latest Michigan medical marijuana news.....

cephalopod

Well-Known Member
[h=1]Michigan Senators: Get Your Kush At CVS[/h] [h=2]Virtual repeal of 2012-s synthetic marijuana ban, no local control, sales through pharmacies are highlights of the new Prairie Plant Bill[/h]It’s been known by many names- the Anti-Local Option Bill, the Anti-Dispensary Bill, or merely the ‘Prairie Plant Paid For It Bill’. Whatever you choose to call it, the Michigan Senate is on the threshold of introducing legislation that would establish a system of medical marijuana greenhouses who distribute cannabis through your corner pharmacy.
Yes, pot sold through national big-box chain pharmacies.
The plan would not kick in until federal policy on marijuana law changes, which is rapidly evolving in a pro-marijuana direction. The proposed bill is not idle speculation pushed by some liberal lawmaker out to satisfy a vocal segment of their constituency, it is a tangible effort pushed by the Senate’s top three Republicans and a wealthy Canadian corporation.
Read the latest draft of the proposed bill HERE
[h=3]WHO IS DRIVING THIS LEGISLATION[/h]Prairie Plant Systems describe their specialty as “plant-based bio-pharmaceutical production that combines strict genetic containment, accelerated plant growth and unrivaled environmental control.” They market marijuana to Health Canada under the trademarked name “Cannimed”.
They successfully lobbied the Canadian government to eliminate the ability for qualifying patients to grow their own cannabis or to have another trusted individual cultivate on their behalf, opting instead for a system of large commercial cultivation sites that supply the entire nation’s medicinal cannabis patients. Prairie Plant is one of only two companies allowed to create and sell cannabis in Canada; that system is the commercialized model they are trying to establish in Michigan.
Prairie Plant Systems very famously brought legislators to tour their current cultivation operation, which utilizes Michigan’s abandoned mines to produce herbs and other foodstuffs underground. Their subsidiary, SubTerra, is the corporation’s Michigan agent. Several Representatives and Senators, and their staff members, have admitted to being given the Prairie Plant mine tour in Michigan or the garden tour in Canada.
Although Prairie Plant’s underground garden tour was publicized in April of 2012, and the bill supporting their cause was introduced in October of that same year, their Michigan lobbying firm has been working to establish a state-run cultivation system for nearly as long as the MMA has been in effect- April, 2009. Some of the current bill’s sponsors were among the first to be wined and dined by the commercial powerhouse, and Lansing is awash with stories of legislators recently being flown to giant Canadian cultivation centers to encourage their support.
This new version of last year’s failed bill, SB 1349, has some subtle changes- it no longer robs the MMA’s Medical Marihuana Fund for financial start-up resources, for example- but it contains many of the negatives that caused the cannabis community so much discomfort when it was first introduced, including an extensive set of testing requirements that managed to find their way into an early version of the Provisioning Centers Act, a dispensary-empowering bill that is also a carryover from the 2012 legislative session. That testing segment has since been modified to reflect standards currently utilized by Michigan’s marijuana testing businesses.
The 2013 version of the Prairie Plant Bill is being launched from Senator Roger Kahn’s office. Kahn, a medical doctor, co-sponsored last year’s version of the same bill along with the Senate Majority Leader Randy Richardville and Senator Rick Jones. Although the 2013 bill has not formally announced sponsors, Lansing insiders confirm that this trio is again at the helm.
Richardville is the leader of the Senate Republicans and his influence is vast. As Majority Leader he decides which bills are voted on by the Senate and which wither and die on the vine. 2012-s SB 1349 was assigned to his Committee- Governmental Oversight- and it is anticipated that this year’s version will be given the same assignment. That gives him the power to control debate, amendments and advancement of the Prairie Plant Bill.
Jones is on record as being in opposition to Michigan’s Medical Marihuana Act (MMA) for most of Michigan’s registered patients. He’s been confrontational in Committee meetings toward medical marijuana patients- even insulting patients and limiting public commentary on marijuana-related bills passing through the Senate Judiciary Committee he chairs.
In 2009, Senators Kahn, Kuipers, Van Workem and Cropsey introduced a package of bills intended to gut the then-new MMA and replace it with a state-run system of marijuana production and distribution. That proposal featured a half-dozen large marijuana growing operations instead of the produce-your-own system the voters selected in 2008 by a staggering 63% landslide. After some damning testimony from the ACLU and the medical marijuana community in 2010, that effort never made it out of Kahn’s Senate Judiciary Committee. Kahn is in the last of his term-limited sessions in the Senate; Cropsey works in the office of Michigan’s Attorney General.
Kahn’s office did not return multiple telephone calls for a quote.
Some highlights:

