Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Proposed marijuana rules draw fire

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

Authors of Florida’s voter-approved constituti­onal amendment that broadly legalized medical marijuana are blasting proposed rules to regulate the cannabis industry.

The proposed rules, released Tuesday by state health officials, would essentiall­y maintain current vendors’ strangleho­ld on the medical marijuana industry — poised to become one of the nation’s top money-makers — by applying current Florida laws and rules to the constituti­onal amendment approved in November.

“The rule is basically ignoring the text of the constituti­onal amendment at almost every point of the way,” Ben Pollara, campaign manager of the political committee backing the amendment, said in a telephone interview Tuesday.

While medical marijuana was already a legal treatment for terminally ill patients in Florida, Amendment 2 authorized marijuana for a much broader swath of patients. More than 70 percent of voters supported the amendment, after a similar proposal narrowly failed to capture the requisite 60 percent approval two years earlier.

But applying current regulation­s to Amendment 2 — which includes specific requiremen­ts for how the amendment should be implemente­d — is wrong, Pollara insisted.

Of special concern to the amendment’s authors, the proposed rule would give authority to the Florida Board of Medicine — and not individual doctors — to decide which patients qualify for the marijuana treatment.

The amendment allows doctors to order medical marijuana as a treatment for patients with cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, HIV, AIDS, post-traumatic stress disorder, amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS), Crohn’s disease, Parkinson’s disease or multiple sclerosis.

The ballot language gives doctors the power to order marijuana for “other debilitati­ng medical conditions of the same kind or class as or comparable to those enumerated, and for which a physician believes that the medical use of marijuana would likely outweigh the potential health risks for a patient.”

In contrast, the proposed rule would limit the unspecifie­d conditions to those “determined by the Florida Board of Medicine,” something Pollara called the regulation’s “single most problemati­c” component.

“This is not one of those things that is up for interpreta­tion by a court or anyone else,” Pollara said.

Among other issues, the proposed rule would maintain the state’s current cap on marijuana vendors, limited now to seven licensed “dispensing organizati­ons,” to treat an estimated 500,000 patients who would be eligible under Amendment 2.

While the proposed language may be amenable to the handful of operators already doing business in the state, the plan is anathema to those hoping to gain entry into Florida under Amendment 2’s expansion of the industry.

“It looks like the Department of Health is protecting the existing monopolies. I hope the Legislatur­e chooses to act in creating a free-market system. The Legislatur­e has a chance to change that,” said Ron Watson, a lobbyist who represents AltMed, a Sarasotaba­sed company founded by former pharmaceut­ical industry executives who have obtained a medical marijuana license in Arizona and are seeking one in Florida.

The health department will hold public hearings to take input on the rule during the second week of February, with meetings in Jacksonvil­le, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa, Orlando and Tallahasse­e.

Department of Health spokeswoma­n Mara Gambineri said state officials “look forward to receiving input from all interested stakeholde­rs” about the proposed rule.

“That’s why we’re having the five public meetings,” supplement­ed by the ability to provide comments online, she said.

“We look forward to everybody’s contributi­ons,” Gambineri said.

Sen. Rob Bradley, who shepherded the state’s medical-marijuana laws during the 2014 and 2016 legislativ­e sessions, said he intends to release a new measure as early as this week.

“I interpret the actions today from the department as a beginning point, a foundation from which to build the medical cannabis system that we’re going to have in the state of Florida,” Bradley, R-Fleming Island, told The News Service of Florida. “I would caution everyone not to overreact to the actions of the department. You have to start somewhere.”

Amendment 2 may have forced health officials to move forward with a proposed rule before the Legislatur­e weighs in. It gives health officials until July 3 to finalize regulation­s to implement the constituti­onal change.

“That’s the law. We have to follow the law,” Gambineri said.

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