
3362 Urbana Pike
Ijamesville, MD 21754
6. Maryland Wellness Access LLC (dba Remedy Columbia) (Howard County)
License No.: D-17-00008
6656-E Dobbin Road
Columbia, MD 21046
7.Peninsula Alternative Health LLC (Wicomico County)
License No: D-17-00006
400 Snow Hill Road
Salisbury, MD 21804
8.Southern Maryland Relief LLC (St. Mary’s County)
License No.: D-17-00004
28105 Tree Notch Road, Suite 1D
Mechanicsville, MD 20659
9.Wellness Institute of Maryland (Frederick County)
License No.: D-17-00001
4606 Wedgewood Boulevard
Frederick, MD 21703
 
Well...."days" can mean anything from a couple of days to a millennium. I think they are close but none of the dispensaries I re-registered with have yet informed me of any imminant product offering. I do expect in the next week or two that some dispensaries will open and some stock will be available. How many stores and what type/qty of stock is far from certain at this point.

But we are FUCKING CLOSE!! :aaaaa:



Marylanders are days away from being able to legally buy medical marijuana


As they filed through the sleek waiting room of Rise Silver Spring, prospective patients — the old, the young, the sick and the curious — came upon deep glass cases that looked like they’d been designed for a high-end jewelry store.

Soon those cases will be stocked with medicinal pot grown and processed in Maryland.

The light-filled storefront on Fenton Street is among the first cannabis dispensaries set to open in Maryland, nearly five years after state lawmakers legalized marijuana for medical use.

Within the next week, Rise is scheduled to begin selling a variety of cannabis products, such as flowers, patches and oils. Four of the state’s other eight dispensaries — including Potomac Holistics in Rockville — say they expect to have medical pot delivered and available for sale by Friday, marking the official launch in Maryland of an industry that is worth billions nationwide. Two said they expect to receive their initial batch of marijuana from Curio Wellness in Baltimore County, which did not return messages seeking comment.

[Maryland’s medical marijuana is finally growing]

“I’ve been waiting, just like you guys,” former Baltimore Ravens tackle Eugene Monroe told a crowd of onlookers at the ribbon-cutting at the Rise dispensary, hoisting a giant pair of red scissors.

Monroe is a partner in Green Thumb Industries, Rise’s Illinois-based parent company, and a longtime advocate of cannabis for pain management. He has spoken out against over-prescription of opioids and has called on the National Football League to remove marijuana from its list of banned substances.

In all, 14 growers, 12 processors and nine dispensaries have been licensed by the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission. About 15,000 people have signed up in the hope of becoming patients, with 8,500 already certified to buy medical cannabis, according to the commission. Nearly 550 health-care providers have registered with the state to recommend the drug to their patients.

mocomedmarijuana03.jpg

Anne Quinlan, in hat at center, has Stage 4 non-Hodgkins lymphoma and says medicinal marijuana may help her regain her appetite. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)
mocomedmarijuana04.jpg

Former Baltimore Ravens tackle Eugene Monroe, left, welcomes people to the RISE Silver Spring medical marijuana dispensary. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)
Legal conflicts and bureaucratic hiccups slowed the launch of the industry in Maryland. The commission was overwhelmed by a slew of applications from interested marijuana businesses, delaying the first batch of license awards by more than six months. Since then, regulators have fended off complaints from businesses and lawmakers who said the process of choosing marijuana companies was unfair.

Green Thumb Industries filed a lawsuit after it won a license to sell the drug but was denied a license to grow it. Company officials originally said they would not open a dispensary without a cultivation license but have apparently reversed course.

Andy Grossman, a partner at GTI, declined to comment on the lawsuit Tuesday. He said the opening of the dispensary was a “great day for the patients of Maryland” who will have access to “quality medicine in a safe and dignified manner.”

[Here’s who wants in on Maryland’s first legal pot industry]

Tuesday’s event was meant to familiarize local residents with Rise, because access to the dispensary will be restricted once marijuana products are in stock and for sale.

mocomedmarijuana01.jpg

Investors, owners and future patients at the RISE Silver Spring medical marijuana dispensary. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)
Among those who came to look around were Anne Quinlan and Judd Juha, a married couple who both have been battling cancer and are eager to try medical marijuana to alleviate some of their symptoms.

Juha, diagnosed three years ago with lung cancer, hopes it will quell the pain of “hot irons” in his chest. And Quinlan, diagnosed in August with Stage 4 non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, is desperate for an appetite stimulant that can help her regain the 20 pounds she has lost.

