Sentinel & Enterprise

State compiles pot catalog

- By Colin A. Young

The Cannabis Control Commission is launching an online catalog of the myriad marijuana products available at the state’s pot shops and dispensari­es to help cops, parents and regulators alike tell the difference between what’s legal, and what’s not.

The first-in-the-nation regulators’ catalog won’t exactly compete with Leafly and Weedmaps — so don’t expect genetic informatio­n or flavor profiles.

Instead, the idea is to compile basic informatio­n and photos in one place so that police, regulators, consumers, and parents can get a better sense of the type of products that are part of the still-young legal cannabis world, and can tell the difference between what’s legal and what’s not.

“When using the Product Catalog, any visitor, such as a par

ent, school nurse, or public safety official, will be able to quickly distinguis­h whether a marijuana product is available in our legal marketplac­e or not,” CCC Executive Director Shawn Collins said. “Licensees are strictly prohibited from producing marijuana products or packaging that appeals to children, including anything that would resemble a popular candy brand. I am confident this tool will support our ongoing efforts to expand public awareness in Massachuse­tts while promoting public health and safety.”

The commission launched the catalog Monday with a limited set of capabiliti­es.

Once it’s fully operationa­l, users will be able to search by product name, keyword, product category and other identifier­s to verify the ingredient­s, packaging and labels, potency, retail locations, and more about state-sanctioned cannabis buds, vape products, edibles, pre-rolls and topicals.

Regulation­s prohibit edibles that are in the “distinct shape of a human, animal, fruit, or sportingeq­uipment item; or … including artistic, caricature, or cartoon renderings” in an attempt to block products that might appeal to children.

The idea for a database of products approved for sale in Massachuse­tts came about in 2018 after members of the CCC balked at a licensee’s request to manufactur­e pot-infused cake pops.

“I can say that, literally, the only people I’ve ever seen with a cake pop in my life are my 8-year-old and my 5-year-old,” Britte McBride, then a member of the CCC, said at the time.

Collins has said the catalog would have come in handy in the fall of 2019, when the CCC banned the sale of vaping products amid a national outbreak of vaping-related lung disease.

He said the CCC “did not have the ability to search any database whatsoever of all ingredient­s that were included and specifical­ly we didn’t have the ability to search for Vitamin E acetate,” which federal public health officials identified as a possible culprit in the illnesses.

 ?? JOHN LOVE / SENTINEL
& ENTERPRISE FILE ?? Revolution­ary Clinics produces these soft gummy chews that are infused with precise a dose of THC. They are produced at the cannibis cultivatio­n facility in Fitchburg.
JOHN LOVE / SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE FILE Revolution­ary Clinics produces these soft gummy chews that are infused with precise a dose of THC. They are produced at the cannibis cultivatio­n facility in Fitchburg.
 ?? JOHN LOVE / SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE FILE ?? Revolution­ary Clinics's David Haley is shown trimming the flower in the Fitchburg facility's trimming room in November.
JOHN LOVE / SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE FILE Revolution­ary Clinics's David Haley is shown trimming the flower in the Fitchburg facility's trimming room in November.
 ?? JOHN LOVE / SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE FILE ?? Revolution­ary Clinics' strawberry cheese cake edibles are waiting to packaged kitchen at its facility in Fitchburg in November.
JOHN LOVE / SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE FILE Revolution­ary Clinics' strawberry cheese cake edibles are waiting to packaged kitchen at its facility in Fitchburg in November.

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