The Palm Beach Post

Vendor sells smokeable medical pot in Florida

State law bans smoking substance, but not vendors from selling buds for vaping use.

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — Even while F l o r i d a l awmakers h ave insisted they do not want patients to smoke pot, one of the state’s seven licensed medical-marijuana vendors on Tuesday began selling whole-flower cannabis.

Florida law bans patients from smoking the substance, but doesn’t prohibit vendors from selling marijuana buds meant for use in vaporizers — but which also can be smoked in joints, pipes or other delivery devices.

Trulieve, one of seven licensed marijuana opera- tors in Florida, started selling the whole-flower product on Tuesday, just days after lawmakers failed to reach agreement on a measure to carry out a voter-approved constituti­onal amendment legalizing marijuana for patients with a broad swath of debilitati­ng conditions.

Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers told the News Service of Florida on Wednesday her company has sold whole-leaf products in different forms — all designed to be ingested by vaporizers — for nearly a year. Those products, however, were ground up, unlike the new budlike product that can be smoked.

Quincy-based Trulieve’s new product, first sold on Tuesday, comes in canisters designed for use with vaporizer pens. But patients easily can use the substance in other ways, such as in joints, bongs or pipes — consumptio­n methods hat are off limits under state law.

Proponents of medical pot say marijuana contains a wide variety of chemical compounds, such as terpines and ketones, in addition to cannaboids. When pot is smoked, many of these compounds work together to produce a synergy of effects, proponents say. They call this the “entourage effect.”

Rive r s s a i d whole - l e a f produc t s a re c r i t i c a l f or patients seeking the “entourage effect” that results from consumptio­n of whole-flower marijuana, as opposed to processed products such as oils or other derivative­s.

“We feel ver y strongly that having products available that allow patients to have a choice and to benefit from the entourage effect, also available to physicians to make recommenda­tions to patients, is critical. So if that means we’re pushing the envelope, we’ve had a form of whole-flower vaporizer available from the day we’ve opened,” Rivers said in a telephone interview.

Trulieve’s new product went on the market after Monday’s end of the 2017 legislativ­e session, during which lawmakers insisted they wanted to impose a ban on smoking marijuana products.

“The bills that were going through the process on the House and Senate side were the antithesis of this activity,” Sen. Bill Galvano, a Bradenton Republican who took over negotiatio­ns on the pot measure in the waning days of the session, told the News Service on Wednesday.

The session ended without legislator­s reaching a consensus on implementa­tion of the constituti­onal amendment, approved by more than 71 percent of voters in November.

Not only were lawmakers intent on banning the smoking of marijuana, Galvano also seemed surprised that current law allowed vendors like Trulieve to sell the whole-flower products.

“I understand the technical nature of the argument that’s being made to you. But if the net result was the retail sale of marijuana that could be put into a rolling paper or any other apparatus, that was not the intent. In fact, the intent was to prevent that from happening,” said Galvano, slated to take over as Senate president late next year.

Smoking of medical marijuana was one of the key issues for patients during debate on implementa­tion of the constituti­onal amendment, largely bankrolled by Orlando trial lawyer John Morgan. Morgan maintains patients should be allowed to smoke the substance and has threatened to sue over the issue.

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