“I’m just sad that we got here before they sold anything,” Juha said after filling out patient registration forms with his wife.

Bill Askinazi, principal of Potomac Holistics in Rockville, said he expects about 2,000 customers to buy flowers, oils and balms and other products during the first month his store is open. Askinazi put his law practice on hold to launch the dispensary, 20 years after his son found that synthetic cannabis could relieve his debilitating nausea.

For now, local handcrafted paraphernalia, including glass-blown water pipes, line his shop’s cabinets, and a copy of Marijuana Business Magazine has been placed in the waiting room. Askinazi said prospective patients have knocked on the door in recent days, asking when sales will begin. “We’re eager to get started,” he said.

National News Alerts

Major national and political news as it breaks.



Sajal Roy, who runs a dispensary in rural Allegany County, said he’s planning a low-key opening day, limited to a small group of preregistered patients, “instead of having a line of 500 people and causing mass chaos.”

Anthony Darby, who leads Peninsula Alternative Health on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, said he expects to begin sales soon but is wary of promising a specific opening date.

“I have been in this situation at least two other times, and because of testing labs and other reasons, product hasn’t gotten to us,” Darby said. “We are hopefully optimistic that this is different and the delivery from Curio will happen.”
 
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So glad to hear this and to see these pictures. I've enjoyed reading your posts about the issue. It's nice to read news related posts from someone who is well informed.

I'm anxious to see what will be on the "menus." Very happy that folks will finally have access to dispensary products.
 
@momofthegoons - frakin A, lady.....just got an email from first dispensary to open with product at 10 am on Saturday.

I will be there, I don't care about lines, they won't have much product I don't think, but I'm going to be THERE!! LOL

:aaaaa::cheers::smoke::dancing::dogpile:
 

Now ain't this interesting.....they just added a 10th dispensary without another meeting where the commission is required to vote on it. It just showed up on the list today. Perhaps there was some small additional info needed and it was just pro forma to not list them previously, but wtf....I often think that our MJ commission is trying redefine the word 'opaque'. sigh.

So, Rise Bethesda was issued the 10th license.




Licensed Dispensaries

1.Allegany Medical Marijuana Dispensary (Allegany County)
License No.: D-17-00005
100 Beall Street
Cumberland, MD 21502
2. Chesapeake Alternatives LLC (dba Rise Bethesda) (Montgomery County)
License No.: D-17-000010
10401 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 210
Bethesda, MD 20814

3. Cannabus LLC (dba Potomac Holistics) (Montgomery County)
License No.: D-17-00003
1408 Physicians Lane, Suite 211
Rockville, MD 20850
4. Growing Ventures LLC (dba Greenhouse Wellness) (Howard County)
License No.: D-17-00009
4801 Dorsey Hall Drive, Suite 110
Ellicott City, MD 21042
5. GTI Maryland LLC (dba Rise Silver Spring) (Montgomery County)
License No.: D-17-00007
7900 Fenton Street
Silver Spring, MD 20910


6. K & R Holdings INC (dba Kannavis) (Frederick County)
License No.: D-17-00002
3362 Urbana Pike
Ijamesville, MD 21754
7. Maryland Wellness Access LLC (dba Remedy Columbia) (Howard County)
License No.: D-17-00008
6656-E Dobbin Road
Columbia, MD 21046
8. Peninsula Alternative Health LLC (Wicomico County)
License No: D-17-00006
400 Snow Hill Road
Salisbury, MD 21804
9. Southern Maryland Relief LLC (St. Mary’s County)
License No.: D-17-00004
28105 Tree Notch Road, Suite 1D
Mechanicsville, MD 20659
10. Wellness Institute of Maryland (Frederick County)
License No.: D-17-00001
4606 Wedgewood Boulevard
Frederick, MD 21703
 
Well, Kannavis on Sat but Potomac Holistics, around the corner, on Friday. Oh boy, I need to hit the bank for some cash! :-)

Supply issues loom as Maryland preps for imminent medical marijuana sales



Some Maryland medical marijuana dispensary owners expect to begin sales as soon as Friday.

But concerns over supply have several owners planning to ration the amount they can sell.

Sales will start as soon as cultivators and processors can supply the medical cannabis.

At least a few dispensaries are telling patients to expect deliveries by the end of the week. Others, playing it safe, are saying transactions will begin sometime next week at the latest.

