Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

April start seen for Rx-pot sales

But uncertaint­y surrounds availabili­ty of dispensari­es

- HUNTER FIELD

Medical marijuana should hit Arkansas shelves for the first time next month, industry officials said, but they’re less sure about how widespread the drug’s availabili­ty will be.

State regulators this week completed final inspection­s at two more growing facilities, meaning they are cleared to begin growing marijuana. The first of five cultivator­s was cleared to begin growing plants in January. The first of the state’s 32 dispensari­es are expected to begin opening next month, and one seller has already requested an Alcoholic Beverage Control Enforcemen­t Division inspection.

What’s less clear is how much product will be available and how many retailers will be open in April.

Alex Gray, an attorney for the Arkansas Cannabis Industry Associatio­n, expects a handful of dispen-

saries — fewer than 10 — to open next month, but some patients may have hourslong drives to reach a dispensary.

“I anticipate it will be possible for patients to obtain their medicine by mid-April,” Gray said. “However, there is no guarantee that it will be convenient. You could have certain zones where there are no dispensari­es up and running.”

The medical-marijuana program’s debut next month would mark the end of legal and regulatory delays that have slowed the program’s implementa­tion since Arkansans voted in 2016 to legalize the drug for medicinal purposes.

Amendment 98 to the constituti­on made Arkansas one of 33 states where medical cannabis is legal. The amendment permits patients and eligible caregivers to purchase and possess small quantities of the drug if a patient is certified by a physician to suffer from one of 18 qualifying conditions.

As of March 7, the state Health Department had approved 7,726 of the registry ID cards required to buy cannabis in Arkansas.

Scott Hardin, a spokesman for the state Department of Finance and Administra­tion, said it’s unlikely that the first medical-marijuana dispensary will be able to service the entire patient population immediatel­y because of several factors, including limited product and obstacles to how many patients a dispensary can process in a day simply from time constraint­s.

He said he expects llengthy waits when the first dispensary opens its doors.

Doctors Orders RX, a Hot Springs dispensary, has already requested an inspection from state regulators, according to documents obtained under the Arkansas Freedom of Informatio­n Act. Others are expected soon, Hardin said.

“We are in contact with several dispensari­es,” Hardin said in an email. “Based on these conversati­ons, we anticipate a limited number of dispensari­es (less than five) will be inspected in April. If the companies pass inspection, they may then open

”The industry should really flourish as we enter late spring and summer.”

— Scott Hardin, a spokesman for the state Department of Finance and Administra­tion

their doors for business. We aren’t necessaril­y confident the product will be available for purchase next month.

“Based on the informatio­n currently available to us, April remains our best estimate. The industry should really flourish as we enter late spring and summer.”

Osage Creek Cultivatio­n of Berryville and Natural State Medicinals Cultivatio­n of White Hall were both approved this week to begin growing cannabis.

They join Bold Team of Cotton Plant as the only cultivatio­n facilities in operation. Bold Team began growing in January, and company officials have consistent­ly said the first product would be available next month. A spokesman didn’t return a phone call requesting comment on Friday.

The two remaining licensed cultivator­s — Natural State Wellness Enterprise­s and Delta Medical Cannabis Co., both of Newport — expect to complete constructi­on of their facilities later this year.

A Natural State Wellness Enterprise­s spokesman said the company expects to begin operations in June or sooner. A spokesman for Delta Medical Cannabis said the company should begin cultivatin­g in late summer or early fall, noting that consistent rains have slowed constructi­on progress.

Dispensari­es will be spread across eight regional zones with each zone containing four stores.

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