July 1 2016 WA State Changes

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
Cannabis has gone from small home town farmers to huge farms. More out door grows in Eastern WA where the summer season is warmer and hotter. There are large indoor grows in big warehouses in the area where I live and surrounding counties. Some counties and cities have decided they won't allow cannabis.

Hopefully the cannabis laws will be evolving. Our state has an extremely high tax for alcohol. We have one of the highest gas taxes too.
 
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Maitri

Deadhead, Low-Temp Dabber, Mahayana Buddhist
Some counties and cities have decided they won't allow cannabis.

Yeah, I am curious to see how that unfolds after the feds finally legalize it.

Hopefully the cannabis laws will be evolving. Our state has an extremely high tax for alcohol. We have one of the highest gas taxes too.

Yeah, WA can be a pretty regressive state. I wish we would replace much of our sales taxes with income taxes. That would be a much fairer way to collect revenue.
 

cybrguy

Putin is a War Criminal
...wow...just paid $275 for a ounce here in sf....and that's good stuff but midrange in terms of price...many dispensaries charge in mid $300 range for top shelf...everything is more expensive in cal..and especially sf..
Here in the Chicago area I see black market prices starting at $300/OZ up to $550/OZ from the thieves who can get it selling to affluent clients. I was paying in the $400s until last year when I found a guy closer to $300. I think he is getting it from Cali. I know no one who is growing themselves.
I haven't been inside a local medical dispensary, but my understanding is their pricing is in the $400 ranges depending on the product.
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
closeupshangobud.jpg

CATEGORIES: CANNABIS BUSINESS NEWSMEDICAL MARIJUANA NEWS
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Washington medical cannabis patients and providers should be prepared for delays in the roll-out of the state’s new medical regulations.

In particular, the state-managed database of medical cannabis authorizations is not ready yet, according to an email issued yesterday afternoon by the Washington Department of Health. This could spell dire consequences for Washington cannabis patients.

Lawmakers voted last summer to dismantle the state’s 18-year-old medical cannabis industry, and those regulations — which assimilate the medical industry into the I-502 recreational market — are supposed to take effect this Friday, July 1. Under the new regulations, patients will be required to get medicine from licensed cannabis retail outlets.

Recreational retailers, however, charge significantly more for cannabis products than dispensaries and collectives charged in the medical industry.

Regulators had planned a database that patients would register with to receive patient recognition cards. With such a card, patients would be allowed to:

  • Purchase cannabis products sales-tax free.
  • Purchase up to three times the legal limit for recreational users.
  • Purchase products infused with higher amounts of THC than recreational users.
  • Grow more than four plants at home.
  • Enjoy full protection from arrest, prosecution, and legal penalties associated with their marijuana activities — though patients will still have an affirmative defense.
If the database is indeed delayed, it will inevitably spell trouble for Washington cannabis patients.

According to the Health Department’s email: “Patients and providers can still purchase marijuana from authorized retail stores; however, they can’t take advantage of the benefits until the database is operational.”

“The department is committed to ensuring patient safety, and it will continue to work on having the database ready as soon as possible,” the department said in its release.

Activists are planning a downtown Seattle protest for tomorrow during the afternoon rush hour to bring attention to the plight of Washington’s medical cannabis patients.
 

Maitri

Deadhead, Low-Temp Dabber, Mahayana Buddhist

CATEGORIES: CANNABIS BUSINESS NEWSMEDICAL MARIJUANA NEWS

Share Tweet 47 TOTAL SHARES

Washington medical cannabis patients and providers should be prepared for delays in the roll-out of the state’s new medical regulations.

In particular, the state-managed database of medical cannabis authorizations is not ready yet, according to an email issued yesterday afternoon by the Washington Department of Health. This could spell dire consequences for Washington cannabis patients.

Lawmakers voted last summer to dismantle the state’s 18-year-old medical cannabis industry, and those regulations — which assimilate the medical industry into the I-502 recreational market — are supposed to take effect this Friday, July 1. Under the new regulations, patients will be required to get medicine from licensed cannabis retail outlets.

Recreational retailers, however, charge significantly more for cannabis products than dispensaries and collectives charged in the medical industry.

