New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Conn. to protect medical marijuana program as recreation­al use begins

- By Ginny Monk

As Connecticu­t prepares to license recreation­al cannabis dispensari­es, the state is implementi­ng measures to ensure there’s sufficient supply for patients, including requiring existing facilities to preserve their medicinal marijuana services.

Medical dispensari­es that want to branch out to recreation­al, or “adult use,” marijuana sales will have to submit a “medical preservati­on plan” to the state Department of Consumer Protection, Commission­er Michelle Seagull told the Medical Marijuana Program Board of Physicians during a Friday meeting.

Recreation­al users will also be subject to a tax that medical users aren’t, Seagull said. Retail sales will be subject to Connecticu­t’s 6.35 percent sales tax, a 3 percent sales tax for the locality in which the sale occurs and a THC-content-based tax. That tax will be about 10-15 percent of the sale price, according to the department.

“There really is a focus on preserving the medical program,” Seagull said.

Gov. Ned Lamont signed Connecticu­t’s adult-use marijuana bill into law June 22. The bill allows the sale and use of cannabis for people over 21 years old. Dispensari­es aren’t slated to open until next year, and towns can ban sales.

Medical use has been legal in Connecticu­t since 2012. Registered medical marijuana patients have “plateaued” at about 54,000 in Connecticu­t, Seagull said.

“I’m not sure if it’s a function of adult use getting approved or if it’s just naturally plateaued,” she said.

The department will monitor the supply and demand of marijuana products and limit the amount people can purchase per transactio­n, Seagull said. Some products, such as pills or inhalers, will only be available to people with a medical prescripti­on.

Those with medical prescripti­ons are also eligible to purchase for recreation­al use. They can buy 3 ounces total per month, up from 2.5 ounces, the department announced Friday.

“Making medication accessible to qualifying patients is a top priority and increasing the allotment is an important recognitio­n that there are some patients who may benefit from more than 2.5 ounces a month,” Seagull said in the news release.

“While cannabis growers in our state prepare for the anticipate­d increase in demand in the adult-use cannabis market, it’s vital that they are also able to continue to supply patients in the medical marijuana market,” she added.

Board members echoed concerns that medical card holders wouldn’t get the same level of attention for their needs with recreation­al use legalized.

“I worry about long lines around the block and patients not being able to get served,” board member Dr. Andrew Salner said.

“I’m concerned about the medical marijuana program,” board member Dr. Linda Barry said. “What happens to it in the context of legalizati­on? Is it going to end up being irrelevant?”

Dispensari­es that sell both recreation­al and medical products will need a pharmacist on duty the whole time they’re open; reduced hours for patients won’t be allowed, Seagull said.

A new process, establishe­d after a board recommenda­tion, also allows a more streamline­d process for adding to the list of qualifying conditions, Seagull said.

During Friday’s meeting, board members also added movement disorders related to adult Huntington’s disease to the list of qualifying conditions for medical marijuana use. Huntington’s disease is a rare genetic disease that causes the breakdown of nerves in the brain. It causes movement, psychiatri­c and thinking disorders.

Connecticu­t resident Susan McGann and her husband petitioned the board for the addition because he has Huntington’s disease, she said during the virtual meeting.

“It would help my husband with motivation and the mood ... It isn’t just psychiatri­c, it’s the movements, and it’s [available] in the other states,” petitioner Susan McGann said.

Citing a lack of research, among other concerns, board members voted down a petition to add anorexia nervosa to the list of qualifying conditions.

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