Dayton Daily News

Medical pot takes hit when weed legal for all

- By Gillian Flaccus and Angeliki Kastanis

When PORTLAND, ORE. — states legalize pot for all adults, long-standing medical marijuana programs take a big hit, in some cases losing more than half their registered patients in just a few years, according to a data analysis by The Associated Press.

Much of the decline comes from consumers who, ill or not, got medical cards in their states because it was the only way to buy marijuana legally and then discarded them when broader legalizati­on arrived. But for people who truly rely on marijuana to control ailments such as nausea or cancer pain, the arrival of so-called recreation­al cannabis can mean fewer and more expensive options.

Robin Beverett, a 47-yearold disabled Army veteran, said she resumed taking a powerful prescripti­on mood stabilizer to control her anxiety and PTSD when the cost of her medical marijuana nearly tripled after California began general sales. Before last year, an eighth of an ounce of dry marijuana flower cost her $35. Now it’s approachin­g $100, Beverett said.

“It’s ridiculous. The prices are astronomic­al,” said Beverett, who moved to Sacramento from Texas because medical marijuana is illegal there. “Going to the dispensary is just out of the question if you’re on any kind of fixed income.”

It’s a paradox playing out nationwide as more states take the leap from care-centered medical programs to recreation­al models aligned with a multibilli­on-dollar global industry.

States see a “massive exodus” of medical patients when they legalize marijuana for all adults — and then, in many cases, the remaining ones struggle, said David Mangone, director of government affairs for Americans for Safe Access.

“Some of the products that these patients have relied on for consistenc­y — and have used over and over for years — are disappeari­ng off the shelves to market products that have a wider appeal,” he said.

Cost also goes up, a problem that’s compounded because many of those who stay in medical programs are low-income and rely on Social Security disability, he said.

Medical shops fade

In Oregon, where the medical program shrank the most following recreation­al legalizati­on, nearly two-thirds of patients gave up their medical cards, the AP found. As patients exited, the market followed: The number of medical-only retail shops fell from 400 to two, and hundreds of growers who contracted with individual patients to grow specific strains walked away.

Now, some of the 28,000 medical patients left are struggling to find affordable medical marijuana products they’ve relied on for years. While the state is awash in dry marijuana flower that’s dirt cheap, the specialize­d oils, tinctures and potent edibles used to alleviate severe illnesses can be harder to find and more expensive to buy.

“Lots of people have started trying to figure out how to make these concentrat­es and edibles themselves in their kitchen,” said Travis MacKenzie, who runs TJ’s Gardens, which provides free medical cannabis to children with epilepsy. “There are things that we don’t really want people to do at home, but the market conditions are such that people are trying to do more at home.”

The numbers compiled by the AP through public records requests and publicly available documents provide a snapshot of the evolution of marijuana as more states — Michigan was last in the door, and Illinois is about to follow — legalize pot for all adults.

Ten states have both medical and recreation­al markets. Four of them — Oregon, Nevada, Colorado, Alaska — have the combinatio­n of an establishe­d recreation­al marketplac­e and data on medical patients. The AP analysis found all four saw a drop in medical patients after broader legalizati­on.

In Alaska, the state with the second-biggest decline, medical cardholder­s dropped by 63% after recreation­al sales began in 2016, followed by Nevada with nearly 40% since 2017 and Colorado with 19% since 2014.

The largest of all the legal markets, California, doesn’t keep data on medical patients, but those who use it say their community has been in turmoil since recreation­al pot debuted last year. That’s partly because the state ended unlicensed cannabis cooperativ­es where patients shared their homegrown pot for free.

There is limited scientific data backing many of the health claims made by medical marijuana advocates, and the U.S. government still classifies cannabis in any form as a controlled substance like LSD and cocaine.

Still, the popularity of medical pot is rising as more states legalize it. There are 33 such states, including the politicall­y conservati­ve recent additions of Oklahoma and Utah. Oklahoma has among the more liberal guidelines for use and has approved more than 100,000 patient licenses since voters backed legalizati­on last June.

Getting a precise nationwide count of medical patients is impossible because California, Washington and Maine don’t keep data. However, absent those states, the AP found at the end of last year nearly 1.4 million people were active patients in a medical marijuana program. The AP estimates if those states were added the number would increase by about 1 million

Market up in smoke

As more states legalize marijuana for all adults, some who have been using it medically are feeling disenfranc­hised. In Michigan, where medical marijuana has been legal for over a decade, the creation of a new licensing system for medical dispensari­es has sparked court challenges as the state prepares for the advent of general marijuana sales later this year. A cancer patient there filed a federal lawsuit this month, alleging the slow licensing pace has created a shortage of the medical marijuana products she needs to maintain her weight and control pain.

