Orlando Sentinel

Panel working out rules for pot industry

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

A panel crafting regulation­s to jump-start the state’s new medical-marijuana industry replaced a lottery system, scrapped by a judge in November, with a scorecard to pick five nurseries to grow, process and distribute types of pot authorized by the Legislatur­e last year.

The 12-member committee also set an applicatio­n fee at $75,000 and tried to find ways to avoid the need for legislativ­e approval of the regulation­s in the hope of getting noneuphori­c cannabis to sick children as quickly as possible.

The panel spent more than 25 hours Wednesday and Thursday hashing out a rule to provide a regulatory framework for the new industry. During the talks, nurserymen were unable to persuade health officials to change ownership requiremen­ts that some contend will keep veteran growers from risking their businesses to participat­e in the potgrowing industry.

Under the marijuana law passed last spring, nurseries that have been in business for at least 30 continuous years in Florida and cultivate at least 400,000 plants are eligible to be one of five “vertically integrated” entities that will grow, process and distribute strains of cannabis that are low in euphoria-inducing tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, and high in cannabadio­l, or CBD, for patients who suffer from severe spasms or cancer.

The costs of starting up the new operations include posting a $5 million bond, which could cost from $50,000 to $500,000, depending on how much money or assets the nurseries pledge to secure bonds.

Administra­tive Law Judge W. David Watkins in November rejected a regulatory framework proposed by the Department of Health. In part, Watkins tossed out a plan to use a lottery system to choose the five entities that would grow, process and distribute the pot.

Also in the order, Watkins wrote that the “plain language” of the law required the “dispensing organizati­ons” to be nurseries.

During the marathon workshop this week, the five nurserymen on the panel wanted to create separate entities to shield assets in existing companies from risks incurred by taking on marijuana, which is still illegal under federal law and is shunned by financial institutio­ns.

But Patricia Nelson, director of the Department of Health’s Office of Compassion­ate Use, and attorney Donna Blanton, who specialize­s in administra­tive law and sat on the panel, said they did not believe a different ownership method would survive a legal challenge.

“The obvious solution here, which I know nobody wants to do, is a legislativ­e fix,” Blanton said.

During debate on the issue, Nelson pointed out that lawmakers are now considerin­g a much broader measure (SB 528) that would legalize “traditiona­l” medical marijuana, possibly opening the door for a much more lucrative endeavor for growers.

Colorado marijuana grower Joel Stanley, who with his brothers manufactur­es the “Charlotte’s Web” noneuphori­c cannabis that prompted Florida’s law and is hoping to start doing business in the state, said growers should be willing to put their assets on the line to help the sick children who can benefit from the strains of marijuana believed to eliminate or reduce lifethreat­ening seizures in children with severe epilepsy.

“I do wish the best rule would come forward that would allow the department to pick the cream of the crop because that’s what the people that are waiting on this deserve. At the same time, I will say that I did this. I know a lot of people who did this years before anyone knew about it or even thought there was any money it. I would encourage not only the people in this room but the people who are considerin­g applying, if you think you’re the cream of the crop … to consider putting your cream of the crop on the line because it’s a really amazing thing you will get to do. It’s a lot better than growing tomatoes or hydrangeas,” Stanley said.

Under the law, a rule was supposed to be in effect on Jan. 1 but was delayed because of legal challenges to the Department of Health’s first attempt. The earliest a new rule could go into effect, if it is not challenged again, would be nearly two months from now, meaning that health officials could select the five growers — one in each part of the state — in April. The five dispensing organizati­ons would then have up to seven months to get the product on the market, according to the proposal agreed to Thursday.

The panel scrapped most of the requiremen­ts in the old rule and included them as items in the applicatio­n, in part to reduce the need for legislativ­e approval that would be required if regulatory costs for all of the businesses that might participat­e in the program exceed $200,000 in one year. The group agreed that the estimated costs to complete an applicatio­n would be about $1,000.

The panel also created a weighted scorecard that would rate applicants based on cultivatio­n (30 percent), processing (30 percent), dispensing (15 percent), financials (20 percent), and medical director (5 percent).

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