Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

State officials have pot plan

Medical marijuana rules move ahead

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

After state lawmakers failed to act, health officials on Thursday laid out a framework for adopting regulation­s required by a voter-approved constituti­onal amendment that could make Florida one of the nation’s largest medical-marijuana markets.

The Florida Department of Health on Thursday issued a “Notice of Regulation Developmen­t Procedure” establishi­ng the process the agency intends to use to carry out Amendment 2, given a thumbsup by more than 71 percent of voters in November.

The amendment gave doctors the authority to order marijuana for a broad swath of patients with debilitati­ng condi- tions, including cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, HIV, AIDS, post-traumatic stress disorder, amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, Crohn’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis.

Doctors also have 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.”

During the legislativ­e session that ended May 8, lawmakers failed to reach agreement on a measure to carry out the constituti­onal amendment. A key sticking point involved a cap on the number of retail outlets the state’s licensed medical-marijuana operators would be allowed to run.

Currently, Florida’s seven medical marijuana operators

can open an unlimited number of dispensari­es. That’s based on a 2014 law, intended to provide non-euphoric cannabis treatment for children with severe epilepsy. That law paved the way for the state’s medical marijuana industry.

The industry is expected to explode after the passage of the constituti­onal amendment, under which at least 420,000 patients in Florida could be eligible for medical marijuana, according to the most recent health department estimates.

The regulation-creating process proposed Thursday by the Department of Health is a shift from typical proceeding­s, governed by Florida administra­tive law.

The constituti­onal amendment gives health officials until July 3 to craft rules to implement the amendment and until Oct. 3 to put the rules into effect.

But typical administra­tive-law procedures include timelines for challenges and revisions that could push finalizati­on of the department’s regulation­s far beyond the constituti­onal deadlines.

Under the process proposed by the agency on Thursday, health officials would give notice 15 days before adopting a new rule. The public would have three days to weigh in on the proposal.

The framework, which would do away with the administra­tive-law process, lacks guidelines for how to challenge or appeal agency decisions about the pot regulation­s. The implementa­tion scheme also apparently does away with a proposed rule that health officials floated earlier this year to try to implement the amendment.

The proposal comes amid bipartisan demands that lawmakers revisit the medical marijuana issue during a special session. The could be unlikely to happen unless Gov. Rick Scott vetoes portions of the budget, forcing the Legislatur­e to come back to Tallahasse­e for issues other than pot.

In a telephone interview Thursday with The News Service of Florida, Sen. Rob Bradley, a Fleming Island Republican who was instrument­al in passing the state’s 2014 non-euphoric cannabis law and who remains a major player on medical-marijuana issues, credited the health department’s attempts to move forward with regulation­s to meet the July deadline.

But Bradley said he feared the department would develop regulation­s built on current Florida law — finalized before the constituti­onal amendment went into effect —while awaiting guidance from the Legislatur­e.

If so, agency officials likely won’t revisit key issues such as a required 90-day waiting period before doctors are able to order marijuana treatment, something patients have strenuousl­y objected to.

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