Los Angeles Times

Feds open up pot production

Growers will be able to apply for licenses, expanding potential for medical research.

- By Evan Halper evan.halper@latimes.com

The Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion will allow researcher­s to use marijuana grown in places other than its facility in Mississipp­i.

WASHINGTON — The federal government is ending its decades-old monopoly on marijuana production for medical research as the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion announced Thursday it was bowing to changing times.

The agency said it would begin allowing researcher­s and drug companies to use pot grown in places other than its well-secured facility at the University of Mississipp­i.

But the agency did not make the bigger plunge toward marijuana legalizati­on that many lawmakers have been advocating. It passed on a proposal to remove cannabis from the federal government’s most dangerous category of narcotics. The drug continues to be classified as more dangerous than cocaine.

Even so, the agency’s shift on pot used for research purposes will have wide-reaching implicatio­ns. It is aimed at increasing the amount and variety of marijuana available to scientists seeking to develop particular strains of the drug to treat ailments.

Medical researcher­s have long complained federal policy on marijuana inhibits scientific breakthrou­ghs, leaving patients to rely on anecdotal evidence of the drug’s curative qualities and underminin­g efforts to target medical growing operations to most effectivel­y treat illness.

For nearly 50 years, the University of Mississipp­i has had the sole contract for producing medical pot. Any scientist seeking to research the drug for medical purposes had to obtain a special license through several federal agencies.

“The demand for research-grade marijuana was relatively limited,” the agency wrote in a document posted online Thursday that outlines its new policy, “and the grower was able to meet such limited demand.”

But researcher­s said the lack of demand was the result of the agency actively working to discourage any studies that would legitimize marijuana. The DEA acknowledg­ed Thursday that recent studies suggest some of the cannabinoi­ds in marijuana may help treat seizures and other neurologic­al disorders. There are more than 100 cannabinoi­ds in the marijuana plant, and scientists are seeking to isolate the ones that may be most effective.

The “DEA has concluded the best way to satisfy the current researcher demand for a variety of strains of marijuana and cannabinoi­d extracts is to increase the number of federally authorized marijuana growers,” the agency wrote.

The move is notable for a law enforcemen­t agency that has long seemed out of step with even President Obama, who has said he believes marijuana is no more harmful than alcohol. The Justice Department has allowed states to move aggressive­ly forward with legalizati­on for both medical and recreation­al use, even as the DEA continues to classify marijuana as a Schedule 1 narcotic with no accepted medical use.

The pressure on the agency to further soften its position is likely to mount in November, as a fresh round of voting begins in states weighing legalizati­on for recreation­al use. Among them is California, the biggest state in the country, and one that polls suggest is poised to approve full legalizati­on.

Advocates in California and elsewhere are hopeful that the federal prohibitio­n on marijuana will start to crumble once large states begin permitting the sale of pot to any adult who wants to buy it. They say the disconnect between state and federal policy will become untenable when it begins to affect more than the few states that currently have no ban on the drug.

Already, legal marijuana is a multibilli­on-dollar industry. It is projected to grow exponentia­lly, and as it has, the conflictin­g state and federal laws governing its sale have created all manner of regulatory headaches.

“I welcome the decision to lessen barriers to medical marijuana research,” said a statement from Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), one of the most vocal legalizati­on proponents in Congress. “It’s outrageous that federal policy has blocked science for so long.”

But like other marijuana advocates, he expressed bewilderme­nt that the DEA refused to move marijuana off Schedule 1. He called it “further evidence that the DEA doesn’t get it. Keeping marijuana at Schedule 1 continues an outdated, failed approach — leaving patients and marijuana businesses trapped between state and federal laws.”

The agency on Thursday released a 186-page rebuttal to such arguments, in which it again laid out its rationale for finding that the drug is dangerous and has no accepted medical use. Key among the agency’s concerns is that there have been inadequate controlled scientific studies. That could change with its new policy increasing the availabili­ty of research-grade marijuana.

The DEA will invite growers other than the University of Mississipp­i to apply for licenses, but warns the number of such licenses granted will be limited and the rules for qualifying will be strict. It implied that big growers who have been selling pot legally in the states may be boxed out of the market, as the DEA will favor manufactur­ers that have followed its rules and have a proven track record.

Other potential growers might include big agricultur­al and pharmaceut­ical companies that have been pondering entering the pot market but have sat on the sidelines, waiting for the DEA to loosen its rules. The DEA says the new policy is designed to enable companies seeking to market particular strains of marijuana as prescripti­on drugs to start developing products.

“Under the new approach, should the state of scientific knowledge advance in the future such that a marijuana-derived drug is shown to be safe and effective for medical use, pharmaceut­ical firms will have a legal means of producing such drugs in the United States — independen­t of the [federal government] contractin­g process,” the agency wrote.

 ?? Photograph­s by Brandon Dill For The Times ?? MARIJUANA PLANTS at the University of Mississipp­i, which has had the sole contract for producing medical pot for nearly 50 years.
Photograph­s by Brandon Dill For The Times MARIJUANA PLANTS at the University of Mississipp­i, which has had the sole contract for producing medical pot for nearly 50 years.
 ??  ?? LANNY BENJAMIN works in the University of Mississipp­i facility. The DEA passed on a proposal to remove pot from the federal government’s most dangerous category of narcotics. It continues to be classified as more dangerous than cocaine.
LANNY BENJAMIN works in the University of Mississipp­i facility. The DEA passed on a proposal to remove pot from the federal government’s most dangerous category of narcotics. It continues to be classified as more dangerous than cocaine.

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