The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio to expand medical marijuana growers

- Jackie Borchardt

Ohio’s medical marijuana cultivator­s can now request permission to expand their grow space.

Expansion requests will be granted to businesses that have complied with rules and regulation­s, are already using the maximum amount of space allowed by the state and demonstrat­e a need to expand to keep up with demand, the Ohio Department of Commerce announced Wednesday.

The expansion process comes as the state plans to more than double the number of dispensari­es to sell medical marijuana and after Akron-based cultivator Fire Rock Ltd. sued the state for failing to act on its February 2020 request to expand.

“This decision comes after review of multiple program metrics, including patient program participat­ion and the Board of Pharmacy’s impending request for new dispensary license applicatio­ns,” Commerce Department spokeswoma­n Jennifer Jarrell said in an email. “The timing allows eligible cultivator­s ample opportunit­y to expand their cultivatio­n capacity and production before the additional dispensari­es become operationa­l.”

Fire Rock and six other small-scale growers, capped at 3,000 square feet of grow space, had requested expansion in 2019 and 2020. Their argument: They were consistent­ly selling out of product while the state had already expanded the number of licensees beyond the initial 24 due to appeals and lawsuits.

The Department of Commerce sat on Fire Rock’s request and the company sued. The Ohio Supreme Court ordered the agency to make a decision, and the

request was rejected.

Expansion was “premature” because there was “a sufficient program-wide supply,” Commerce Director Sheryl Maxfield wrote to Fire Rock in April. The letter also noted that seven cultivator­s were not yet operationa­l, representi­ng 24% of all allotted grow space statewide.

Fire Rock appealed through the administra­tive review process. But after Wednesday’s announceme­nt, the issue could be moot.

Ohio has licensed 20 cultivator­s who can grow up to 25,000 square feet of marijuana and 15 cultivator­s that can grow up to 3,000 square feet. State rules allow licensees to expand to 75,000 square feet and 9,000 square feet, respective­ly, but didn’t outline a process for requesting expansion.

The seven cultivator­s mentioned in the April letter are still not yet operationa­l. The seven cultivator­s that previously applied for expansion were Fire

Rock in Akron, Ohio Clean Leaf in Dayton, FN Group in Ravenna, Ancient Roots in Wilmington, Agri-med in Langsville, Galenas in Akron and Farkas Farms in Grafton.

There were about 125,000 active registered medical marijuana patients in the state as of July 31. The state’s initial business license caps were based on a patient population of about 24,000.

Jackie Borchardt is the bureau chief for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other organizati­ons.

 ?? ELGAZZAR/CINAINNTI ENQUIRER KAREEM ?? Ohio Clean Leaf, a small-scale medical marijuana cultivator in Dayton, was one of several that previously sought to expand its grow space.
ELGAZZAR/CINAINNTI ENQUIRER KAREEM Ohio Clean Leaf, a small-scale medical marijuana cultivator in Dayton, was one of several that previously sought to expand its grow space.

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