  1. The state will license marijuana production facilities, called a “Pharmaceutical-grade cannabis licensed facility”, which exclusively manufacture, cultivate and tests cannabis. No distribution of cannabis would be allowed at any location other than a pharmacy.
  2. All cannabis must be sold from the cultivation facility to a pharmacist directly. “A pharmaceutical-grade cannabis licensed facility shall sell pharmaceutical-grade cannabis only to a licensed pharmacist or retail pharmacy to be dispensed only to patients…” Direct interactions between patients and the cultivation facilities are crimes.
  3. Local communities could not refuse to accept a cultivation facility in their area; “a local governmental unit shall not enact or enforce an ordinance regarding pharmaceutical-grade cannabis licensed facilities.” Any locally-enacted zoning requirements could not eliminate the Facilities, and must meet a state-defined standard of “reasonable”.
  4. Each ‘prescription’ for medicinal cannabis would have to contain the “Name, address, and federal Drug Enforcement Administration number of the dispensing pharmacy and the initials of the pharmacist who fills the prescription.”
  5. No caregivers are allowed under the proposed system, so those who are too sick to visit the pharmacist are not able to designate a surrogate to acquire on their behalf.
  6. The Prairie Plant Bill would create a parallel registry program similar to the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act (MMA), including registry identification cards, but individuals must sacrifice their MMA status and all rights to cultivate cannabis if they choose to enroll in the Prairie Plant Bill program.
  7. Pediatric cannabis use is not allowed under the Prairie Plant Bill guidelines, regardless of how many physicians believe the child would receive therapeutic benefit.
  8. No transfers between patients- even if there is no compensation involved.
  9. Although the Prairie Plant Bill is predicated on a change in federal laws, the proposed bill has enough push behind it to get it introduced for a second legislative session in a row.
[h=3]IT ALLOWS THE CREATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF SYNTHETIC MARIJUANA[/h]Synthetic versions of marijuana were outlawed in Michigan via Public Act 183 of 2012. It created Section 7212 (1)(e) and (1)(x) of the Public Health Code to remove dangerous designer drugs from gas station and convenience store shelves. The language was created by Senate Bill 1082, which used 95 lines of text in section (e) to explain the details and intricacies of the ban on products that were killing Michigan youth. The Prairie Plant Bill discards nearly all that detailed and intricate language, substituting instead this minimalist passage:
(e) EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN SUBSECTION (2), COMPOUNDS of structures of substances referred to in subdivision (d), regardless of numerical designation of atomic positions, are included.
The Prairie Plant Bill also completely eliminates the 32-line Section (1)(x) that outlawed synthetic cathinones, used as a catch-all segment intended to give prosecutors a tool against emergent drugs not previously defined but containing dangerous components.
The exception listed in (1)(e) in the Prairie Plant Bill authorizes the distribution, creation and acquisition of synthetic cannabinoids, and makes those substances a Schedule 2 drug in Michigan- as long as they are created in Prairie Plant Bill facilities and are sold in pharmacies. Synthetic cannabis is a classification which includes K2, spice, bath salts, herbal incense and any other derivation chemists can come up with.
The elimination of these protections diminishes the work of legislators, parents and the Governor in favor of a system that allows for commercial exploitation of a product that, unlike marijuana, has demonstrably caused death. The re-emergence of synthetic marijuana is not supported by any marijuana law reform organization, in Michigan or nationally.
[h=3]LOOSER REGULATIONS THAN THE MMA[/h]In some respects, the Prairie Plant Bill allows more Michiganders the right to use medicinal cannabis.
In the MMA, the responsibility of making a ‘recommendation’ for medicinal cannabis use is reserved for “a Doctor of Medicine (MD) or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery (DO) fully licensed in the state of Michigan,” per the Licensing and Regulatory Affairs website. In the Prairie Plant Bill, “a physician” may make the recommendation.
No establishment of a prior relationship between the doctor and patient is articulated in the Prairie Plant Bill; the current system of specialty physicians, often referred to as ‘pot docs’ by the very supporters of this legislation, would flourish and prosper. The language of the MMA requires a bona-fide doctor-patient relationship, and that relationship was further defined in legislation Governor Snyder signed into law in 2013. The Prairie Plant Bill makes no such distinction, and eliminates the records review, record keeping, in-person evaluation and follow-up care requirements drafted into law for participants in the MMA.
Under current law, registered medical marijuana patients are restricted to 2.5 ounces of dried usable cannabis; the Prairie Plant Bill contains no restrictions on possession amounts. Similarly it lacks any definition as to the amount of cannabis that licensed and certified facilities can grow, or hold, or sell, or transfer to pharmacies. All the safeguards that were contained in the MMA are left undefined, opting instead to allow LARA to decide those limitations on their own after the bill is passed into law, without legislative debate or a vote.
The Prairie Plant Bill allows law enforcement to learn the registered patient’s illnesses and symptoms, the name and address of the recommending physician, and the history of obtaining marijuana prescriptions (if technology allows it). This relaxation of the privacy provisions contained in the MMA is of great concern to the medical cannabis community.