Regulators had planned a database that patients would register with to receive patient recognition cards. With such a card, patients would be allowed to:

  • Purchase cannabis products sales-tax free.
  • Purchase up to three times the legal limit for recreational users.
  • Purchase products infused with higher amounts of THC than recreational users.
  • Grow more than four plants at home.
  • Enjoy full protection from arrest, prosecution, and legal penalties associated with their marijuana activities — though patients will still have an affirmative defense.
If the database is indeed delayed, it will inevitably spell trouble for Washington cannabis patients.

According to the Health Department’s email: “Patients and providers can still purchase marijuana from authorized retail stores; however, they can’t take advantage of the benefits until the database is operational.”

“The department is committed to ensuring patient safety, and it will continue to work on having the database ready as soon as possible,” the department said in its release.

Activists are planning a downtown Seattle protest for tomorrow during the afternoon rush hour to bring attention to the plight of Washington’s medical cannabis patients.

Combining this thread with the Presidential one is a little challenging for me because on the one hand, I am undeniably a Sanders socialist. However, on the other hand, shit like this reminds me how unwise it is for me to rely on my government... :(

Interesting read, @CarolKing. Thank you for sharing it!! :)
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
This is one of my fav dispensaries. A very good article. I will share, a very wonderful person who deserved a lisence.

Veteran-Owned Medical Marijuana Dispensary To Close June 30
By AUSTIN JENKINS JUN 20, 2016
SHARETwitter Facebook Google+ Email

  • Rainier Xpress owner Patrick Seifert says he will have to close his military veteran-focused medical marijuana dispensary in downtown Olympia on June 30 because he failed to win a license under the new, regulated medical marijuana system.
    AUSTIN JENKINS / NORTHWEST NEWS NETWORK
Originally published on June 20, 2016 5:18 pm

The end is near for a veteran-owned medical marijuana dispensary in downtown Olympia. It’s a casualty of the state merging recreational and medical marijuana.

At Rainier Xpress there’s a Wall of Honor--photographs of customers during their time in the military. Owner Patrick Seifert is a former Marine himself. But now after four years of serving veterans and their medical marijuana needs, he’s preparing to close up shop.

“What we do here is so important and it’s heartbreaking,” Seifert said.

Seifert failed to win a state license to continue operating after July 1. Seifert said he paid his taxes and had a business license. But still he didn’t qualify as a tier one applicant.

And now Seifert and his nine employees face the unemployment line. The Liquor and Cannabis Board said there were more than 2,000 applicants for only 222 licenses.

“Unfortunately the cap that they put on is what ultimately is damaging all the good players,” Seifert said.

Copyright 2016 NWNews. To see more, visit NWNews.
__utm.gif
 
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CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
That's was an awesome article @Maitri thank you for sharing. I went to the above dispensary today and thanked them. I told them how much they helped me. How frightened I was when I first went to a dispensary. And how sad I was that they have to shut down. I got all emotional and started crying. I meant every word I said.

This will be a hardship and too expensive for many patients. Some folks have to be really stressed over this. I know how I feel. I' can afford it but don't want to pay the extra money. I haven't been in a state store yet, only what I've read online as to their offering of merchandise.

I've been dreading this day for a year. CA and other states make sure if you get legal cannabis or even medical. Make sure they don't stick a tax on it so high it makes it unattainable for some people to buy.
 
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C No Ego

Well-Known Member
That's was an awesome article @Maitri thank you for sharing. I went to the above dispensary today and thanked them. I told them how much they helped me. How frightened I was when I first went to a dispensary. And how sad I was that they have to shut down. I got all emotional and started crying. I meant every word I said.

This will be a hardship and too expensive for many patients. Some folks have to be really stressed over this. I know how I feel. I' can afford it but don't want to pay the extra money. I haven't been in a state store yet, only what I've read online as to their offering of merchandise.

I've been dreading this day for a year. CA and other states make sure if you get legal cannabis or even medical. Make sure they don't stick a tax on it so high it makes it unattainable for some people to buy.

sadly people are seeing $$ signs only. like everything once money gets involved real quality goes down while costs go up. over inflated bull$#!T
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
I've been doing a bit of research. This seems to be how it is here in WA. If you have 2.5 + million dollars you can possibly buy an existing WA state cannabis license from someone that decides to sell. So it comes down to who has the most money. Isn't it always the case.

