South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

With smokable medical marijuana legal, GOP House looks to restrict highs

- By Dara Kam

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida patients can now smoke medical marijuana, but some Republican legislativ­e leaders want to put a limit on how high they can get when lighting up.

The House is considerin­g a proposal that would cap THC levels in medical marijuana at 10 percent, Rep. Ray Rodrigues, R-Estero, said in an interview with The News Service of Florida.

No bill has been filed, and Rodrigues, who’s shepherded medical-marijuana legislatio­n in the House since low-THC cannabis was first authorized in 2014, said legislatio­n is still “up in the air.”

“But it’s something we still think is important,” Rodrigues said.

Also, it hasn’t been determined yet whether the cap would only apply to smokable cannabis or other medical marijuana products as well.

Tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, is the intoxicati­ng ingredient in marijuana that produces a euphoric effect.

“We think there should be caps on THC,” Rodrigues said this week.

Senate President Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton, said in a text message Thursday that the Senate would support imposing caps on THC levels, but “would have to understand more before making a determinat­ion” about what the caps would be and whether they should apply only to smokable cannabis.

The House and Senate this month succumbed to Gov. Ron DeSantis and agreed to repeal the state’s ban on smokable medical marijuana. DeSantis had threatened to drop the state’s appeal of a court decision that found the smoking ban violated a 2016 constituti­onal amendment that broadly legalized medical marijuana.

Proponents of medical marijuana in Florida say that potential THC caps are another example of the Republican-dominated Legislatur­e attempting to thwart the will of the voters, who overwhelmi­ngly supported the constituti­onal amendment.

“It’s absolutely insane that after finally relenting on their jihad against sick people smoking marijuana that the House would deem it appropriat­e to wage another unconstitu­tional war against the will of the 71 percent of Floridians who approved medical marijuana. These proposed caps are arbitrary, unnecessar­y and will hurt Florida patients if enacted,” Ben Pollara, the campaign manager of the political committee behind the amendment, said in a text message.

Rodrigues said the House had been exploring THC limits but, in the rush to meet DeSantis’ March 15 deadline for the smoking-ban repeal, it didn’t have time to fully vet the issue and was unable to include such a provision in the measure the governor signed into law last week.

“This attempt to focus on the concentrat­ion of the THC in the raw flower form is once again a lack of understand­ing that the legislator­s have because they haven’t reached out to enough clinicians who are doing this every day to understand some of those subtleties,” said Barry Gordon, chief physician for Compassion­ate Cannabis Clinic in Venice. “It’s not about the THC percentage. In the medical world, that’s going to be a horrible, horrible slippery slope.”

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