Medicine Hat News

Oregon’s medical marijuana program admits to problems

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SALEM, Ore. The agency overseeing Oregon’s legal medical marijuana industry conceded in a report Thursday it has not provided effective oversight of growers and others in the industry, creating opportunit­ies for weed to be diverted to the black market.

The blunt internal review echoes complaints from federal authoritie­s that Oregon hasn’t adequately controlled its marijuana businesses, and that overproduc­tion of pot is feeding a black market in states that haven’t legalized it.

Oregon was one of the first states to legalize medical marijuana in 1998, and in 2014 voters approved allowing recreation­al use. The state’s struggle to transform a business that for decades had operated illegally in the shadows into a regulated industry sets an example for other states moving toward legalizati­on.

Oregon Health Authority Director Patrick Allen ordered the internal review amid complaints from state and local law enforcemen­t officials about lack of oversight of the pot industry. The health authority directs the state’s Medical Marijuana Program, while the Liquor Control Commission regulates recreation­al pot.

The review showed there were more than 20,000 grow sites, but only 58 inspection­s were carried out in 2017.

The Oregon Medical Marijuana Program has far too few inspectors, while the tracking of growers and the pot they produce has been inadequate and inaccurate, the report concluded.

“Potentiall­y erroneous reporting coupled with low reporting compliance makes it difficult to accurately track how much product is in the medical system,” the report said. “This limits OMMP’s ability to successful­ly identify and address potential diversion.”

Validation concerns

The report said the medical marijuana oversight agency lacks reliable, independen­t tools to validate grow site locations and relies on inconsiste­nt county databases.

Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s say they often have trouble identifyin­g which marijuana growers are legal. Seen from a helicopter just before harvest season, marijuana grows are like a green patchwork across one southweste­rn county, one drug enforcemen­t officer recalled.

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