The state has a cap on how many retail licenses they allow. I feel sad for places like Rainier Xpress the above dispensary. Guys like Patrick the owner who has been a good player through his whole time in business.
 

Maitri

Deadhead, Low-Temp Dabber, Mahayana Buddhist
That's was an awesome article @Maitri thank you for sharing. I went to the above dispensary today and thanked them. I told them how much they helped me. How frightened I was when I first went to a dispensary. And how sad I was that they have to shut down. I got all emotional and started crying. I meant every word I said.

This will be a hardship and too expensive for many patients. Some folks have to be really stressed over this. I know how I feel. I' can afford it but don't want to pay the extra money. I haven't been in a state store yet, only what I've read online as to their offering of merchandise.

I've been dreading this day for a year. CA and other states make sure if you get legal cannabis or even medical. Make sure they don't stick a tax on it so high it makes it unattainable for some people to buy.

You are welcome, @CarolKing. Heh, I am just trying to keep up with you! :)

I am SO sorry for the unnecessary challenges you face. You, all WA MMJ users, and really everyone and everything are in my heart. I managed to hold back my tears until I get back in my car after I left the dispensary.

Then I woke to this, this morning:

78hqwCK.jpg


It really happened. Today will be a particularly good day to remember:

Kindness, Gentleness, and Compassion - because this is going to be challenging for a lot of people - including me.

Gratitude - for the time we were able to benefit from snd be protected by WA's MMJ laws.

Humility - because the world is neither about nor does it revolve round me.

Respect - For the process, whether I like it or not...
 

looney2nz

Research Geek, Mad Scientist
That's was an awesome article @Maitri thank you for sharing. I went to the above dispensary today and thanked them. I told them how much they helped me. How frightened I was when I first went to a dispensary. And how sad I was that they have to shut down. I got all emotional and started crying. I meant every word I said.

This will be a hardship and too expensive for many patients. Some folks have to be really stressed over this. I know how I feel. I' can afford it but don't want to pay the extra money. I haven't been in a state store yet, only what I've read online as to their offering of merchandise.

I've been dreading this day for a year. CA and other states make sure if you get legal cannabis or even medical. Make sure they don't stick a tax on it so high it makes it unattainable for some people to buy.

Let's see what happens with the upcoming election and the AUMA bill, not to mention the stuff that's been going on in the background (not very advertised changes to cannabis laws). I'm hoping that medical patients remain protected and not gouged for their medicine :(
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
These types of things worry me below. I haven't signed up for the registry yet. I need to think about it some more. I have my form the doctor filled out which gave me authorization to be on a registry.

Date: July 5, 2016
To: Licensed Marijuana Retailers with Medical Endorsements
From: Timothy Gates, Marijuana Examiner Program Administrator
Subject: Medical Marijuana Sales Data Collection and Verification

Summary:

It has come to the attention of both the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (WSLCB) and the Department of Health (DOH) that some third party commercial traceability software systems are requesting patient information such as: conditions, history, and notes. Licensees are prohibited by law and rule from soliciting or retaining patient information in third party commercial software systems. Certified consultants are the only persons who should be seeing the information on the authorization forms to enter them into the database. All other retail employees are only to verify the recognition card by using the publicly available information on the recognition cards itself and by verifying the card number in the DOH medical marijuana authorization database (for a sale), which does not include the patients’ medical condition or any other information not printed on the recognition card.
 
CarolKing,
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looney2nz

Research Geek, Mad Scientist
These types of things worry me below. I haven't signed up for the registry yet. I need to think about it some more. I have my form the doctor filled out which gave me authorization to be on a registry.

Date: July 5, 2016
To: Licensed Marijuana Retailers with Medical Endorsements
From: Timothy Gates, Marijuana Examiner Program Administrator
Subject: Medical Marijuana Sales Data Collection and Verification

Summary:

It has come to the attention of both the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (WSLCB) and the Department of Health (DOH) that some third party commercial traceability software systems are requesting patient information such as: conditions, history, and notes. Licensees are prohibited by law and rule from soliciting or retaining patient information in third party commercial software systems. Certified consultants are the only persons who should be seeing the information on the authorization forms to enter them into the database. All other retail employees are only to verify the recognition card by using the publicly available information on the recognition cards itself and by verifying the card number in the DOH medical marijuana authorization database (for a sale), which does not include the patients’ medical condition or any other information not printed on the recognition card.

