Austin American-Statesman

Texas issues first medical pot license

Florida company plans facility in Schulenbur­g; 2 firms near approval.

- By Bob Sechler bsechler@statesman.com

A Florida company has made history by winning the first Texas license to grow, process and sell a form of medical marijuana in the state — but only for patients suffering from a rare form of epilepsy.

Cansortium Texas, a division of Florida-based Cansortium Holdings, which sells medical cannabis under the Knox Medical brand, was awarded the license Friday and will operate a facility on West U.S. 90 in Schulenbur­g.

Two other companies — Compassion­ate Cultivatio­n, which is retrofitti­ng a 7,200-square-foot warehouse in Manchaca with customized growing and pro- cessing equipment, and Surterra Texas, which will operate on Wells Branch Parkway in North Austin — are expected to be awarded state licenses soon after final reviews by the Texas Department of Public Safety, rounding out the three medical cannabis licenses that the agency has said it will issue.

José Hidalgo, chief executive of privately held Cansortium Holdings, said he was “humbled” to receive the first Texas license, adding in an interview that Cansortium is committed “to establishi­ng the industry and to becoming the most respected company in the medical cannabis space.” Cansortium already has medical cannabis licenses in Florida, Pennsylvan­ia and Puerto Rico.

The Texas licenses won’t equate to quick profits, however, and success in Texas over the long haul

might depend as much on the Legislatur­e as on business acumen. Cansortium and the two other companies expected to operate in Texas are facing strict state regulation­s that limit their customer bases solely to patients with intractabl­e epilepsy and that constrain how they formulate their products — on top of investment costs running into the millions of dollars.

“It is safe to say that it is a challengin­g market,” said Morris Denton, chief executive of Compassion­ate Cultivatio­n.

Denton said an initial goal for his company will be to prove that medical marijuana can be dispensed safely in Texas and that it is beneficial, with the aim of persuading state leaders to make it available to patients suffering from a wider variety of ailments in coming years.

Hidalgo said Cansortium considers the market among Texas patients suffering from intractabl­e epilepsy potentiall­y lucrative enough and didn’t opt to expand into the state because of the prospect that additional medical conditions eventually will be made eligible.

Still, he said he considers it likely that future discussion­s among the state’s leaders regarding medical marijuana will revolve around “what conditions and for what reasons they are considerin­g expanding” its availabili­ty.

“I think it remains to be seen what will happen (in Texas), but the evidence is out there,” Hidalgo said.

Proponents in Texas already are anticipati­ng a major push during the next regular session of the Legislatur­e in 2019 to try to increase patient access to medical cannabis. Some industry experts have said the Texas market for medical cannabis could rival California’s estimated $2.8 billion market, if restrictio­ns are loosened and it becomes more widely available.

The state licenses — giving the companies green lights to begin growing medical cannabis — are being issued under the Texas Compassion­ate Use Act, which was approved by the Legislatur­e and signed into law by Gov. Greg Abbott in 2015.

Cannabis group files complaint on rollout

The companies were selected from 43 applicants for conditiona­l approval in May, triggering a series of inspection­s of their facilities leading up to final licensing.

The Texas Cannabis Industry Associatio­n recently filed a formal complaint regarding the rollout of the program with the DPS, which is in charge of regulating it, and with Abbott.

The group’s complaint — endorsed by 10 of the unsuccessf­ul applicants — seeks issuance of an additional nine dispensary licenses, beyond the minimum of three mandated by the Compassion­ate Use Act, and accuses Abbott of “a conscious ongoing effort to severely undermine” the program.

Neither Abbott nor DPS representa­tives have commented on the complaint.

As things stand, each of the three companies selected for licenses is required to pay a $488,520 fee upon final approval, followed by a license renewal fee of $318,511 in two years if they want to stay in business. The fees are designed to cover the cost of regulating the new industry, state officials have said.

The Compassion­ate Use Act legalized the production and sale of cannabidio­l, an oil derived from the cannabis plant that doesn’t produce a high, by the state-licensed dispensari­es.

But the law limits use of the oil, commonly called CBD, to certain patients suffering from intractabl­e epilepsy — and only if they have a doctor’s prescripti­on for it and already have tried two convention­al drug treatments that proved to be ineffectiv­e.

Observers of the burgeoning legal marijuana industry in the U.S. say the new Texas law is significan­tly more restrictiv­e than medical marijuana laws in the 29 other states that have enacted them.

“We have not yet seen any other state try to launch a medical cannabis program based solely on a single condition,” said John Kagia, executive vice president for industry analytics at New Frontier Data, a cannabis market research firm based in Washington. “Under the (Texas) law as it is currently structured, it is going to remain a fairly narrow, constraine­d market. It is going to be a relatively limited business environmen­t.”

