The Columbus Dispatch

MARIJUANA

- Mschladen@dispatch.com @martyschla­den

growers last year, one disappoint­ed bidder, Cincinnati businessma­n Jimmy Gould, conducted background checks and discovered that a consultant in the screening process had been convicted of drug crimes. When that came to light, Williams didn’t admit any mistakes; she said her department wasn’t required to do background checks of vendors.

That response was woefully inadequate in the eyes of Ohio Auditor Dave Yost.

“That’s not acknowledg­ing a mistake; it’s defending what you did and saying it’s all right,” he said last week.

A subsequent review by his office revealed that inadequate computer security could have allowed applicatio­ns to be altered, underminin­g confidence in their scoring.

Gould and 19 other would-be growers are suing, saying among other things that five companies that received provisiona­l licenses didn’t meet threshold requiremen­ts, such as having adequate setbacks from schools and other stipulated locales. And 60 of the 109 companies that applied for 12 large-grow licenses have filed administra­tive appeals of their rejections, Gould’s lawyers say.

Earlier this month, after months of scrutiny and criticism, the Commerce Department itself admitted that it mishandled applicatio­ns in a way that rejected a company that should have been selected. The department said it would look for a way to create an additional license for it after Sept. 8.

But for Yost and at least one state lawmaker, it’s too little, too late. Sen.

Bill Coley, R-West Chester, filed legislatio­n last week that would require Yost’s office to audit the way applicatio­ns for medical marijuana licenses have been handled by the Commerce Department before any sales can begin.

“What I think I’m seeing in the legislatio­n is a serious crisis of confidence in the willingnes­s and competence of the Department of Commerce to operate this program,” Yost said. Coley agreed. “Right now, I think it’s a culminatio­n of a lot of mistakes,” he said.

Senate Bill 264 would require Yost to complete an audit within 30 days of its effective date, and it would require the Commerce Department to implement its recommenda­tions. He said he thinks he can get the bill passed by the end of March.

“I don’t think it has to delay the September start” of the medical marijuana program, Coley said.

Yost also doesn’t want to delay the start of the program. In a letter to Williams last week, he said that would be unfair to businesses that have invested in medical marijuana cultivatio­n.

But one group, the National Cannabis Industry Associatio­n of Ohio, said Coley’s bill would delay the availabili­ty of medical marijuana in Ohio.

“Auditor Yost made clear in his letter to the Ohio Department of Commerce that he did not want to prolong patient suffering by putting Ohio’s Medical Marijuana Control Program on hold while he completes his audit. Senate Bill 264 would do just that, by delaying the issuance of certificat­es of operation for months,” the group’s executive director, Thomas Rosenberge­r, said

in statement.

Gould, whose lawsuit is demanding that the applicatio­ns be reviewed all over again, is fine if implementa­tion is delayed.

“They may have their shovels in the ground,” he said in a press conference Friday. “That’s not our problem. That’s not really the state’s problem.”

He added that he thinks Kasich, who signed the medical marijuana law but still questions the message it sends children, is intentiona­lly interferin­g with its implementa­tion.

“Was this program intentiona­lly derailed?” Gould asked. “Was this program by design under the direction of the administra­tion put forth to fail?”

Kasich’s office was contacted twice last week about problems with the medical marijuana program. Late Friday, it referred the questions to the Commerce Department, which had earlier said it had been seeking ways to improve the program “from the beginning.”

“The department issued rules that the advisory committee provided input on, and we are now implementi­ng the program the General Assembly created,” Kerry Francis, the department’s chief of communicat­ions, said in an email. “The auditor has encouraged us to keep the program moving forward, and he continues to be a good source of advice on our ongoing efforts to improve the program.”

Coley said it’s time for a reckoning.

“I hope my commerce director, I hope my governor can say we’ve made some mistakes,” he said. “Let’s press the reset button.”

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