Times Colonist

Keeping candies away from kids

Colorado’s edible pot industry goes from public enemy to public-health leader, and wants Canada to take note

- LAURA KANE

BOULDER, Colorado — A tray of tempting pastel-coloured candies sits on a countertop inside AmeriCanna’s production facility. Although shaped like pot leaves and stamped with Colorado’s universal symbol for the mindalteri­ng ingredient in cannabis — a diamond containing the letters “THC” — the gummies would only provide a sugar high at this point.

Working with precision and speed, the kitchen supervisor uses a device to soak each candy with marijuana extract, so that each piece contains exactly 10 milligrams of THC, a single dose under the state’s regulation­s.

The entire process takes seconds, but it represents the culminatio­n of a long regulatory journey for Colorado’s edible marijuana industry. AmeriCanna owner Dan Anglin wants Canada to learn from it.

“I’ve heard it all. I know what they’re going to say before they say it. ‘What about kids who are at a party and somebody gives them weed candy?’ OK, well, if you create a symbol like Colorado did, it gives them an opportunit­y to educate the public,” Anglin said.

“It’s very easy to have a government commercial that says: ‘Here’s what you’re looking for, mom and dad, when you go through your teenager’s backpack.’ Or: ‘Are you at a party? Did somebody hand you something? Well, if it has this symbol on it, then that’s drugs.’ ”

Although many might assume inhaling hot smoke into your lungs would be the greater public health concern than marijuana candies, it was the edible industry that caused the greatest amount of debate after Colorado legalized pot in 2012. Today, the state is a leader in packaging and dosage rules, and officials and businesses say Canada should take notes.

The Canadian government has said when marijuana becomes legal on July 1, 2018, sales will entail only fresh and dried cannabis, oils and seeds and plants for cultivatio­n. Sales of edibles will come later, once regulation­s for production and sale can be developed.

When Colorado’s first recreation­al pot dispensari­es opened in January 2014, there were practicall­y no restrictio­ns on edibles. They were packaged in clear bags, Anglin said, and the cookies and brownies inside often looked identical to any other sugary treat. There was also no standardiz­ed dose, so a consumer who didn’t pace him or herself could accidental­ly ingest a whopping 100 milligrams of THC.

In 2014, the Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center received 87 marijuana exposure calls about children and youth under 18, nearly doubling the total for the previous year. A Wyoming college student jumped to his death from a balcony after eating infused cookies. New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd wrote about her harrowing trip after consuming too much of a pot-laced candy bar. All of these incidents grabbed national headlines and sent industry and officials into a tailspin.

“When we first started, we really had no idea what the world of edibles would look like,” said Dr. Larry Wolk, chief medical officer of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t. “We had to quickly consider all of that as we put those rules into place.”

With input from business owners, including Anglin, the state developed packaging, labelling and potency restrictio­ns that came into effect in 2015. Now, edibles must be contained in childresis­tant packaging and be wrapped individual­ly or demarcated in servings of 10 or fewer milligrams of THC.

The state has also banned cartoon characters on packaging, and edibles cannot be shaped like humans, fruit or animals — so no more gummies in the shape of bears. It later required all edibles to be individual­ly marked with the universal THC symbol.

“We were ahead of the curve on that,” said Anglin, whose company began selling symbol-marked candies months before the rule came into force last October.

“A lot of companies that, say, were small, mom-and-pop companies that didn’t have millions of dollars behind them, who weren’t paying attention to the news — it was a surprise to them. They couldn’t afford to continue to make that product.”

Figures from the Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center suggest child-poisoning calls involving marijuana have started to come down. There were 82 calls about kids and youth under 18 in 2016, down from 111 the previous year.

“That pales in comparison to the thousands of calls we get when kids ingest alcohol, or when kids ingest over-the-counter medication­s or even prescripti­on medication­s,” Wolk said.

Wolk said the transforma­tion of edible packaging and dosage rules in Colorado has been a success, largely due to co-operation between industry and government. He advised Canada to start small by allowing low-dose THC in predictabl­e servings.

Inside the Cannabis Station dispensary in downtown Denver, manager Mike Koulouvari­s shows off the store’s wide variety of THC-infused candies, gummies and drinks. He carefully instructs how much to eat and how long to wait before nibbling on more.

Koulouvari­s, a former edibles chef, said he believes the products shouldn’t taste too good, so people aren’t tempted to overeat. At the same time, he said he thinks the regulation­s have gone too far.

“It’s limiting creativity,” he said. “It should be the responsibi­lity of the parents to make sure that their stuff isn’t lying around, rather than making it be in child-resistant containers. I don’t think alcohol is in child-resistant containers.”

 ??  ?? A marijuana plant at the AmeriCanna Edibles facility in Boulder, Colorado. Each candy will contain 10 milligrams of THC, the mind-altering ingredient in cannabis.
A marijuana plant at the AmeriCanna Edibles facility in Boulder, Colorado. Each candy will contain 10 milligrams of THC, the mind-altering ingredient in cannabis.
 ??  ?? Kitchen supervisor Thomas Slone and kitchen associate Jamie Johnson infuse candy with marijuana extract at AmeriCanna Edibles.
Kitchen supervisor Thomas Slone and kitchen associate Jamie Johnson infuse candy with marijuana extract at AmeriCanna Edibles.

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