If they are trying to gather information on ailments/strains, they should be able to add anonymized records to separate database tracking effectiveness. That should not violate HIPAA laws.
 
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Maitri

Deadhead, Low-Temp Dabber, Mahayana Buddhist
The Stranger: WSLCB Board Member Silently Departs, Patient Database Confuses, and Tacoma MMJ Suit Sees Success

From the essay:

"Patients who brave the recreational atmosphere of retail stores will find a lack of appropriate products and crushingly high prices, as well as insufficient protections for patient privacy and security of patient information. DOH designed a medical marijuana system that makes an end-run around HIPAA, to the peril of patients and the few providers who risk authorizing medical marijuana. The risks of having one's medical information in the authorization database far outweigh any ostensible benefit." - Nicole Li - cannabis attorney and patient privacy advocate
 

looney2nz

Research Geek, Mad Scientist
so you're REQUIRED to participate in their little database???
that's a different kettle of fish :(
I can understand a voluntary system (and a properly designed system needn't expose patients, but how often do you see a properly designed system?), but mandatory... who the hell do they think they are?
Sadder yet, I hear damn near everything in your market is full of pesticides and fungicides :(
JUST what medical patients need in their lives! :(
 
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CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
It's strictly voluntary to participate into the cannabis registry. To get any of the few benefits available you have to participate in the registry. You get higher THC in the medibles that will be about $30 a serving or more for a medical patient, depending on what you are getting. I've priced online is all, I havent been into a state store yet. You get 10% off the cost of your purchase if you are in the registry is all.

I think many folks will choose to go underground. We have folks that have been growing for the patients for years. Most of them aren't a part of the large grows. Many patients will choose to make their own edibles cannabis and grow their own or get their cannabis from a farmer in the black market. That takes quite a bit of flowers to make medibles, often a batch is more than an ounce.

I know that a list is forming just for the medical patients to match up patients with farmers. We can only have 4 people to a coop garden. I signed my name to a couple lists. If I choose one then I need to go back and add that to my medical registry information to make everything legit. That would be giving the names of those in the coop or giving the name of where the coop garden is. So the state can make sure everything is above board.

If we get special clearance from our Doctor we can have as many as 15 plants. So the folks organizing the coops will have folks get the 15 plants. That would mean 60 plants max per coop. That would be a good number with a variety of strains. I'm hoping the coop system might be good. I will hear more about this. I'm not interested in growing by myself but being part of a coop would be appealing to me. There will be a fee, I was told. The price of materials and electricity.

I don't know if I want to sign into the states registry yet, I'm waiting. If I'm a part of a coop I will sign into the registry.
 
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CarolKing,
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CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
The Mad Hatter is angry and sad.

No longer will Sheila Scott cook and sell her medical-marijuana cookies, bars and other high-dose treats, reported The News Tribune (http://bit.ly/29rgvSs).

The proposed rule that became law July 1 allows certain high-dose delivery systems (suppositories, tinctures, etc.), but honors existing state rules that prohibit the sale of cannabis-infused edibles containing a total of more than 100 milligrams of THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol.

Until the ban, Scott said she manufactured and sold products containing up to 1,500 milligrams.

Until the ban, she said, she served 281 patients — including 165 with a diagnosis of Stage 4 cancer. Her products were sold in select Washington dispensaries.

With the ban in place, she said, "I can't stop crying about it. I don't think it's going to help anybody."

For her, it's about compassion.

For the state, it's about safety.

THE ROAD TO MEDIBLES

Scott, 48, is herself a patient.

Heart surgery led to leg pain a handful of years ago, and marijuana, she said recently at her home near Rochester, "would take the pain away."

"It made it so I could eat," she said.

A girlfriend gave her perspective.

"She said, 'If I could save myself I could probably save others,'" Scott said.

And that became her mission.

She remains a patient herself, and it's not unusual for her to begin the day with a self-prescribed 500-milligram candy bar. Add "three or four to 20 joints a day, depending on the pain."