Lansing politicos have opined that the new Prairie Plant Bill will be assigned a Senate Bill number and be introduced during the last week of October.
Source: The Compassion Chronicles
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
I will never buy the Canna from a corner store, unless the corner store was a co-op of hippies.

No way buying from Rite-Aid. LOL! WTF??!! Like outlawing back yard tomatoes and you can only buy them from a chain! Ha! Try and enact that shit.
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
We've been growing it for thousands of years. If I'm asked to pay tribute to a corporate god- well, a little civil disobedience never hurt a population.
 

Stompromper

Well-Known Member
No... just dont do it in the presence of secret service. Thats a felony now.. Protests havent worked in this state yet. They dont give a shit what we think or do, they will have their way.
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
I'm more optimistic. The tide is shifting fast. If they could avoid this, they would have. Big Alcohol, Tobacco, Pharma, and private prisons all benefit from keeping shackles on the Canna. The fact that the laws have changes as much as they have clearly show they are losing.

Ultimately, each of the fuckers only gets one vote
 

buckaroo bonzai

Well-Known Member
cant multi quote octopus man-- I will say this tho- sometimes the truth cant be explained -you have to experience it you can thank the CPU group for what is and whats coming...they helped draft the rules peace from another dimension and someone elses comp (ipad stolen)
 

