Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

More medical pot licenses expected

State revamps applicatio­n process

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E – State health officials are preparing to revamp the applicatio­n process for medical-marijuana businesses, with the hope of issuing up to seven new licenses before the end of the year, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office told The News Service of Florida on Thursday.

The state Office of Medical Marijuana Use is expected to withdraw a series of proposed rules, which were never finalized, and restart the process with a new set of proposed regulation­s as early as May.

The start-from-scratch approach is another indication that DeSantis, a Republican who took office in January, is charting a markedly different medical-marijuana course than the much-maligned path adopted by his predecesso­r, former Gov. Rick Scott.

DeSantis’ administra­tion on Tuesday settled drawn-out litigation and agreed to award eight new medical marijuana licenses to applicants that lost out on the first round of licensing in 2015. That round was conducted under an initial state law that allowed noneuphori­c cannabis, before voters in 2016 approved a constituti­onal amendment that broadly legalized medical marijuana.

“Voters overwhelmi­ngly supported medical marijuana as a means to alleviate the pain of those who are suffering. These settlement­s help move the process forward and will increase patient access as approved by their doctors,” Helen Ferre, DeSantis’ communicat­ions director, said in an email.

The settlement­s this week left three licenses up for grabs, with another four looming on the horizon.

The number of highly soughtafte­r licenses is restricted by a 2017 law that was designed to carry out the constituti­onal amendment.

Under the 2017 law, health officials were required to issue licenses to applicants that had legal challenges pending as of January 2017 or who had scored within one point of the highest-ranked applicants in five regions of the state during the initial licensing round.

The law also required health officials to issue one license to a black farmer who had been involved in settled class-action lawsuits, known as the “Pigford” cases, about discrimina­tion against black farmers by the federal government.

In addition, the law required health officials to give preference to two applicants with ties to the citrus industry, a move that became the subject of a lawsuit. The state is expected to drop its appeal in the citrus case and allow the applicatio­n process to move forward, according to the governor’s office.

The 2017 law also set up a schedule for more new licenses to come online as the number of pa

tients who have qualified for medical marijuana increases. Under the law, four more licenses will be available once a patient database total reaches 300,000. With 200,000 patients currently in the database, state health officials predict the database will trigger four new licenses as early as October.

Not counting the blackfarme­r license, that could mean health officials will have six licenses to hand out by the time legal and administra­tive challenges, which will almost certainly be filed in response to the new proposed regulation­s, are resolved. Hundreds of potential operators are expected to apply.

The new applicatio­n process will create two tracks: one track for the black farmer license and another track for the two licenses that will take into considerat­ion the citrus preference and the four licenses linked to patient numbers.

While applicants with ties to the citrus industry will get a boost, that doesn’t necessaril­y mean any of them will wind up being granted licenses, the governor’s office stressed Thursday.

Lawmakers, patients and potential vendors seeking to enter Florida’s rapidly growing market had harshly criticized Scott and his administra­tion for delays in carrying out the medical marijuana law, accusing health officials of

dragging their feet due to Scott’s opposition to medical marijuana. Health officials, meanwhile, blamed many of the delays on legal and administra­tive challenges, which frequently resulted in rulings against the state and sent the Office of Medical Marijuana Use, which is part of the Department of Health, back to the drawing board.

In contrast, the DeSantis administra­tion pressured lawmakers into repealing the state’s ban on smokable medical marijuana. The

governor sided with backers of the amendment and a Tallahasse­e judge, who said the smoking ban ran afoul of the Constituti­on.

Tuesday’s settlement­s with the eight applicants — which will boost the number of medical marijuana operators in Florida from 14 to 22 — put an end to drawn-out litigation over the “one-pointer” litigation.

Also, dropping the appeal in the citrus case will be instrument­al in allowing the new applicatio­n process to begin, a move anxiously

awaited by investors seeking entry to what could be one of the nation’s largest medical marijuana markets.

The new applicatio­n process also is expected to address many of the concerns raised over the past two years, including from the Legislatur­e’s Joint Administra­tive Procedures Committee, which oversees state agency rules. Late last year, the committee strenuousl­y objected to numerous features of a proposed applicatio­n.

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