"Obviously it takes more milligrams to help me because I've built up a tolerance," she said.

She recalls stories of her former patients, particularly "a patient named Chris who left a note for me, a beautiful letter about how he didn't know me, and how he couldn't leave his house because of Tourette's. Now I think that patient is not going to be able to leave his house anymore."

Patients, she believes, "are not going to be able to function. They'll go back underground. You start making people be on a registry — how is that fair? People will suffer or they will pay recreational prices."

Patients who join the state registry will be able to buy more marijuana and higher-dose edibles — although not as high as those previously offered by Mad Hatter and other mega-dose products — and they will not be required to pay sales tax.

They will be able to buy and use high-dose products in forms including capsules, tinctures, transdermal patches and suppositories.

THE STATE

"I understand that patients have for many years now had free run in a completely unregulated market, and change is hard," said Kristi Weeks, policy counsel for the State Department of Health.

Weeks helped design the new law.

"There was no scientific research available. We just listened to the patients, who said they needed more than 10 (milligrams) per serving, and 50 seemed reasonable," she said, in reference to the medical edible limits.

Of the high-dose products, Weeks said, "We understand that these things have been available. We do not think as a public policy they should continue to be available. If patients need medicine, it should be in the form of medicine, not cookies and candies and things that are especially attractive to children."

Another issue, she said, concerns household pets. "It's not only children who are getting into these products," she said.

"I only have anecdotes," she said. "I do hear from E.R. departments (that) are seeing an increase in children and the elderly who are not familiar with high doses. People who may have smoked it in the '60s — now they're trying it again."

She said high dosages are available beyond the four varieties allowed in the law.

"If you are a patient you can grow your own marijuana, and make your own butter, or your own oil, and use that to infuse your cookies. We're not talking about what patients can have or use — we're talking about what they can buy. If somebody really feels they need to have a 500-milligram cookie, there is an outlet for that," Weeks said.

And she repudiates the threat that patients will return to the black market.

"Every decision that's been made by the state Legislature, Department of Health or the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board, every decision has been met with that argument," she said. "If we have a patient registry, black market; if (there are) taxes, black market; serving size, it will lead to the black market.

"We have to make regulations that are in the best interests of the public as a whole, and we know that there will always be people who do not abide by the law. If we set the edible serving at 100, or 500, there would still be some people who say, 'I need more.'"

CONTROVERSY ANTICIPATED

At a recent marijuana industry gathering, Sheila Scott won the 2016 Dope magazine "Best Edible Sweet Medical" Dope Cup trophy for her peanut butter bars.

No longer will she compete.
The Mad Hatter operation has closed. Scott will move on, she said, and assist a licensed producer manufacturing legal, low-dose edibles.

The Mad Hatter is defunct.

And Scott remains angry and sad.

"They need to reinstate medical marijuana," she said. "It has nothing to do with recreational. They're not looking out for people who have cancer, who have pain. If it wasn't for medical marijuana patients, you wouldn't have recreational. We were against (Initiative) 502.

"We thought something like this might happen," she said.

She asks, "What do you tell patients? I don't know what to tell them. Put it back the way it was. All of us patients were just fine. We were taking care of one another."

WASHINGTON STATE

Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/news/state/washington/article88643497.html#storylink=cpy
 
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Maitri

Deadhead, Low-Temp Dabber, Mahayana Buddhist
http://thepeopleformedicalcannabis.com/new-laws-impact/

Whats wrong with what has happened to patients… How is it impacting me? by Gina Garcia ( Patient / Veteran) July 10, 2016

My Husband has Inoperable Cancer (Adenocarcinoma) in the pancreas, doctors sent him home with nothing they could do.He is on Full Extract Cannabis Oil and has already passed the time they told him he has. (in other words it is working…so far) And he is on a fixed income. There is no way in hell we can afford the medicine. I also use it for chronic pain from Autoimmune Diseases and Degenerative diseases and many more.. I was on 1 gram a day …can no longer get it or can never buy it, I need to be able to make my own. Kristi Weeks KNOWS NOTHING about how much dry herb it takes to keep us in medicine. and My friend uses it for Post Polio Syndrome, None of us will be able to buy it ever, and we wont have enough to make our medicines. The quantities we are left with will not be sufficient. We are looking to move because this state will literally KILL US…waiting for the “FIX” that should of been done and figured out Prior to putting in Recreational.