The Epilepsy Foundation Texas has pegged the number of Texans with intractabl­e epilepsy at about 150,000.

But only a fraction are expected to meet the Compassion­ate Use Act’s eligibilit­y requiremen­ts for CBD, want to try it and know a doctor willing to write a prescripti­on for it.

New Frontier Data hasn’t yet estimated the monetary value of the Texas medical cannabis market under the new law, but Kagia said it’s just a sliver of what it could be.

He said a broad medical marijuana program in Texas could put the state’s market in the same ballpark as the California medical marijuana market — the largest in the country and on track to hit nearly $2.8 billion in sales this year. The potential is why the nascent Texas market has drawn so much interest, he said.

Texas “could be an enormously substantia­l market” because of its size and population, Kagia said. “It could be right up there in the top tier of state markets” for medical cannabis.

Tight restrictio­ns on potency in Texas

To emulate California, however, Texas would have to make cannabis-derived products accessible by many more patients suffering a much greater variety of ailments, and it would have to lift constraint­s on the amount of tetrahydro­cannabinol­s, or THC, they are allowed to contain.

THC induces a high, but advocates say it also has therapeuti­c effects for patients with chronic pain, autism, post-traumatic stress disorder and other medical conditions.

The Compassion­ate Use Act allows CBD oil produced by the licensed Texas dispensari­es to contain no more than 0.5 percent THC, which is barely above the trace THC content in over-the-counter CBD oils that some out-ofstate companies already sell in Texas.

For comparison, marijuana for recreation­al purposes generally contains 9 percent to more than 30 percent THC.

Heather Fazio, a proponent of marijuana legalizati­on, said the low THC cap in the Texas medical cannabis law will limit the effectiven­ess of the CBD oils produced under it, because the components of the plant are most therapeuti­c when they work together.

“It’s a touch better than what we have now” in terms of THC content, said Fazio, Texas political director for the Marijuana Policy Project, a national nonprofit group focused on reforming marijuana laws. “We said from the beginning that this isn’t going to help people much more than they can already get.”

Eyes on the future

She said the companies that have been vying to operate the new Texas dispensari­es clearly have their eyes on the future.

“These first few years are not going to be very profitable, and it is going to be more about being first and establishi­ng your brand” in advance of a hoped-for expansion of the law, Fazio said.

There’s no guarantee when or if or that will happen, however.

Dozens of patients and caregivers from around Texas traveled to the Capitol to advocate for increased availabili­ty of medical marijuana during the regular legislativ­e session that ended in May — delivering personal testimony to lawmakers regarding their inability to obtain relief using convention­al medical treatments — but bills that would have substantia­lly expanded upon the Compassion­ate Use Act never came up for votes by either the full Senate or House.

While another push is in the works for the 2019 legislativ­e session, the newly minted Texas dispensari­es must make substantia­l investment­s before knowing if it will be successful.

Neither Cansortium’s Hidalgo nor Compassion­ate Cultivatio­n’s Denton would give specifics on what they have spent to get their Texas facilities up and running, although both pegged the sums in the millions of dollars. Surterra Texas — a division of Surterra Wellness, an Atlanta company — didn’t make an executive available for comment.

“If we were trying to run this business to be profitable (indefinite­ly under the existing constraint­s of the Compassion­ate Use Act), we probably would not start with a facility of this size,” Denton said of the Manchaca operation.

Still, he said he thinks his company could turn “a narrow profit” under the current law, provided the business is “managed very efficientl­y.” Denton, an Austin native, began Compassion­ate Cultivatio­n with five partners.

Hidalgo said he’s confident Cansortium’s Texas subsidiary can be operated profitably under the state’s existing constraint­s.

The company expects to start cultivatin­g medical cannabis at the Schulenbur­g facility this month, he said, with CBD products available by the end of the year.

“If this is the way that it stays, there is a very large population” of people with intractabl­e epilepsy who can be served, Hidalgo said.

 ?? RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN 2015 ?? Mardy Ollervidez and his wife, Cristina Limas Ollervidez, attend a rally in support of medical marijuana and the Compassion­ate Use Act at the Capitol in 2015. Their 5-yearold daughter, Lailah, suffers from Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and severe seizures...
RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN 2015 Mardy Ollervidez and his wife, Cristina Limas Ollervidez, attend a rally in support of medical marijuana and the Compassion­ate Use Act at the Capitol in 2015. Their 5-yearold daughter, Lailah, suffers from Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and severe seizures...

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