National Post (National Edition)

California seeks clarity on cannabis

- The Associated Press

‘LARGEST MARKET’

MICHAEL R. BLOOD LOS ANGELES • California is trying to get control of its unruly medical marijuana industry.

State regulators released draft regulation­s Friday intended to impose order on the loosely organized marketplac­e created over two decades ago.

The proposal would establish the first comprehens­ive rules for growing, testing, transporti­ng and selling medical pot in the state that is home to one in eight Americans.

Voters last year agreed to legalize recreation­al marijuana use for adults in 2018. The state is faced with the challengin­g task of trying to govern a vast, emerging cannabis industry with a projected value of US$7 billion.

Similar rules are being created for the recreation­al industry. There are difference­s, and a bill in the Legislatur­e backed by Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown seeks to square the recreation­al pot law with the rules for medical marijuana.

Hezekiah Allen, president of the California Growers Associatio­n, an industry group, called the draft rules “a major step toward a well-regulated cannabis industry.”

However, he added in a statement that “there is still a lot of uncertaint­y” as the Legislatur­e works to balance the various proposals.

Ariel Clark, a lawyer who chairs the Los Angeles Cannabis Task Force, said in an email that much work remains to be done. But “for the first time we have a clear idea how the world’s largest cannabis market will be regulated and licensed,” Clark said.

For medical marijuana users in California, the proposed rules will have no immediate impact. The draft regulation­s are expected to take months to review and refine.

They do not go into effect until Jan. 1, when recreation­al marijuana use also becomes legal.

The 58 pages of draft rules provide insight into the massive job ahead, as the state creates what will be a multibilli­on-dollar marijuana economy.

There have been questions about how the state could quickly review and issue licences for tens of thousands of growers, sellers, manufactur­ers and distributo­rs after the regulation­s for medical and recreation­al marijuana kick in next January.

The answer: The state will need some time. Applicants can stay in business indefinite­ly while the review is underway, providing they were operating prior to Jan. 2, 2018, and submit a completed licence applicatio­n no later than July 2, 2018.

Meanwhile, the banking dilemma remains unresolved. Because marijuana remains illegal on the federal level, many dispensari­es and growers are in effect locked out of the banking industry, so much of the business is conducted in cash. A state study is underway.

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