For the legislators that voted no on 5052.. thanks for doing so but they werent sweating your no vote when they had so many yes’s and the amendments never got anywhere. Hope this session you all realize what a big mistake it was to toss aside the ill to get a recreational store in.

I have heard the Medical Consultants tell me there is no privacy where they speak to patients. There is no medicine for them , and if there is they really dont know much about it. And that it is really the same that they use for recreational. The ONLY thing patients get is 3 times the amount of a recreational. Your promised as a registered patients that you get a sales tax break but what they dont tell you is you STILL have to pay the 37% excises tax. STILL unaffordable to the ones that need it most.

The registry has already shown it cannot be trusted to run without breeches. People assume you can get 15 plants when you register, not true either… You get UP TO 15 plants and UP TO 16 oz. So many patients mis-informed but to read the rules on the DOH site makes it sound like everything is terrific.

MY representatives dont reply to me and if they do they brush me off or dont answer my questions. All are replaceable. I cannot believe I have to watch people die because this state was in such of a hurry to make a quick buck and by doing so you have made a bigger mess of things.

This state claims they are doing things to take care of patients, yet pesticides are still in our medicines, we dont have what we need on the shelves and in MY COUNTY (Okanogan County) we have 3 stores in the entire county.. are more coming.. WHO CARES they dont have what patients need. You have made it extremely hard on patients as part of a cooperative. Saying we have to participate yet they are required to have the same seed to sale tracking as the state licensed growers and processors and the patients of this said co-ops are suppose to participate in it. You have made sure patients dont get what they need ESPECIALLY on the east side of the casacades..just take a look at the map on the WSLCB it shows you where the stores are. DO you think you have no people living east of the casacdes?

No Ma’ams and Sirs, You all have made sure we don’t have safe access. I am ashamed to be part of a state that would be perfectly ok if its patients died as long as the state gets their millions.. You are aware that the growers and processors dont want us, we dont make enough for them, and the ones that do are given a store and even if they are the 37% excise tax will keep us out if not their allowable pesticides. How about a WORK SESSION OF OUR PEERS, the REAL Patients who require MORE than the recreational amounts, since up to now those are the only ones ..those and the big pharma lobbyists are the only ones our legislators are paying attention to.

I could go on forever about what is wrong with what happened, but it will fall on deaf ears and my husband needs to have his medicine today not in the next 5 years.
 

Maitri

Deadhead, Low-Temp Dabber, Mahayana Buddhist
Hi Everyone, two things today:

First, in addition to Washington State, I read news about marijuana from around the country and world on a daily basis. This thread inspired me to wonder if anyone would be interested in a new thread I would create and update daily with some/many/most/all the relevant news I find on a daily basis. If you have a moment, please reply letting me know if you might be interested in a thread like this one - but for the rest of the planet.

Thank You! :)

And second...

The Stranger
July 13, 2016
http://www.thestranger.com/news/201...rewed-over-its-medical-marijuana-dispensaries


How Washington State Screwed Over Its Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

A Loophole in the Recreational License Application Process Created a Black Market for Dispensary Employee Pay Stubs and Left Longtime Dispensary Operators in the Dust
by Tobias Coughlin-Bogue


A loophole allowed applicants with no background in medical marijuana to be treated as if they were law-abiding, taxpaying veterans of the industry.
On July 1, when the Cannabis Patient Protection Act (SB 5052) took effect, all dispensaries without an I-502 license were forced to shut down, sending many of the state's medical marijuana patients into a panic. Patients worry that the recreational market doesn't have enough medicinal cannabis for their needs and that what is available is not affordable. Many point to the fact that the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (WSLCB) issued only 222 new retail licenses to replace more than 1,500 medical marijuana dispensaries.

But there's another aspect that should trouble patients, though few may know about it. Thanks to a loophole in the state's licensing process, many longtime dispensary operations were shut out of the recreational market. New actors were able to game the system by buying pay stubs from former medical marijuana dispensary employees in order to bolster their applications.