cephalopod

Well-Known Member
[h=1]Transporting pot: Latest wrinkle in complex medical marijuana regulations[/h]GRAND RAPIDS, MI – Christian Hines, a registered medical marijuana patient, had pot in his backpack when his Chevy Silverado pickup was pulled over by police near Cascade Road SE and Forest Hills Avenue at 2:47 a.m. on June 24.
A Kent County Sheriff’s deputy found the marijuana. Although Hines, 22, was legally allowed to have the marijuana, the deputy issued him a ticket for improper transportation of medical marijuana in a vehicle.
Hines is among the first people in Kent County to be charged with this misdemeanor, which came into effect only a few months before he was stopped. As 2013 progresses, the charge is showing up more often on district court dockets throughout Michigan.
To Bruce Block, a Grand Rapids attorney who specializes in law related to medical marijuana, the statute is little more than another stab at the voter-approved Michigan Medical Marijuana Act.
“It just seems like another way to harass medical marijuana users,” Block said. “I think it’s a bunch of crap.”
Public Act 460 states that medical marijuana must be enclosed in a case that is carried in the trunk of the vehicle. If the vehicle has no trunk, then the marijuana must be enclosed in a case that is not readily accessible from the interior of the vehicle.
Violating the law is a misdemeanor punishable by as much as 93 days in jail and a $500 fine.
The act became enforceable this year after passing unanimously in the State Senate and by a margin of 98-10 in the State House during the December lame duck session of the state Legislature.
The bill was introduced by Owosso Republican state Rep. Ben Glardon, who said the law is not intended to harass anyone, but is simply is a way to clear up the ambiguities that have plagued the Medical Marijuana Act.
He said the law is not much different than laws that prohibit open alcohol containers in motor vehicles, and really serves as a protection for medical marijuana users who may have come under suspicion when transporting their marijuana.
“This helps eliminate some confusion,” Glardon said. “It wasn’t done as a harassment, at least not on my part.”
Glardon said he recognizes that the MMMA was approved by voters and is the law of the state. He said he knows this act does not call for commonly abused prescription drugs to be locked in a trunk.
“But if you had a bunch of pills out on the seat of your car, police might find that suspicious,” Glardon said.
Glardon said he has heard from proponents of medical marijuana who appreciate having the guidelines that help them avoid coming into conflict with law enforcement.
Block said he has represented a number of clients in regard to this law and is finding that as long as the person is generally law-abiding, courts are not using the law to slam legal users too harshly.
“I’m not seeing judges send people to jail. Mostly it is fines and costs,” Block said.
But nevertheless, Block says the law may be looking at a constitutional challenge because the MMMA states that as long as a patient or caregiver complies with the MMMA, they are not subject to arrest, prosecution or penalty in any way.
Related: Michigan shows 'zeal to make felons' out of medical marijuana providers, Grand Rapids attorney says
The new law regarding the transportation of marijuana is not contained within the MMMA.
The transport bill passed by majorities large enough that it could have amended the MMMA, but Glardon said that was not politically viable at the time.
“To revisit the whole subject, there really wasn’t an appetite for that,” Glardon said. “Taking it in bits and pieces was a more manageable approach.”
This law applies only to marijuana that can be smoked or used in other ways. It does not apply to live marijuana plants or seeds.
Block says the transportation law shows just one of the many confusing aspects of the MMMA as the courts deliver contradictory opinions and the Legislature creates new hoops to jump through.
Block warns that anyone attempting to use medical marijuana should do a careful and complete study of the applicable laws.
Records show Hines’ case has languished in the courts for four months, some of the delay due to the defendant’s failure to show up for hearings, but it now appears the case will be settled prior to jury selection scheduled for Nov. 14 in Kent County District Court.
It is likely that Hines will be slapped with fines and court costs when all is said and done.
Read the law: Public Act 460
E-mail Barton Deiters: [email protected] and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/GRPBarton or Facebook at facebook.com/bartondeiters.5




 

RenMasters

Member
What is alleged in this article really pisses me off. How can a Michigander live with themselves when their trying to funnel the profits of MI's med sales to a Canadian company and not a Michigan company. How can these people be the ones leading our state? The people leading our state are leading a drive to funnel profits out of it? That's so F'ed up!

