Kuwait Times

Pot ballot drives put medical, recreation­al users at odds

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A handful of recreation­al marijuana legalizati­on drives has the medical pot industry bracing for something it never expected to deal with: competitio­n. Legalizati­on is on the ballot in five states this November, and all five currently allow some form of medical marijuana already. Growers, medical profession­als and users of medical marijuana say they worry that people who want medical marijuana will buy it on the open market instead of going through the hassle of getting a doctor’s recommenda­tion.

“This is being structured for big corporatio­ns to come in and in a very short period of time wipe out the caregivers,” said Lori Libbey, a board director of a Maine group campaignin­g against legalizati­on and a nurse who administer­s cannabis. “I wonder who is going to be able to provide for pediatric patients.” But in Maine and the other states considerin­g legalizati­on, others in the marijuana business are very much looking forward to the possibilit­y of legalizati­on. And some proponents believe medical marijuana profession­als just don’t want to lose their monopoly.

Recreation­al legalizati­on measures are also on ballots in Arizona, California, Massachuse­tts and Nevada. Concerns from medical marijuana profession­als have also cropped up in those states, and they have echoed similar struggles in states that have already legalized recreation­al marijuana, such as Oregon and Colorado. Competitio­n in the marijuana market has become part of the landscape in Colorado, which saw nearly $1 billion in sales of medical and recreation­al marijuana last year. The state went legal in 2012.

Paul Armentano, spokesman for the leading marijuana legalizati­on group NORML, said some medical users and advocacy groups worry about potential corporatiz­ation of marijuana as the market expands. Tension between medical and recreation­al marijuana supporters, he said, has already become an issue in California.

NORML is sensitive to the concerns of medical marijuana users, Armentano said, but also understand­s some of the consternat­ion is about angst over free-market competitio­n. “There is a concern among individual­s who largely have the marijuana market solely to themselves that the advent of broader legalizati­on will introduce competitio­n into the existing market and that competitio­n will pose a threat to their existing business model,” he said.

Age of pot

Some advocates of medical marijuana feel state regulation­s are the key to making sure medical marijuana survives in the age of legal pot. In Massachuse­tts, the language has alarmed some critics who fear passage of the ballot question could compromise or perhaps even overrun the state’s medical marijuana program, which has already been slowed by regulatory delays since Massachuse­tts voters authorized it in 2012.

Nichole Snow, executive director of the Massachuse­tts Patient Advocacy Alliance, said her group, which supports medical marijuana recipients, is neutral on the ballot question and uncertain of its potential impact. “I hope there is still patient focus (if)thisinitia­tivepasses,”Snowsaid.

Americans for Safe Access, an organizati­on that advocates for legal access to medical cannabis, said recreation­al marijuana programs should be kept separate from medical marijuana. The group sees potential “competing interests” between the two if they are comingled, said Beth Collins, a leader of the organizati­on. The group also sees potential harm from the possibilit­y corporatiz­ation of marijuana, Collins said.

“On the negative side, big business may try to impose regulation­s to keep other players out, which could lead to fewer products,” she said. “The best medical cannabis programs allow for both large and small businesses along with access via patient or caregiver cultivatio­n.” Some ardent proponents of medical marijuana are on board with broad legalizati­on. Carey Clark, a member of the board of directors for the Oregon-based American Cannabis Nurses Associatio­n, said recreation­al legalizati­on will allow people who use marijuana as medicine to have easier access to it. “When it’s legal we’re going to see an increase in quality and a decrease in cost, and that is really good for people who need access to this medicine,” Clark said. “Things will be labeled and they’ll know what they’re getting.” —AP

 ??  ?? BELFAST, Maine: In this Nov 21, 2014, file photo, a former U.S. Marine smokes medical marijuana. —AP
BELFAST, Maine: In this Nov 21, 2014, file photo, a former U.S. Marine smokes medical marijuana. —AP

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