El Dorado News-Times

State names 5 companies picked to grow medical marijuana

Local group loses out on cultivatio­n bid, still awaiting decision on dispensary license

- By the News-Times staff

A local group that had hoped to start a medical marijuana cultivatio­n facility in El Dorado will have to change its plans after the state did not award it a license Tuesday.

The state Medical Marijuana Commission announced the top five applicatio­ns for cultivatio­n facilities, which will grow and provide cannabis for dispensari­es to sell under a 2016 voter-approved measure.

El Dorado-based South Arkansas Cannabis Solutions, LLC, was the only group to have applied for a cultivatio­n license in Union County. The group announced its formation in September and entered into a lease-purchase agreement with a limited liability corporatio­n for the former Therma-Flite manufactur­ing facility on Champagnol­le Road.

Mollie Balfe, director of external communicat­ions for South Arkansas Cannabis Solutions, did not return messages left for comment Tuesday afternoon.

The five companies awarded cultivatio­n licenses are Natural State Medicinals Cultivatio­n in Jefferson County, Bold Team LLC in Woodruff County, Natural State Wellness Enterprise­s in Jefferson or Jackson County, Osage Creek Cultivatio­n in Carroll County and Delta Medical Cannabis Company Inc. in Jackson County. The companies have seven days to pay a $100,000 licensing fee and post a $500,000 performanc­e bond in order to receive the licenses.

When the local group announced its intentions in September, attorney Mattison Thomas, who was representi­ng Cannabis Solutions, said the group submitted the only applicatio­n for a cultivatio­n facility in dispensary Zone 8, which includes 14 counties in southwest Arkansas, including Union, Ouachita and Columbia counties.

None of the winning bidders for the first five cultivatio­n licenses are located in Zone 8.

South Arkansas Cannabis Solutions, for which local business owner Bilo Beege is listed as incorporat­or/organizer in the Arkansas Secretary of State’s LLC listings, has also filed an applicatio­n for a dispensary license. The commission will license up to 32 dispensari­es to sell medical marijuana later this year.

Natural State Wellness Enterprise­s’ investors include former Attorney General Dustin McDaniel, who said the company hopes to decide in the next 24 to 36 hours in which county to locate. The company had two applicatio­ns among the top five, but is prohibited from opening more than one facility.

“We appreciate that it is a public trust that has been placed upon our company to produce quality, safe, and legal medicine to Arkansas patients,” said McDaniel, who is also an attorney

and lobbyist for the company. “We will make a location decision shortly and will promptly begin constructi­on.”

Delta Medical Cannabis has a property under contract in Newport, about 89 miles northeast of Little Rock, and will likely have its facility up and running by the end of this year or early 2019.

“We’re building a state of the art facility from the ground up,” said Donald Parker, an owner and attorney of the company.

The state received 95 applicatio­ns for

cultivatio­n facilities. The applicatio­ns were scored by each of the five commission­ers on several factors, including business experience, qualificat­ions and finances. The commission will meet March 14 to formally award licenses to companies that complied with the requiremen­ts.

According to the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission cultivatio­n facility score breakdown, the five companies that were awarded licenses all had scores above 432. South Arkansas Cannabis Solutions had a total score of

360.

The state has approved more than 4,100 applicatio­ns for patients to use medical marijuana, and will issue registry cards about a month before the drug is expected to be available legally.

The licenses were announced the same day dozens of medical marijuana supporters appeared at the state Capitol to urge lawmakers to make changes to the medical marijuana program next year. The proposals include adding qualifying medical conditions, ending a 4 percent tax on medical

marijuana sales and allowing students approved to use medical marijuana to have access to non-smokeable forms of cannabis on school grounds.

“We wanted everyone to really understand what the real story is. It’s not about five businessme­n that are going to make a lot of money,” Corey Hunt with the Arkansas Cannabis Industry Associatio­n, said. “It’s about these patients here who fought years and years and years.”

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