At least six of the nine licensed dispensaries are hoping to begin sales by next week.

The start of sales has been a long time coming for the Old Line State.

Five years ago, the state put MMJ development in the hands of only major medical teaching organizations, which didn’t work. Then, a year later, it began developing rules for the program that’s about to begin sales this week.

Now there are 14 licensed cultivators, 12 licensed processors and nine licensed dispensaries. Four labs have been licensed to test cannabis.

“It’s a big deal for the state of Maryland,” said Andy Grossman, market president for Green Thumb Industries Maryland, which owns the Rise Silver Spring dispensary. “Patients have been waiting for over four years to be able to get access to medicine.”

Ready to go

On Wednesday, every available worker at the Potomac Holistics dispensary in Rockville was on the phone and the doorbell was ringing. People wanted to know when they could buy medical cannabis.

“We’ll be open on Friday,” principal Bill Askinazi said as he turned away a potential customer at the door. “We’re waiting on the growers.”

Askinazi declined to reveal his cultivation source but said several of the state’s 14 cultivators are ready to ship a limited amount of product. His store has been open since October, waiting for product.

He expects lines Friday, when shelves will be stocked with up to six strains of flower, pre-rolls, tablets, elixirs, balms and tinctures.

Askinazi is planning for his nine employees to serve 600 patients in the first 24 hours. In the first month, he hopes to serve 2,000 patients.

At the Allegany Medical Marijuana Dispensary in Cumberland, CEO and owner Dr. Sajal Roy is also preparing to begin sales Friday. They’ve been open for about a month, waiting for transactions to begin.

Roy said some 1,400 patients have pre-registered with Allegany, but only about 350 have filled out the necessary paperwork to begin purchasing MMJ.

He expects to receive about 8 pounds of flower and two kits from Dixie Elixirs, which include tablets and cannabis beverages.

Allegany has pre-sold 90% of its planned inventory.

Grossman expects sales to begin at Rise Silver Spring in the next week or so.

“Lots of things need to happen in order to get open,” he added.

The dispensary is waiting for product to be delivered from cultivators and processors, Grossman said, so it’s too early to tell what products the store will have available.

Jordan Baker, manager at Kannavis dispensary in Frederick, said he too is hoping to begin sales by Friday or next week at the latest, depending on when product is available.

“We’ve put out dates about three times when we expected to get product and have been disappointed each time,” he said. “We don’t want to disappoint anyone else.”

Kannavis has over 300 patients pre-registered for opening day, and Baker expects 70-150 customers.

Kannavis is also selling flower and Dixie Elixir’s kits.

Several Maryland dispensaries will offer discounts to seniors, veterans and children who have severe ailments, including epilepsy.

Supply questions

It’s normal for new markets to have supply issues – just ask Nevada and Hawaii.

Roy said Allegany is working with only one grower and processor and doesn’t expect that to increase until late December or early January.

“Until then it’s going to be very limited,” he said.

Roy’s encouraging patients to hold off from buying their maximum amount of 120 grams, or more than 4 ounces.

“We want to make sure everyone can get something,” he added.

That’s the same approach Baker is taking. He expects prices to drop, so he’s encouraging patients to wait to stock up until the cost goes down.

Askinazi was “optimistic” about the supply holding up.

“There’s going to be very strong demand,” he said.

So he’s contemplating setting quotas – limiting patients to an eighth or quarter of an ounce for each initial purchase.

“We want to give as many people as much product as we can,” he said.

Grossman also expects supply to be limited initially as the program rolls out.

“A lot of it will depend on the product we’ll be getting,” he said. “Hopefully we’re going to have more variety and more poundage.”

Preparations underway

Baker’s 10 employees have been on site for about two months, training for eight hours a day.

His staff is learning about cannabis science and training on GreenBits’ point-of-sale system for integration with the state’s METRC seed-to-sale program.

“We expected to be open in October,” he said. “So now, two months down the road, we’ve done all the stamping of bags and all that. Now we’re focused on training.”

Roy has been putting his employees through drills and practice scenarios for weeks. His staff even visited a dispensary in Connecticut to know what to expect.

“We’re actually feeling very prepared,” he said.

Askinazi said he polished the doorknob to the front door of his dispensary. This week, he’s making sure the printer is full of ink and there’s enough paper for the label machine.

Over the past few weeks, Askinazi’s had more than a half-dozen vendors – cultivators, pharmacologists and vaporizer experts – educate his staff. His budtenders are learning about a range of topics, ranging from terpenes to how MMJ interacts with pharmaceuticals to the basic mechanics of how cannabis works in the brain.