Michigan Senators: Get Your Kush At CVS

Virtual repeal of 2012-s synthetic marijuana ban, no local control, sales through pharmacies are highlights of the new Prairie Plant Bill

It’s been known by many names- the Anti-Local Option Bill, the Anti-Dispensary Bill, or merely the ‘Prairie Plant Paid For It Bill’. Whatever you choose to call it, the Michigan Senate is on the threshold of introducing legislation that would establish a system of medical marijuana greenhouses who distribute cannabis through your corner pharmacy.
Yes, pot sold through national big-box chain pharmacies.
The plan would not kick in until federal policy on marijuana law changes, which is rapidly evolving in a pro-marijuana direction. The proposed bill is not idle speculation pushed by some liberal lawmaker out to satisfy a vocal segment of their constituency, it is a tangible effort pushed by the Senate’s top three Republicans and a wealthy Canadian corporation.
Read the latest draft of the proposed bill HERE
WHO IS DRIVING THIS LEGISLATION

Prairie Plant Systems describe their specialty as “plant-based bio-pharmaceutical production that combines strict genetic containment, accelerated plant growth and unrivaled environmental control.” They market marijuana to Health Canada under the trademarked name “Cannimed”.
They successfully lobbied the Canadian government to eliminate the ability for qualifying patients to grow their own cannabis or to have another trusted individual cultivate on their behalf, opting instead for a system of large commercial cultivation sites that supply the entire nation’s medicinal cannabis patients. Prairie Plant is one of only two companies allowed to create and sell cannabis in Canada; that system is the commercialized model they are trying to establish in Michigan.
Prairie Plant Systems very famously brought legislators to tour their current cultivation operation, which utilizes Michigan’s abandoned mines to produce herbs and other foodstuffs underground. Their subsidiary, SubTerra, is the corporation’s Michigan agent. Several Representatives and Senators, and their staff members, have admitted to being given the Prairie Plant mine tour in Michigan or the garden tour in Canada.
Although Prairie Plant’s underground garden tour was publicized in April of 2012, and the bill supporting their cause was introduced in October of that same year, their Michigan lobbying firm has been working to establish a state-run cultivation system for nearly as long as the MMA has been in effect- April, 2009. Some of the current bill’s sponsors were among the first to be wined and dined by the commercial powerhouse, and Lansing is awash with stories of legislators recently being flown to giant Canadian cultivation centers to encourage their support.
This new version of last year’s failed bill, SB 1349, has some subtle changes- it no longer robs the MMA’s Medical Marihuana Fund for financial start-up resources, for example- but it contains many of the negatives that caused the cannabis community so much discomfort when it was first introduced, including an extensive set of testing requirements that managed to find their way into an early version of the Provisioning Centers Act, a dispensary-empowering bill that is also a carryover from the 2012 legislative session. That testing segment has since been modified to reflect standards currently utilized by Michigan’s marijuana testing businesses.
The 2013 version of the Prairie Plant Bill is being launched from Senator Roger Kahn’s office. Kahn, a medical doctor, co-sponsored last year’s version of the same bill along with the Senate Majority Leader Randy Richardville and Senator Rick Jones. Although the 2013 bill has not formally announced sponsors, Lansing insiders confirm that this trio is again at the helm.
Richardville is the leader of the Senate Republicans and his influence is vast. As Majority Leader he decides which bills are voted on by the Senate and which wither and die on the vine. 2012-s SB 1349 was assigned to his Committee- Governmental Oversight- and it is anticipated that this year’s version will be given the same assignment. That gives him the power to control debate, amendments and advancement of the Prairie Plant Bill.
Jones is on record as being in opposition to Michigan’s Medical Marihuana Act (MMA) for most of Michigan’s registered patients. He’s been confrontational in Committee meetings toward medical marijuana patients- even insulting patients and limiting public commentary on marijuana-related bills passing through the Senate Judiciary Committee he chairs.
In 2009, Senators Kahn, Kuipers, Van Workem and Cropsey introduced a package of bills intended to gut the then-new MMA and replace it with a state-run system of marijuana production and distribution. That proposal featured a half-dozen large marijuana growing operations instead of the produce-your-own system the voters selected in 2008 by a staggering 63% landslide. After some damning testimony from the ACLU and the medical marijuana community in 2010, that effort never made it out of Kahn’s Senate Judiciary Committee. Kahn is in the last of his term-limited sessions in the Senate; Cropsey works in the office of Michigan’s Attorney General.
Kahn’s office did not return multiple telephone calls for a quote.
Some highlights:


