probo24
Well-Known Member
I'm not sure anyone can answer questions like this one yet.
It does seem to me a lot of people are in the dark on who can and cannot
purchase a caregivers meds.
While as a caregiver you are allowed a max number of patients, and compensation
issues are addressed between patient and caregiver, it seems to me that the basic
question of what to do with meds over 2.5oz/patient has been ignored, or at least,
given the recent raids isn't very clear yet.
This is the root of my question, being a legal patient who has elected to grow
my own meds, in the technical sense, i am also a caregiver. Doesn't that
give me the same rights (if any) to get rid of my excess meds as say a
caregiver with patients.
For example, if a caregiver with five patients is "compensated" for extra meds from anyone (dispensaries) other than a patient he or she has a card for, and this is deemed legal in the future, couldn't i also get the same compensation, and wouldn't i be just as "legal"?
I'm trying to rationalize it this way, until we have some for sure answers.
It does seem to me a lot of people are in the dark on who can and cannot
purchase a caregivers meds.
While as a caregiver you are allowed a max number of patients, and compensation
issues are addressed between patient and caregiver, it seems to me that the basic
question of what to do with meds over 2.5oz/patient has been ignored, or at least,
given the recent raids isn't very clear yet.
This is the root of my question, being a legal patient who has elected to grow
my own meds, in the technical sense, i am also a caregiver. Doesn't that
give me the same rights (if any) to get rid of my excess meds as say a
caregiver with patients.
For example, if a caregiver with five patients is "compensated" for extra meds from anyone (dispensaries) other than a patient he or she has a card for, and this is deemed legal in the future, couldn't i also get the same compensation, and wouldn't i be just as "legal"?
I'm trying to rationalize it this way, until we have some for sure answers.