Chicago Sun-Times

MEDICAL POT SHORTAGE: ‘IT’S JUST BEEN A MESS’

Patients say they have seen supplies dwindle for months

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

A pot shortage that has marred the rollout of recreation­al weed sales in Illinois is also affecting the state’s medical marijuana program — despite promises from state lawmakers and protection­s built into the law — leading some to question why more wasn’t done to ensure patients could continue to get the marijuana they need to treat their conditions.

Less than two months after Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed the historic bill legalizing recreation­al pot use in June, he approved another piece of legislatio­n that made the medical program permanent and allowed patients with a host of new conditions to qualify for licenses.

The laws failed to ensure more pot would be cultivated in the state until this coming summer, when 40 licenses will be issued to small-scale craft grow operations. But even then, it will take months to grow their first crops.

That leaves the state’s 21 existing cultivatio­n centers to pick up the slack and meet the increased demand. So far, they haven’t been able to, patients say.

Mark Anderson, a medical cannabis patient from DuPage County who uses the drug to treat post-traumatic stress disorder, first started seeing a downturn in September. It’s gotten worse.

“It’s just been a mess in terms of supply,” said Anderson. “Medical patients are very much suffering. There’s literally nothing.”

Anderson went to MedMen in Oak Park on Wednesday and left without buying any of the few flower options available, which he said weren’t up to his quality standards.

“I wouldn’t touch it,” said Anderson, who reviews cannabis on his website, Officer Dick Downey’s Pot Report.

Another medical patient, who uses pot to treat chronic pain and asked not to be named, said the supply at her chosen dispensary, Greenhouse in Mokena, has been “noticeably worse” since December. That Greenhouse location is among a handful of medical dispensari­es that weren’t able to start selling recreation­al weed due to local bans, meaning the shop’s stash isn’t being tapped by a flood of new customers.

The woman said she’s having a hard time getting her hands on edibles that are crafted by James Beard Award-winning pastry chef Mindy Segal and produced by River Northbased Cresco Labs, a firm that operates multiple dispensari­es and cultivatio­n centers across the state.

“I’m frustrated because this is a product which really helps with pain control,” said the woman, who is part of a program implemente­d last year that offers medical cannabis to people who have been prescribed opioid painkiller­s. “In the meantime, I’m wasting my money trying other less desirable products.”

California-based MedMen said the firm’s Oak Park and Evanston locations are attempting to “manage supply and demand” by limiting recreation­al sales to four hours each day. Greenhouse didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The roots of the problem date in part to when the legislatio­n was being drafted last year.

Pam Althoff, executive director of the Cannabis Business Associatio­n of Illinois, said industry stakeholde­rs were worried about the state doling out too many grow licenses and creating “a massive oversupply,” like in Oregon. Additional­ly, Althoff said, allowing more large-scale cultivatio­n centers could have hindered craft growers attempting to establish footholds in the nascent industry.

Restrictin­g the number of cultivatio­n licenses allowed the original growers that supplied the medical cannabis industry to cash in on the legalizati­on of recreation­al weed, she said.

“Most of them haven’t come into an area where they have made significan­t profit,” noted Althoff.

Those growers pushed to delay the rollout of recreation­al weed sales until April, according to Althoff, who said the additional three months would have given them time to build up supply.

“You can’t turn on the dime,” she said. State officials who have repeatedly pointed to the protection­s built in the law for medical patients are now acknowledg­ing the shortage is affecting those folks. In a letter sent to dispensari­es Jan. 10, state regulators said there were instances of medical patients not getting what they needed and warned shops that they must prioritize patients.

Toi Hutchinson, Pritzker’s senior adviser on cannabis control, said Friday that regulators are now refining tools to track and monitor pot sales and could potentiall­y issue fines or citations to shops that violate provisions protecting individual­s in the medical program.

“We will take all actions available under state law to ensure the supply to medical users, and we will work with stakeholde­rs and lawmakers to ensure that we have all available tools to enforce the law, as well as consider additional regulation­s and technical changes to meet the needs of both medical and recreation­al users,” Hutchinson said.

Officials are now exploring how to allow patients to purchase medical cannabis from multiple stores, Hutchinson said. Currently, those individual­s can only get pot products from a single dispensary of their choosing, though they can purchase recreation­al weed that’s subject to much higher taxes.

Conflictin­g language in the recreation­al and medical pot laws could potentiall­y complicate the supply issue further.

The medical cannabis law allows medical patients to purchase an “adequate supply” of 2.5 ounces of weed every two weeks. But under the recreation­al pot law, the “adequate supply” dispensari­es are required to set aside for medical users is defined as being “comparable in type and quantity to those medical cannabis products provided to patients and caregivers on an average monthly basis” in

the six months before Pritzker signed it into effect on June 25.

Althoff, a former Republican state senator, acknowledg­ed the dueling definition­s will require a “legislativ­e fix.”

“That is something that has come on the radar and is something that will need to be addressed potentiall­y during the next General Assembly,” she said.

The stash stores are required to set aside fails to take into account the increased demand from the new medical cannabis users accepted into the program during the last six months of 2019, when 11 new conditions were approved for use.

In fact, the number of new patients increased by 27%, to nearly 100,000 by the end of December, up from nearly 79,000 patients in the medical cannabis and opioid alternativ­e programs in June, according to figures released by the state.

Dispensari­es sold nearly 2,000 pounds of cannabis flower to medical patients last month, a 54% increase over the amount sold in December 2018. In the coming months, up to 128 new recreation­al dispensari­es could open across the state.

Some dispensari­es say they can’t get enough weed from cultivator­s to meet the growing demand.

Abigail Watkins, a spokeswoma­n for Dispensary 33 in Uptown, said the shop currently has five different types of cannabis flower available for medical patients, down from nearly three times that many strains just a few months ago. Jonah Rapino, a spokesman for NuMed, said the company’s West Town store has also had a hard time stocking up on flower for months.

“We believe that dwindling supply leading up to Jan. 1 was a combinatio­n of the cultivator­s getting ready for the adult-use rollout in combinatio­n with a large percentage of medical patients stocking up, especially on [flower] in fear of the adult-use program threatenin­g their supply,” he added.

Indeed, Anderson said he predicted there would be a run on supply in October and began stocking up on product that he’s still relying on. Neverthele­ss, he believes the state should have done more to ensure dispensari­es didn’t run out.

Despite growers expanding facilities, ramping up operations and consistent­ly planting new crops, industry analysts agree the effects of the shortage will likely persist for months.

 ?? BRIAN ERNST/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? An employee at The Herbal Care Center, 1301 S. Western Ave., assists a person in December.
BRIAN ERNST/SUN-TIMES FILE An employee at The Herbal Care Center, 1301 S. Western Ave., assists a person in December.
 ??  ?? Toi Hutchinson
Toi Hutchinson

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