  1. The state will license marijuana production facilities, called a “Pharmaceutical-grade cannabis licensed facility”, which exclusively manufacture, cultivate and tests cannabis. No distribution of cannabis would be allowed at any location other than a pharmacy.
  2. All cannabis must be sold from the cultivation facility to a pharmacist directly. “A pharmaceutical-grade cannabis licensed facility shall sell pharmaceutical-grade cannabis only to a licensed pharmacist or retail pharmacy to be dispensed only to patients…” Direct interactions between patients and the cultivation facilities are crimes.
  3. Local communities could not refuse to accept a cultivation facility in their area; “a local governmental unit shall not enact or enforce an ordinance regarding pharmaceutical-grade cannabis licensed facilities.” Any locally-enacted zoning requirements could not eliminate the Facilities, and must meet a state-defined standard of “reasonable”.
  4. Each ‘prescription’ for medicinal cannabis would have to contain the “Name, address, and federal Drug Enforcement Administration number of the dispensing pharmacy and the initials of the pharmacist who fills the prescription.”
  5. No caregivers are allowed under the proposed system, so those who are too sick to visit the pharmacist are not able to designate a surrogate to acquire on their behalf.
  6. The Prairie Plant Bill would create a parallel registry program similar to the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act (MMA), including registry identification cards, but individuals must sacrifice their MMA status and all rights to cultivate cannabis if they choose to enroll in the Prairie Plant Bill program.
  7. Pediatric cannabis use is not allowed under the Prairie Plant Bill guidelines, regardless of how many physicians believe the child would receive therapeutic benefit.
  8. No transfers between patients- even if there is no compensation involved.
  9. Although the Prairie Plant Bill is predicated on a change in federal laws, the proposed bill has enough push behind it to get it introduced for a second legislative session in a row.

IT ALLOWS THE CREATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF SYNTHETIC marijuana

Synthetic versions of marijuana were outlawed in Michigan via Public Act 183 of 2012. It created Section 7212 (1)(e) and (1)(x) of the Public Health Code to remove dangerous designer drugs from gas station and convenience store shelves. The language was created by Senate Bill 1082, which used 95 lines of text in section (e) to explain the details and intricacies of the ban on products that were killing Michigan youth. The Prairie Plant Bill discards nearly all that detailed and intricate language, substituting instead this minimalist passage:
(e) EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN SUBSECTION (2), COMPOUNDS of structures of substances referred to in subdivision (d), regardless of numerical designation of atomic positions, are included.​
The Prairie Plant Bill also completely eliminates the 32-line Section (1)(x) that outlawed synthetic cathinones, used as a catch-all segment intended to give prosecutors a tool against emergent drugs not previously defined but containing dangerous components.
The exception listed in (1)(e) in the Prairie Plant Bill authorizes the distribution, creation and acquisition of synthetic cannabinoids, and makes those substances a Schedule 2 drug in Michigan- as long as they are created in Prairie Plant Bill facilities and are sold in pharmacies. Synthetic cannabis is a classification which includes K2, spice, bath salts, herbal incense and any other derivation chemists can come up with.
The elimination of these protections diminishes the work of legislators, parents and the Governor in favor of a system that allows for commercial exploitation of a product that, unlike marijuana, has demonstrably caused death. The re-emergence of synthetic marijuana is not supported by any marijuana law reform organization, in Michigan or nationally.
LOOSER REGULATIONS THAN THE MMA