His staff has also been brushing up on MJ Freeway’s point-of-sale system and compliance training to ensure everyone has correct identification.
 
I will be there, I don't care about lines, they won't have much product I don't think, but I'm going to be THERE!! LOL
I just had this visual of people getting there the night before and setting up tents in line. :lol: But yes! Finally!

Hope to see you posting up some fire soon. :weed: And hopefully they stock some of this fresh resin you've been drooling over lately. :biggrin:
 


How to get medical marijuana in Maryland, and other FAQs


Medical marijuana is set to go on sale in Maryland in early December, after years of delays. Here’s what you need to know:

Where can I get it?
So far, 10 out of 102 potential dispensaries are fully licensed. Seven of those are in Montgomery, Frederick and Howard counties, and there is one each in St. Mary’s County, Allegany County and on the Eastern Shore. Their names and addresses are listed under “Licensed Dispensaries.”

How can I get it?
First, you have to register as a patient with the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission. Then you need a certification from a doctor or other health-care provider registered with the state.

2300-MarylandMarijuana.jpg

With a limited supply and a market, many dispensaries are limiting initial sales to patients who have already have registered with them.

Does medical marijuana need to be smoked?
In addition to the dried-leaf variety, companies have plans to process medical cannabis into a variety of other products including capsules, oils, creams, vaporizing pens and a peanut brittle-like substance called “shatter.”

Maryland law does not allow edible medical marijuana products — such as brownies, cookies and gummies — which are popular in other states.

How do I find a doctor who will recommend marijuana?
Maryland doesn’t want unscrupulous doctors handing out phony marijuana recommendations for anyone who pays. Providers need to meet with patients in person and have a “bona fide” relationship with them before issuing certifications (which aren’t called prescriptions, for legal reasons).

The list of doctors registered to recommend marijuana isn’t public, but some are advertising their willingness.

mdmedmarijuana4.jpg

Green Leaf Medical CEO Philip Goldberg, second from right, and his brother and general counsel, Kevin Goldberg, right, inspect the marijuana plants at Green Leaf Medical, LLC in Frederick, Md. (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post)
How much does medical marijuana cost?
It’s unclear at the moment, but dispensaries have been warning patients to expect unusually high prices in the early stages of the program. (This answer will be updated after dispensaries open and list their prices.)

Can patients from other states purchase marijuana?
The law allows nonresidents to participate if they are being treated in Maryland (such as cancer patients receiving chemotherapy). But the commission is not registering out-of-state patients, while it reviews its policies.

It is a federal offense to transport marijuana across state lines — even to the District, Delaware and Pennsylvania, where the use of medical marijuana also is legal.

What conditions qualify for treatment with cannabis?
The law lists these conditions as treatable with medical cannabis: Cachexia or wasting syndrome, anorexia, severe pain, severe nausea, seizures, severe or persistent muscle spasms, glaucoma, post-traumatic stress disorder and chronic pain.

But the regulations also have a catchall provision that allows physicians and other providers to recommend cannabis for patients if they think doing so is in the patients’ best medical interests.

Read more about Maryland’s medical marijuana program:

The political donors, ex-cops and even clergy who want to grow Maryland’s marijuana

Veterans are using medical marijuana in defiance of federal policy

Following Post report, Maryland probes potential conflicts in selection of pot businesses

Lawmaker behind marijuana legalization reprimanded for undisclosed business ties
 
So, I went to the grand opening of the very first dispensary to open in my state of Maryland...and what a cluster fuck. It took me 9 hours from arrival to departure. NINE!! :cursing::nunchuks:

This was Potomac Holistics. Nice people, I'm sure they will get it all sorted eventually, but they sure didn't yesterday.

They were to open at 11 am, so I showed up at 10 am and was expecting to have to queue up, which I did. I was maybe 60 or so people back from the front. In fact, they didn't open until 4:30 pm (and we all know that many of the people standing out in the cold on concrete for hour after hour have physical ailments, that's why there are there....including me.)

