The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Medical marijuana sales may be a step closer

House bill seeks to widen transparen­cy, production, resolve suits.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

Each of Georgia’s two licensed marijuana companies, Trulieve and Botanical Sciences, will be allowed to open up to six dispensari­es across Georgia, according to a state law passed in 2019.

A bumpy start to Georgia’s medical marijuana program could be resolved, lawmakers say, by a bill that would expand production, increase transparen­cy and end lawsuits.

State representa­tives voted in a committee to pass the bill last week, and it could soon receive a vote in the full Georgia House.

Though two companies are planning to open Georgia’s first medical marijuana dispensari­es by late spring, lawsuits have held up production licenses to four additional companies that were set to receive them under a state law approved nearly four years ago.

Meanwhile, about 27,000 registered patients are still waiting to be able to legally buy a product they’ve been allowed to consume since 2015.

The legislatio­n attempts to open up the market by awarding licenses to the four pending companies along with eight more companies that weren’t selected but filed lawsuits, alleging that the competitiv­e selection process set up by the General Assembly was secretive, inconsiste­nt and unfair.

By licensing them all, supporters of the bill said pending lawsuits would become moot and the program could move ahead without waiting months or years for court cases to be resolved, said state Rep. Alan Powell, a Republican from Hartwell who sponsored the measure, House Bill 196.

Legislator­s share some of the blame. They passed laws that made most of the marijuana companies’ informatio­n confidenti­al, unlike other competitiv­e bids for government contracts, fueling suspicion that the most qualified companies didn’t receive licenses. HB 196 would remove those secrecy protection­s.

“It was a major show of how government shouldn’t work,” Powell said during a hearing of the House Judiciary Non-civil Committee on Wednesday. “Nothing good comes out of government

behind closed doors — nothing — because you don’t know who’s responsibl­e and whether things are being done the right way.”

While most of the committee supported the bill, state Rep. Deborah Silcox said she’s worried that it would allow too many medical marijuana companies at once, reducing profits and resulting in a black

market. Silcox said she worked as a consultant for a company that applied for a production license but didn’t disclose which one.

“I want to help these people, and I want them to have a source that’s ongoing so that the industry survives, people are helped and everybody makes money” said Silcox, a Republican from

Sandy Springs, one of two legislator­s on the committee who voted against HB 196.

Low THC oil is allowed for registered patients suffering from several approved illnesses, including severe seizures, Parkinson’s disease and terminal cancers. The oil can have no more than 5% THC, the compound that gives users a high.

Each of Georgia’s two licensed marijuana companies, Trulieve and Botanical Sciences, will be allowed to open up to six dispensari­es across Georgia, according to

a state law passed in 2019. Nearly 40 states already have medical marijuana programs.

Kristen Goodman, an attorney for several of the companies seeking a license, said that without legislatio­n, additional licenses might not be issued for 18 month to two years while lawsuits work their way through the courts.

“We have ended up with a complete insult to the integrity of our procuremen­t process . ... It was a simple train wreck,” Goodman told the committee. “This (bill) is the best solution.”

Meanwhile, Georgia’s two licensed companies are getting closer to opening for business, said Andrew Turnage, executive director for the Georgia Access to Medical Cannabis Commission. Low THC oil still needs to be manufactur­ed, tested and packaged before it can be sold.

“The production licensees are clearly on a path to opening those dispensari­es in late spring,” Turnage said. “The dialogue has been in the future tense all the way up until now. That future tense is just weeks down the road.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? Trulieve Cannabis Corp. hosted a ribbon-cutting for its production facility in Adel in December. Trulieve is one of two companies awarded a license to produce low THC oil in Georgia for the treatment of several approved illnesses, including severe seizures, Parkinson’s disease and terminal cancers. Four other companies are suing to state to be licensed to sell the product.
COURTESY Trulieve Cannabis Corp. hosted a ribbon-cutting for its production facility in Adel in December. Trulieve is one of two companies awarded a license to produce low THC oil in Georgia for the treatment of several approved illnesses, including severe seizures, Parkinson’s disease and terminal cancers. Four other companies are suing to state to be licensed to sell the product.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Jim “J-BO” Wages holds a bottle of cannabis oil for his daughter, Sydney, at their home in Dallas in 2017. The family was among the very first to receive permission from Georgia to use low-dose cannabis oil without fear of prosecutio­n.
HYOSUB SHIN/HSHIN@AJC.COM Jim “J-BO” Wages holds a bottle of cannabis oil for his daughter, Sydney, at their home in Dallas in 2017. The family was among the very first to receive permission from Georgia to use low-dose cannabis oil without fear of prosecutio­n.

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