In some respects, the Prairie Plant Bill allows more Michiganders the right to use medicinal cannabis.
In the MMA, the responsibility of making a ‘recommendation’ for medicinal cannabis use is reserved for “a Doctor of Medicine (MD) or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery (DO) fully licensed in the state of Michigan,” per the Licensing and Regulatory Affairs website. In the Prairie Plant Bill, “a physician” may make the recommendation.
No establishment of a prior relationship between the doctor and patient is articulated in the Prairie Plant Bill; the current system of specialty physicians, often referred to as ‘pot docs’ by the very supporters of this legislation, would flourish and prosper. The language of the MMA requires a bona-fide doctor-patient relationship, and that relationship was further defined in legislation Governor Snyder signed into law in 2013. The Prairie Plant Bill makes no such distinction, and eliminates the records review, record keeping, in-person evaluation and follow-up care requirements drafted into law for participants in the MMA.
Under current law, registered medical marijuana patients are restricted to 2.5 ounces of dried usable cannabis; the Prairie Plant Bill contains no restrictions on possession amounts. Similarly it lacks any definition as to the amount of cannabis that licensed and certified facilities can grow, or hold, or sell, or transfer to pharmacies. All the safeguards that were contained in the MMA are left undefined, opting instead to allow LARA to decide those limitations on their own after the bill is passed into law, without legislative debate or a vote.
The Prairie Plant Bill allows law enforcement to learn the registered patient’s illnesses and symptoms, the name and address of the recommending physician, and the history of obtaining marijuana prescriptions (if technology allows it). This relaxation of the privacy provisions contained in the MMA is of great concern to the medical cannabis community.

Lansing politicos have opined that the new Prairie Plant Bill will be assigned a Senate Bill number and be introduced during the last week of October.
Source: The Compassion Chronicles

 

cephalopod

Well-Known Member
http://www.freep.com/article/20131103/NEWS01/311030065/medical-marijuana-medibles-epilepsy-NORML

[h=1]House bill would allow pot in food and lotions | Detroit Free Press | freep.com[/h]What has been a standing joke in decades of comedy movies and college parties — marijuana brownies — became a serious matter to state Rep. Eileen Kowall when a family came to her with their sick child.
The meeting led Kowall, R-White Lake, to introduce a bill last week that, in effect, makes marijuana brownies and other non-smoked forms of the drug legal medicine in Michigan.
“People joke about marijuana brownies but this (subject) came to my attention recently when some families with sick children called me,” Kowall said. The families were upset by a Michigan Court of Appeals ruling in September that said smoking cannabis was virtually the only legal means for using the drug, she said.
The decision stemmed from the case of a man, arrested while driving in Beverly Hills in 2011, who had in the back of his car brownies containing marijuana extract. It sent shock waves through Michigan’s community of more than 100,000 state-approved medical marijuana patients, many of whom rely on “medibles” — the nickname for health foods and extracts made of marijuana, according to groups such as Southgate-based Michigan Compassion.
And it put the parents of pediatric users in a corner, unable to legally administer the drug in lozenges or via vaporizers that are less irritating than smoke to young lungs, Kowall said.
The ruling also posed a problem for adult users of medical marijuana such as Pamela Brown, 57, of Riverview. The idea of smoking anything repels Brown but medical marijuana in other forms has been a godsend, allowing her to stop taking blood-pressure medicine and pain pills for her back pain, she said.
“I juice it and I also make a lotion that I rub on my joints,” Brown said.
“It’s sadly ironic that the people who need this medicine the most are the ones most affected by this bad court decision,” said Detroit lawyer Matt Abel, executive director of Michigan NORML, a group that seeks to legalize marijuana in Michigan.
House Bill 5104 would add the words “plant resin or extract” to the definition of usable marijuana in Michigan’s medical marijuana act.
And, in deciding whether a patient was within the legal limit of 2.5 ounces that state-approved users can possess, the law would no longer let police, prosecutors and judges count the weight of brownies, pop, lotion base, candy “or any inactive substance used as a delivery medium” against the limit, according to the bill’s language.