In Washington, medical patients feel they were pushed aside when that state merged its medical and general-use markets, which also is what’s happening in California.

Los Angeles dispensary owner Jerred Kiloh sells medical and recreation­al marijuana and said those markets are quickly becoming one, since few companies are going to produce products for a vanishing group of customers. He said his medical business has dipped to 7% of overall sales and is dropping month to month.

“It’s going to be gone,” said Kiloh, president of the Los Angeles trade group United Cannabis Business Associatio­n.

In Oregon, regulators are struggling to find a path that preserves the state’s trailblazi­ng low-cost medical pot program while tamping down on a still-thriving black market. A special state commission formed to oversee the market transition put out a report earlier this year that found affordabil­ity and lack of access are major hurdles for Oregon’s patients.

“Patients have needs. Consumers have wants,” said Anthony Taylor, a medical marijuana advocate who sits on the Oregon Cannabis Commission. “Patients are in crisis right now.”

General legalizati­on has “indelibly changed the medical market,” and regulators want to identify the patients most affected by the transition, said Steve Marks, executive director of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, which oversees Oregon’s recreation­al marijuana program.

Lawmakers just passed a bill that includes language that will allow the commission to explore a pilot program for home delivery of medical cannabis to patients in underserve­d areas, he said.

Meanwhile, Oregon U.S. Attorney Billy Williams has demanded lawmakers get control of excess weed being trafficked out of state and cited the medical industry as a potential source of illicit cannabis.

As a result, lawmakers are “paring the medical program back to what it probably should have been from the outset,” said Ben Pirie, a cannabis law attorney in Portland.

“There are patients with legitimate needs, but there are many more growing way more cannabis than needed to address those needs — and what do you do with that?” Pirie said, adding “there is this sweet spot in the middle that’s difficult to hit.”

Oregon law allows medical patients to shop tax-free at general-use stores, and recreation­al stores can sell medical cannabis, although those products comprise just 8.5% of their sales. Medical dispensari­es can offer special discounts and deals that general use stores can’t, and new rules put lower caps on the potency of edibles and on how much dried flower patients can buy at a time.

That means medical customers often pay more for the same dose they got before broad legalizati­on.

Medical cardholder­s, for example, used to buy gummies or chocolate bars infused with 400 mg of THC, the high-inducing element of cannabis. Now, edibles are capped at 100 mg for medical patients but cost the same or more.

“Who, with any medical condition, needs to be eating 20 pieces of candy a day?” asked Erich Berkovitz, Oregon’s last remaining state-licensed medical marijuana processor.

Legal gray area

Patients can also grow a small number of plants, but that doesn’t address the needs of the many medical patients who don’t smoke and instead rely on marijuana-infused edibles or tinctures.

Bill Blazina, a Navy veteran, used the state’s medical program in 2013 when he was diagnosed with esophageal cancer. But the 73-yearold grandfathe­r found the landscape had changed dramatical­ly when he was diagnosed last year with a new cancer in his lung.

The highly concentrat­ed marijuana oil he took before — and wanted to take again — was selling for $60 a gram, his daily dose. A two-month supply would cost thousands at a retail pot shop, so Blazina connected with what he calls a “compassion­ate grower” who sold him the same amount at cost for $750, a transactio­n that fell in a legal gray area.

“I didn’t even know his name,” said Blazina, sitting in a rocking chair in his home in the tiny coastal town of Waldport. “I met him ... and he’d bring it to me and smile, and I’d give him money and say, ‘Thank you,’ and I’d be on my way.”

After surgery and chemo, his cancer is in remission, but he still swallows a tiny drop of the oil on a piece of tortilla twice a day. He’s learned how to make it himself: He and his neighbor combine their total of eight legal plants, pulverize a pound (0.45 kilograms) of marijuana flower, steep it in grain alcohol, strain it and then simmer the resulting mix of alcohol and plant juice in a rice cooker until only dark black oil is left.

A pound of that flower at a retail store would be about $2,000, Blazina said.

“I think the regulation­s should go toward more access and how do we get more access, realistica­lly, for the people who need it medically,” he said, before taking his afternoon dose.

 ?? GILLIAN FLACCUS / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 ?? Matthew Miller of Millervill­e Farms looks over a marijuana plant in Cave Junction, Oregon. An Associated Press analysis has found existing medical marijuana programs struggle when states legalize cannabis for all adults. The market raises the cost so much that many medical marijuana patients cannot afford the drug at a recreation­al marijuana store.
GILLIAN FLACCUS / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 Matthew Miller of Millervill­e Farms looks over a marijuana plant in Cave Junction, Oregon. An Associated Press analysis has found existing medical marijuana programs struggle when states legalize cannabis for all adults. The market raises the cost so much that many medical marijuana patients cannot afford the drug at a recreation­al marijuana store.

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