Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Advocate takes marijuana plan off table till 2024

Three competing proposals addressed recreation­al use

- RACHEL HERZOG

Arkansas medical marijuana patient advocate Melissa Fults has scrapped her recreation­al cannabis amendment petition in favor of waiting until 2024 and advocating against another recreation­al proposal in the meantime.

Fults filed the Arkansas Adult Use and Expungemen­t Marijuana Amendment in November. In an interview last month, she said she wanted to focus her efforts on working against the Arkansas Adult Use Cannabis Amendment, which is backed by a ballot question committee funded largely by existing medical marijuana cultivator­s.

“We’ve been working so hard trying to stop the cultivator­s,” she said. “You can’t fight on that many fronts.”

She has said she believes that amendment would allow large cultivator­s to profit while squeezing out the competitio­n and jeopardize the medical program, and criticized it for not including an expungemen­t provision for people with marijuana-related charges on their records. She has a lot of volunteers prepared to oppose it, she said.

Fults’ amendment would also allow for a number of cannabis businesses proportion­al to the state’s population, while the amendment backed by Responsibl­e Growth Arkansas would first award cultivatio­n and dispensary licenses to existing businesses.

Petitions must gather 89,151 signatures, or 10% of the total votes cast for governor in the 2018 general election, by July 8 to qualify for the November ballot. Fults said she didn’t feel she had sufficient time to get enough signatures before the deadline.

She added that the 2024 ballot includes the presidenti­al election, which typically brings higher voter turnout.

Responsibl­e Growth Arkansas chairman Eddie Armstrong said criticism of the amendment is just encouragem­ent to work harder. He said the amendment would help patients by lowering prices while meeting demand, and that the amendment was developed by bringing industry groups and government leaders to the table.

“The industry is a new industry, so there are lots of bumps and bruises along the way when you’re building something new,” Armstrong said.

He said the effort has gathered more than 50,000 valid signatures.

A spokeswoma­n for a third recreation­al marijuana effort, Arkansas True Grass, said it was likely that Arkansas Recreation­al Marijuana Amendment of 2022 would also be pushed back to 2024. That amendment would not cap the number of marijuana businesses and automatica­lly release people who are incarcerat­ed solely because of a marijuana-related charge.

Briana Boling said Wednesday that the group would make a call by the end of the month and cited the difficulty of gathering signatures with a solely volunteer-driven effort. She said the group had gathered about half of the signatures needed.

“So that’s pretty good for a volunteer effort,” she said.

She added that the group had plans for a more organized effort in 2024, which include keeping up with the volunteer database and having monthly meetings and training sessions.

Meanwhile, Responsibl­e Growth Arkansas has raised more than $1.82 million and spent nearly $630,000 toward promoting the Arkansas Adult Use Cannabis Amendment, according to a report filed with the Arkansas Ethics Commission last month.

Arkansas voters approved Amendment 98, which created the state’s medical marijuana program, in 2016. The first dispensari­es in the state opened in 2019; there are now 38 in operation.

A poll from Talk Business & Politics and Hendrix College published Feb. 15 showed majority support among Arkansas voters for broadening the legalizati­on of marijuana. About 53% of 961 likely voters surveyed said marijuana should be legal for all adults 21 and older.

Currently, a simple public majority is required for approval of proposed constituti­onal amendments and initiated acts, but a proposal from the Legislatur­e set to be on the ballot in November would raise that threshold to 60% if it is approved.

Since 2019, patients have spent more than $639 million to obtain 98,793 pounds of medical cannabis, according to state Department of Finance and Administra­tion spokesman Scott Hardin.

Medical marijuana patients spent $24 million at dispensari­es in April, obtaining 4,213 pounds of cannabis. On average, patients are spending $22.45 million each month across the state’s 38 dispensari­es to purchase approximat­ely 3,919 pounds, according to DFA.

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