 

cephalopod

Well-Known Member
[h=1]Feds raid marijuana dispensary[/h][h=3]Owner could face gun charges[/h][h=5]December 19, 2013[/h]By DAN ROBLEE - DMG writer ([email protected]) , The Daily Mining Gazette
Save |
HOUGHTON - Northern Specialty Health, a medical marijuana dispensary in Houghton's Huron Center will close its doors following combined federal/regional raids on the business and the Hancock home of its owner, Nathan Joyal, on Dec. 12.
Public Information Officer Donald Dawkins of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said state and federal prosecutors are still considering evidence before deciding what charges to file, but firearms charges against Joyal are likely with marijuana charges possible.
"We were going in looking at firearms issues, but are aware of possible medical marijuana violations as well," Dawkins said.
[h=4]Article Photos[/h]
Dan Roblee/Daily Mining Gazette
Nathan Joyal, owner of Northern Specialty Health stands in his store Wednesday. Joyal is closing the business following a raid last week by federal and regional law enforcement authorities.



He said that the investigation and raids were a joint effort of the ATF and the Upper Peninsula Substance Enforcement Team.
Joyal said he plans to close the business by the end of the year after trying to sell his remaining stock of marijuana smoking and growing supplies. He said his money, the marijuana in his home and in his store have been seized. Beyond that, the legal situation would likely prevent him from growing or selling marijuana legally again.
However, Joyal said he's in discussions with someone interested in buying the business and re-opening it as a dispensary. He said his legal issues should have no affect on the business' ability to operate under different ownership.
"The sanctions imposed were against me personally," he said.
Dawkins said the investigation of Joyal was based on tips and other information, and had been ongoing since "earlier this year." Investigators and attorneys are still building their case, he added, but would likely file charges within a few days.
The case is unlikely to have broader fallout. Dawkins said investigators aren't seeking any other warrants or targeting any more suspects at this time.
The ATF is not specifically targeting medical marijuana dealers, he said, though they might bring federal marijuana charges against someone if evidence arises while investigating something else. While federal law does not recognize the legality of state legislated legal medical marijuana, "medical marijuana dealers, when they're conducting business within the law, we don't have any problem with them," Dawkins said.
Joyal said police arrived at his home with a warrant at about 5:45 p.m. Dec. 12, and entered the business about 45 minutes later. He said he thought he saw about 25 different police officers involved in the operation, and believes there were actually many more. He said he spent about seven hours in handcuffs before being released.
Authorities haven't yet released an account of the raid.
"I don't believe I did anything wrong," Joyal said. "I think there's a dispute about exactly what the rules are."
Prospective medical marijuana customer Jim Ross was angry when he walked into Northern Specialty Health Monday and heard that he'd been denied what he considered the safest and least destructive painkiller normally available for his back pain and mobility issues.
"I can get a prescription for Oxycontin, even if it kills me," he said. "This is a plant that grows in the garden."
A counter worker referred him to the only other dispensary in the region, Noggins, in Calumet.
Noggins owner Ry Kochsiek said that his shop was still in business, that he made it a point to avoid guns entirely and kept a close eye on any legal technicalities that could put him afoul of the law.




 

gladstoned

Well-Known Member
I believe the story that the guns caused this. They taught me same lesson when I first came up here.
It's good to know there are a few dispensaries still up here. I wonder if the offer he has to buy the
dispensary came from the same guy that supplied the tips to ATF & UPSET.
 

st0wandgrow

Well-Known Member
I believe the story that the guns caused this. They taught me same lesson when I first came up here.
It's good to know there are a few dispensaries still up here. I wonder if the offer he has to buy the
dispensary came from the same guy that supplied the tips to ATF & UPSET.
Ha! Didn't even think of that when I read the article. You're probably right. Cut the throat of your competition then swoop in and buy it up at pennies on the dollar.
 

NEEDMMASAP

Well-Known Member
Could just buy it from Uruguay
[h=1]Uruguay: Lawmakers Authorize Marijuana Production And Sales[/h]Under the pending law, residents of the South American nation will be able to legally purchase up to 40 grams of cannabis per month. (Sales to non-residents will not be permitted.) Price controls will set the cost of cannabis available at state-stores to $1 per gram. The forthcoming law would also allow households to grow up to six cannabis plants each; it also allows for the establishment of cooperatives, which will be able to grow as many as 99 plants.
 
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