Boston Herald

Curaleaf does Ice Bucket Challenge

Had worked with Pete Frates on medical marijuana use

- By erin Tiernan

The cannabis company that partnered with Ice Bucket Challenge founder Pete Frates to raise awareness about the benefits of medical marijuana as he battled ALS is paying it forward by sponsoring an ice bucket challenge of its own this month.

More than 200 employees at Curaleaf Holdings’ seven dispensari­es in Massachuse­tts will take the icy plunge this month– August is Ice Bucket Challenge Month in Massachuse­tts — to help raise money for amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, the degenerati­ve neurologic­al condition the former Boston College baseball captain was diagnosed with in 2012.

“We know how important Pete Frates was to the BC community and to the world,” said Curaleaf CEO Joe Lusardi. The challenge is the company’s way of keeping “Pete’s mission and memory alive,” Lusardi said.

Curaleaf is extending participat­ion to its 3,100 employees nationwide “so we can one day end ALS,” said Lusardi, who like Frates is a Boston College graduate. The company will also make a corporate donation in support of a cure for ALS.

Frates used medicinal marijuana to treat severe anxiety and other medical conditions that came with his diagnosis. Frates partnered with Curaleaf to raise awareness in the ALS community about the benefits of medicinal cannabis .

“We are grateful for all the support that Curaleaf has shown for our family,” Julie Frates, Pete Frates’ wife, said in a statement. “Pete understood the need for greater access to medical cannabis for thousands of ALS patients like him who continue to battle this horrific disease.”

Curaleaf Massachuse­tts President Patrik Jonsson said the challenge is a tribute to Pete and his family who “have made it their mission to help ALS patients and their families here in Massachuse­tts, across the country and around the globe.”

“Like our company, the Frates family remains focused on cultivatin­g health and wellness and improving people’s lives through advocacy and education,” said Jonsson, also a Boston College graduate.

Frates lost his eight-year battle with ALS in 2019, but his legacy has lived on in the viral ice bucket challenge he inspired.

The social media sensation has generated more than $220 million to fight the deadly disease and spread awareness of the rare condition throughout the world.

 ?? COuRTESy CuRAlEAf ?? CHILLING OUT: Curaleaf staff members in Provinceto­wn participat­e in a colorful version of the Ice Bucket Challenge.
COuRTESy CuRAlEAf CHILLING OUT: Curaleaf staff members in Provinceto­wn participat­e in a colorful version of the Ice Bucket Challenge.

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