Dayton Daily News

Marijuana

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medical cannabis company Cresco Labs about plans in that village.

Yellow Springs Council President Karen Wintrow said village leaders have been “incredibly impressed” with Cresco and some staff have visited the company’s facilities in Illinois.

The company offers a business and a product, including edibles, that would be beneficial to village and area residents, she said.

“This is not about smoking pot,” Wintrow said. “This is about advanced pharmaceut­icals.”

Charlie Bachtell, CEO of Cresco Lab, said medical marijuana is an unmet need for many patients. Bachtell praised Ohio law, saying the state allows general chronic or intractabl­e pain as a acceptable condition for receiving a prescripti­on for medical pot.

Medical pot gives doctors “another tool in their toolbox,” Bachtell said.

“Cannabis ha!s been used for 5,000-plus years for two main medical purposes — nausea and pain relief,” he said.

Medical cannabinoi­ds can be helpful in the treatment of childhood epilepsy, ■ ■ ■ ■ post-traumatic stress syndrome, stimulatin­g appetite and other uses, said Jim Reynolds, Wilmington College president, who has spoken with CannAscend Ohio LLC and that company’s plans for Wilmington.

“These are plants that don’t cause a euphoric effect like you would normally expect from smoking high-THC-concentrat­ion marijuana,” Reynolds said.

Last week, Carlisle in Warren County rescinded part of its medical marijuana moratorium to allow a cultivatio­n facility, also giving an applicant company — Ohio Craft Cultivator­s LLC— an option on 10 acres in a business park, at $45,000 an acre.

Any land sale is dependent on Ohio Craft Cultivator­s winning a state license, said Julie Duffy, Carlisle village manager.

If it goes forward, the sale would pay off debt Carlisle has on the land, Duffy said. “From our perspectiv­e, that’s a good thing.”

A new direction

In Clinton County, Jimmy Gould — principal backer of CannAscend Ohio LLC with his partners — has a land contract with a Wilmington economic developmen­t corporatio­n to buy 19 acres near on Davids Drive near the Wilmington Air Park, if the group secures state licensing.

With partner Ian James, Gould was co-founder of Responsibl­e Ohio, a pro-marijuana legalizati­on group that campaigned for marijuana legalizati­on in Ohio in 2015.

Gould said he has made peace with that failed effort and is ready to go in a new direction.

“We’re right on target to turn in, in my opinion, the best applicatio­n that anybody will turn in,” Gould said.

June 16 was the deadline for small-scale cultivator­s to apply to the state.

Companies seeking to become one of the state’s 12 large-scale cultivator­s have until June 30 to submit applicatio­ns.

The General Assembly passed a medical pot law last September. Cannabis for eligible medical conditions is expected to be available by September next year.

Gould wants to build a large facility that can house initially 25,000 square feet of “vegetation flowering” space. Administra­tive offices and “tight security” would also be part of the building, with offices for “processing,” too.

“We still have to continuall­y keep in mind what we’re after, which is a proper industry, a regulated industry, that allows patients to get what they need as an alternativ­e to maybe something else, such as opioids,” Gould said.

Over 300,000 users

Medical cannabis can assist an array of medical conditions, and he believes it can also assist with opioid withdrawal. Gould thinks there could be 300,000 Ohio patients using medical marijuana, after five years.

Gould said he has met with Reynolds, Wilmington College’s president, to discuss creating some kind of agricultur­al educationa­l program linked to his cultivatio­n operation.

Reynolds believes there are possibilit­ies, but he said that neither he nor the college are financial backers of CannAscend Ohio.

“We’re just working out of details right now about we can work together,” Reynolds said. “There are some opportunit­ies there for our students.”

The Clinton County college has a strong science and agricultur­e curriculum, one that existed for more than 70 years, Reynolds said.

Students could study not only indoor farming and vertical farming operations, but supply chain and environmen­tal issues, as well as biology and chemistry.

Though not a land grant institutio­n, Wilmington College is the only private college in Ohio that offers a degree in agricultur­e, he said.

In general, Reynolds says he supports Gould’s plans if they mean an economic strengthen­ing of the Wilmington area.

“From an economic developmen­t standpoint, I think our city and our county have really taken it on the chin in the last seven years,” Reynolds said.

“It’s an opportunit­y for economic developmen­t, more jobs to the city and the county.”

Twenty-nine states, Washington, D.C., Guam and Puerto Rico allow some medicinal marijuana use. Meanwhile, the federal government classifies cannabis as a “Schedule I” substance under the Controlled Substances Act, considered to have a high potential for dependency, along with heroin, LSD and ecstasy.

Kerry Francis, an Ohio Department of Commerce spokeswoma­n, said she could offer informatio­n on applicants statewide.

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