Daily Camera (Boulder)

Medical marijuana laws will be more strict soon

- By Alex Burness

Colorado will impose stricter rules for the purchase of medical marijuana starting Jan. 1 following several months of deliberati­on over how to execute a new state law meant largely to limit young people’s access to and abuse of high-potency THC products.

Mark Ferrandino, executive director of the state’s Department of Revenue and a former speaker of the Colorado House of Representa­tives, announced the rules Tuesday night. He had final say, but he received heavy input from state marijuana enforcemen­t officials and a task force that included parents, health profession­als and marijuana industry representa­tives. That task force was formed by the new law passed this year, HB211317, that represente­d the state’s most significan­t overhaul of marijuana regulation­s since recreation­al legalizati­on in 2012.

In the process of passing that bill, the legislatur­e heard stories parents shared about the dramatic effects some marijuana products have had on their children. Parents spoke of psychosis, suicidal thoughts and nonstop vomiting, among other issues, and by the time the legislatur­e was to vote on the bill, nearly all members — 93 out of 100 — were convinced of a need to tighten the law.

Of particular concern to the legislatur­e are products such as wax and shatter that, unlike traditiona­l marijuana flower, are concentrat­ed products made in labs containing much higher percentage­s of THC — the main psychoacti­ve compound in cannabis — than even the most potent flower.

The new rules, which in limited cases also affect recreation­al buyers, include:

Daily purchase limits

The state will limit the daily purchase to two ounces of flower and eight grams of concentrat­e such as wax and shatter for medical marijuana patients. The concentrat­e limit goes down to two grams per day for medical patients between the ages of 18 and 20. The previous daily concentrat­e purchase limit for medical patients was 40 grams.

Dispensari­es must enforce the daily purchase limits by inputting patient ID numbers found on medical marijuana cards. Stores are to refuse sale to anyone who seeks to exceed their purchase limit. All data collected must be kept confidenti­al.

Exceptions

Exceptions to the new limits apply only to a patient whose doctor affirms in writing that the patient has a physical or geographic hardship that should allow them to exceed the daily purchase limits, and that the patient has designated a store as the primary place they get their medicine.

Examples of ways people can qualify for a hardship include: restricted mobility as a result of a debilitati­ng condition, lack of access to a driver’s license due to a debilitati­ng condition or lack of access to public transit or ride-sharing services due to a debilitati­ng condition. Exceptions can also apply to people who live outside of populous Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Denver, Douglas, El Paso, Jefferson, Larimer or Pueblo counties and who also cannot access medical marijuana (or their preferred medical marijuana concentrat­e) in their home county.

Public education

An educationa­l resource in the form of an 8×11 paper pamphlet must be provided to customers (medical and recreation­al) at the point of sale of a concentrat­e. This pamphlet will include a black dot, smaller than a fingernail, displaying the state’s recommende­d serving size for concentrat­es. It will also feature advice on how to safely consume and a list of negative conditions the state declares can result from the use of marijuana concentrat­e, including psychotic symptoms, “uncontroll­ed and repetitive vomiting” and “physical and psychologi­cal dependence.” The pamphlet will list numbers to various hotlines for people experienci­ng any of those problems.

Advertisin­g

Medical marijuana dispensari­es are specifical­ly barred from marketing to people under the age of 21. That’s a change from the previous ban on advertisin­g to people under 18. The state considers it a violation if an advertisem­ent appears in a form of media estimated to have at least 28.4% of its audience younger than 21. In advertisin­g concentrat­es, medical and recreation­al businesses must both include language approved by the state that warns of the risks of overconsum­ption.

Ferrandino was not available Thursday to discuss the new rules, a spokeswoma­n said.

The law that led to the rules also directs the Colorado School of Public Health to analyze existing research “related to the physical and mental health effects of high-potency THC marijuana and concentrat­es” — and its results could influence future policy decisions at the Capitol.

Denver Democrat Alec Garnett, current House speaker and a lead sponsor of the bill that led to the rules, said he’s confident in Ferrandino’s decisions and that he isn’t planning any new legislatio­n regulating marijuana for the 2022 session, which begins in January, days after the new rules go into effect.

“I would assume it’s a quieter session on this topic,” Garnett said.

The past session was anything but. HB21-1317 was the product of months of meetings and it drew massive bipartisan support from the legislatur­e as well as dire warnings from medical marijuana patients and advocates concerned about restricted access to medicine.

Some of those fears remain, Truman Bradley, executive director of the Marijuana Industry Group, said at a hearing earlier this month when the rules were being finalized.

“I have some concerns that when these rules are put into effect on Jan. 1 that there’s going to be a whole group of medical patients that are caught up in this sort of gray area where they’re not sure what they can legally purchase,” he said. “Remember, we’re talking about medicine here. This is really important, and I don’t want to see them left behind.”

But Bradley said Thursday it’s too soon to tell whether patients will experience that confusion. He said he hopes other lawmakers join Garnett in refraining from further legislatio­n this year, to leave time for “the impacts of these rules to be fully implemente­d and understood.”

Although the new rules touch on recreation­al marijuana, too — namely regarding the educationa­l pamphlet — the rules for nonmedical consumers aren’t really changing. Recreation­al users can still buy up to one ounce of flower per day, or up to eight grams of concentrat­e.

The purchase age for recreation­al products remains 21, whereas people over 18 can seek medical cards. The lower age for medical patients, combined with the (previously) much higher daily concentrat­e purchase limits for that group, is a big reason the legislatur­e was so focused on the medical side of the industry.

“The prime thing is to reduce the access for teenagers,” Democratic Rep. Yadira Caraveo of Thornton, who sponsored the bill along with Garnett, said in June as the governor signed it into law.

At the same time it has pursued these tougher regulation­s, the legislatur­e has shown increasing openness to the use of cannabis in children to treat epilepsy and other issues, even legalizing the storage and administra­tion of medicinal cannabis products in schools.

Dawn Reinfeld, a Boulder parent who heads the advocacy group Blue Rising Together and who rallied other parents to back HB211317, said in a text message Thursday that she’s “pleasantly surprised” by the new rules, and especially by the thresholds people will have to meet in order to demonstrat­e hardship sufficient to exempt themselves from the daily purchase limits.

“We mobilized dozens of advocates to counter the industry’s power throughout the rule-making proceeding­s, and we feel that the final rules reflect our advocates’ concerns because of the stories and experience­s they shared about how high-potency THC has impacted their lives,” she said.

 ?? Brendan Smialowski / Getty Images ?? The canopy of a marijuana crop is seen at Alternativ­e Solutions, a DC area medical marijuana producer, April 20, 2016 in Washington.
Brendan Smialowski / Getty Images The canopy of a marijuana crop is seen at Alternativ­e Solutions, a DC area medical marijuana producer, April 20, 2016 in Washington.
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