"[The state was] supposed to create new licenses to move over the [medical marijuana] system so that the patients could be served," said John Davis, owner of the Northwest Patient Resource Center, who applied for but did not receive an I-502 license. "That's not what they did. They were just giving licenses to people who were scamming the system."

As a result of SB 5052, which mandated that the medical marijuana market be folded into the recreational one, the WSLCB was instructed to open a new round of retail cannabis licensing and "develop a competitive, merit-based application process that includes, at a minimum, the opportunity for an applicant to demonstrate experience and qualifications in the marijuana industry." Applicants were broken into three levels of priority based on a list of criteria, including whether or not they had operated or were employed by a dispensary before January 1, 2013.

The idea was to help the most legit dispensaries transition to the legal market. But because a person who had worked just one day at a dispensary was given priority to get a license, and because applications could include multiple people, a lot of former budtenders suddenly found themselves in high demand. In exchange for their proof of employment and willingness to sign on to an application, they could be paid handsomely. Last November, I searched Craigslist for "I-502 Priority I" and found several postings offering to buy or sell pay stubs for anywhere from $80,000 to $100,000.

This loophole allowed applicants with no background in medical marijuana to be treated as if they were law-abiding, taxpaying veterans of the industry.

To make matters worse, the WSLCB blindsided applicants by announcing a cap of 222 new medically endorsed stores late in the application process. Those 222 stores were allocated by jurisdiction, with more populous, higher-selling areas getting larger allocations of licenses. Still, that left many places, including Seattle, with far fewer licenses than qualified applicants, creating fierce competition. Up until shortly after the new cap was announced, the WSLCB had assured applicants that there was no hurry.

"They were saying to me, 'Don't worry, it's not a race, there's plenty of time, we'll get to you,'" said Davis.

Even more frustrating, Davis said the state investigators who were charged with vetting his application were elusive, uncooperative, and disorganized. One investigator, he said, went on vacation for four weeks without notifying him, and another e-mailed the login information for his application to a competing applicant by mistake. The error put him weeks behind other applicants, Davis said.

Those who received licenses, Davis said, were people who were able to throw down $100,000 to game the system, or those who already owned recreational stores. He conducted a study of Seattle's 21 newly licensed "medically endorsed" recreational stores and found that a significant number of them were newly created. Only nine had operated dispensaries prior to the application process, he said, and only seven of those existed before 2013. Seven licensees created entities after the application process was already under way.

Davis was denied a license, despite operating one of the state's oldest-running dispensaries. Now he's suing the WSLCB, contending that its rules on priority licensing deviated from the spirit—and, to some extent, the letter—of the law.

In an e-mail, WSLCB director of communications Brian Smith acknowledged the issue of the pay-stub scam, saying: "From the beginning I've seen quotes from applicants [who] say they would try to game the system. There will always be people who will try to cheat." But, he added, "our investigation process is very thorough. We also work with other agencies to review and verify the information submitted as correct." However, Smith didn't address if the state was able to verify whether applicants would actually be involved on a business or operations level with the application they were included on.

Davis isn't the only critic of the WSLCB's licensing process. His suit includes about a dozen others, including Olympia's Rainier XPress, a dispensary that worked primarily with veterans suffering from PTSD.

"In Oly, there were five available licenses," said Patrick Seifert, Rainier Xpress's owner. "Three of the five licenses went to one fucking guy. The other two went to people who already had stores. How is that fair? How are they spreading it out to all of the good players that were supposed to get them?" Good question. recommended
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
I went to my regular organic medical cannabis farmers market today. I found out that they are still open. I was worried about going in and buying products because of WA new medical law. I had seen online that the sheriffs department had talked with the cannabis market regarding that they hadn't closed.

Medical farmers still have product to sell. The sheriff said he would much rather see it sold at the medical market than the black market. So it's still the Wild West for a little bit longer. The market is still trying to get their license I was told. I sure hope they get it. They won't be selling the cannabis from regular farmers, they will have to sell the state certified medical cannabis. I hope they can still sell organic.

I was so worried about going in and buying products. I looked around to make sure there were no cops around across the street. The new law makes me feel like I'm a criminal. I looked in my rear view mirror quite a bit a first after leaving. It reminded me of the black market days. Then I was more relaxed about driving home. I have quite a bit of cannabis saved up. I'm ready for the apocalypse.:p
 
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