At one time, the owners announced that everyone would be served and they were going to limit customers to 1/8th only. Personally, I was fine with rationing to share the wealth wider. Also, I had no intention of loading up as the variety and quality is only going to improve. But some gal who just moved down from NY (and had a voice just like Fran Drescher...and she was behind me in line, constantly telling people what she thought they should know...for NINE FUCKING HOURS...a few of us discussed tossing her over the railing but resisted the urge) started hollering how she's going to get everybody here to put bad reviews on Leafly and just generally being a PIA. So, they changed, buy as much as you want up to the state limit of 4 oz/month, and when they run out, then they will be out. Well, it didn't effect me very much, but indeed they ran out and some folks spent all day standing there and got bubkis.

Then it took them forever to process customers. Once I was in, I asked the owner why he opened two hours late. His reply was that his product wasn't delivered until 11 am. My response was that if we was just scheduled to get his first product shipment in that morning, he had NO BUSINESS scheduling his grand opening for the same day. Who the fuck doesn't include some buffer and risk into their schedule. Guy is an attorney and, IMO, a complete amateur at running a project.

The admin help (not bud tenders but checking in, cashier, ect) in the store was his wife and her friends (and these are Potomac housewives...right, not quite 'Real Wifes of Potomac' but not that far off. They were nice people, just had absolutely NO idea what they were in for). Also his brother managing the crowd outside. No industry experience at all as far as I can tell.

We had to get frisked by security (fucking frisked...as in patted down) before we could get into the reception alcove. Then called back one by one into the dispensary proper. They only had five strains to start with and by the time I got in, they were down to three. I bought a qtr of Ace of Spade (indica) and one of a sativa leaning hybrid called Guice (not a typo...).

It took about 45 minutes to get checked out at the cashier as they said the MD database system crashed (but it was working fine this morning at another dispensary...FFS). 45 minutes in line to pay them. sigh

All the bud came from one grower, Curio in Baltimore Co, I believe). I posted pics below.

It comes prepackaged in 1/8's in plastic containers from the grower. I just ground some Ace up and it was very dry. No need to dry this before vaping. Matter of fact, its too dry and ground pretty damn fine and I was using my NV Coarse grinder. If I used the fine grinder, I would have dust. All of the bud was very bright green...sort of blue dream kind of bright. Its all indoor grown and I'm sure that they pushed these plants hard to harvest and get some cash flowing. Also, the THC levels aren't really that high, at least not in comparison to other places where the industry is well established.

Look, its the first shipment of any herb in MD, so I'm cutting these guys some slack....but there is room for improvement. I'm pretty sure that the N Cali herb I have been consuming for the past couple of years is outdoor grown and I wonder (not being a grower) if it was the indoor vs outdoor or nutrient treatments, or what but the N Cali herb was always a good bit darker green (I'm betting on indoor vs outdoor for the explanation).

So, I get home at about 11 pm, pour a scotch, crank up the EVO, and I was hurting.

The next day (today, Sat the 2nd), the second dispensary opened in Fredrick...about 20 miles from my house...easy highway drive. This is Kannavis and what a different experience. They also got their product yesterday but scheduled their grand opening for today to account for any slips or other issues. They got their product from the same grower and had the same limited menu. They opened their doors exactly on time at 10 am (I got there at 9 am and was about 30 back from the front of the line) and had a wonderful experience with professionals who knew what they were doing and had obviously done a friend and family or some other type of rehearsal before opening to the general public. I bought a 1/4 of Northern Lights as Potomac was sold out of it by the time I got into to buy. I was out of there in a couple of hours and was very happy with those folks and their CS.

Now, same grower, herb from the same delivery run yesterday, so I expect its going to be on the dry side. I have the Guicy and Northern Lights in mason jars with Boveda 62% packs but I'm not hopeful of rehydrating it to any extent. My only concern about the driness is the stuff turning to powder when ground. I'll deal with it and, again, this is only the very start of the program here in MD.

Ok, pics...and yes, I obviously don't know how to spell Norther(n). LOL

Attachment-3.jpeg


Attachment-2.jpeg


Attachment-1.jpeg
 
Wow @Baron23 the experience you had at the first dispensary is absolutely ridiculous. There's no excuse for any of what happened. And the fact that they actually frisked you? :disgust: In the heart of Detroit the most you'll go through is a metal detector and have some questions thrown at you if you make it buzz. No frisking.

I'll bet that dispensary wont be on your 'go to' list at any point in the future. And if they keep up that level of service they wont last long.

I have no doubt that once this gets rolling, there wont be lines like there were today and that product will be more plentiful. I don't think I've ever spent 2 hours at the dispensary I go to; even on a Saturday. And it's one of the most popular in the area.

But hurray that they're finally open for you!!! :cheers:
 

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