Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hawaii medical pot dispensari­es open but can’t sell

- CATHY BUSSEWITZ

HONOLULU — Medical marijuana dispensari­es are beginning to open in Hawaii, but they’re not allowed to sell their products.

Instead, the leafy medicinal greens they’ve harvested are sitting on a shelf unsold because nearly a year after dispensari­es were legally allowed to open, the state has not yet certified any labs to run required safety tests.

That means dispensari­es such as Aloha Green on Oahu have no income despite payroll, rent and operations expenses that top $100,000 per month.

“For us it’s a little frustratin­g, having so many people on board, but it has to be done,” said James H.Q. Lee, CEO of Aloha Green. “I’m more concerned for the patients, because people have been calling: ‘We see it online, when are you going to open? We need our medical cannabis.’”

Hawaii was among the first states to legalize medical marijuana 17 years ago, but dispensari­es were only legalized in 2015. The state’s 17,000 registered patients have been left to grow marijuana plants on their own or buy it on the black market.

The delays have been frustratin­g to potential customers, executives and employees in the nascent industry.

Since they’re paying for the space, Aloha Green decided to open its doors to the public Thursday for education and outreach.

“That’s indicative of how creative the licensees are having to be, because they’re bleeding money,” said Carl Bergquist, executive director of the Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii.

By law, dispensari­es were allowed to open in July, but none could open their doors or even begin growing cannabis because the state had not approved software to track the product from seed-to-sale.

“People are hoping for dispensari­es to open, but they’re just waiting and waiting,” said Jari Sugano, whose 8-year-old daughter suffers from a form of epilepsy that can be treated with medical cannabis. “In the end, the delays are going to come back on the patient to pay back.”

But state officials and lawmakers say they’re working as fast as they can to set up an industry from scratch while ensuring patient safety.

“The dates that were in the legislatio­n were unrealisti­c,” said Keith Ridley of the Department of Health. “I think we need to reset our time frames.”

Nationwide, it often takes states a year and a half to two years to open medical marijuana dispensari­es after passing a law, said Becky Dansky, legislativ­e analyst for the national Marijuana Policy Project. The fastest state to set up dispensari­es was Minnesota, which took about 13 months to open a narrow program; on the other hand, Maryland has no dispensari­es open nearly five years after passing a law, she added.

“The idea of having dispensari­es open in a year was extremely ambitious,” Dansky said of Hawaii.

Hawaii also faces unique challenges as an isolated island state with a small population, which makes opening a testing lab difficult.

“Everything’s inflated. Lease areas, getting expensive equipment shipped on-island, finding the space,” said Michael Rollins, chief administra­tive officer of PharmLabs, a lab based on Maui that is awaiting certificat­ion from the Department of Health.

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