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WA~state ... Inslee signs state medical marijuana system changes into law

yortbogey

To Have More ... Desire Less
Veteran
OLYMPIA — Nearly two decades after voters passed a medical marijuana law that often left police, prosecutors and even patients confused about what was allowed, Gov. Jay Inslee signed a bill Friday attempting to clean up that largely unregulated system and harmonize it with Washington’s new market for recreational pot.

Among the law’s many provisions, it creates a voluntary registry of patients and, beginning next year, eliminates what have become in some cases large, legally dubious “collective gardens” providing cannabis to thousands of people.

Instead, those patients will be able to purchase medical-grade products at legal recreational marijuana stores that obtain an endorsement to sell medical marijuana, or they’ll be able to participate in much-smaller cooperative grows, of up to just four patients.

And those big medical marijuana gardens will be given what lawmakers describe as a path to legitimacy: The state will grant priority in licensing to those that have been good actors, such as by paying business taxes.

“I am committed to ensuring a system that serves patients well and makes medicine available in a safe and accessible manner, just like we would do for any medicine,” Inslee wrote in his signing message to the Legislature.

The proliferation of green-cross medical dispensaries has long been a concern for police and other officials who decry them as a masquerade for black-market sales. Some proprietors of new, state-licensed recreational pot businesses — saddled with higher taxes — called them unfair competitors.

Washington in 1998 became one of the first states to approve the use of marijuana for medical purposes, but the initiative passed by voters did not allow commercial sales. Instead, patients had to grow the marijuana for themselves or designate someone to grow it for them. The measure did not prohibit patients from pooling their resources together to have large collective gardens on a single property, but the size of some made law enforcement queasy, and raids sometimes resulted.

Medical marijuana growers repeatedly sought legislation that would validate their business model, coming closest in 2011, when the Legislature approved a bill to create a licensing framework for medical dispensaries. But then-Gov. Chris Gregoire vetoed much of the measure.

This time, with the state seeking to support its nascent recreational pot industry after the passage of Initiative 502 in 2012, there was a financial impetus to pull the medical users into the recreational system. The recreational businesses pressed for a tight rein on the medical industry with newfound lobbying muscle, and the medical businesses countered with some of their own.

That left advocates concerned that the people who are actually sick were the ones losing out. Under the new system, patients will be buying more heavily taxed marijuana, and they’ll be allowed to grow fewer plants at home.

“This is pejorative to patients while being friendly to those who are in the business of patients,” said Muraco Kyashna-tocha, who operated a Seattle medical dispensary. “There are sincere patients who don’t have any money. They’re cancer patients who are being bankrupted by their treatment.”

Under the new law, patients who join the voluntary registry will be allowed to possess three times as much marijuana as is allowed under the recreational law: 3 ounces dry, 48 ounces of marijuana-infused solids, 216 ounces liquid and 21 grams of concentrates. Such a patient could also grow up to six plants at home, unless authorized to receive more.

Patients who don’t join the registry can possess the same as the recreational limit of 1 ounce, and grow up to four plants at home — which recreational users can’t.

Sen. Ann Rivers, a Republican from La Center who was the sponsor of the measure, said that part of the reason the registry is so important is to find out if there are enough stores providing medical products to patients.

“We have no idea how many patients we have in this state,” she said.

Inslee, who vetoed some minor sections of the bill, was joined during the signing by Ryan Day and his epileptic 6-year-old son, Haiden. The boy’s seizures have been managed with an extracted liquid form of marijuana.

Day said the new law gives his family more certainty.

“We were under the threat every single year that the system was going to change in a way that was going to take away my ability to help my son,” he said.


http://www.yakimaherald.com/home/3111003-8/inslee-signs-state-medical-marijuana-system-changes-into
 

Doc D

Active member
sad day.

sign the petition for I-1372, the only possible way out of this mess (that i know of)
 

snake11

Member
Very sad day for wa medical patients. They are being tossed aside so the 502 cartel can succeed. Wa politicians are some of the most greedy, ignorant people in politics. I am embarrassed for them and worried for the future.
 

snake11

Member
I was just reading through the bill and find it disgusting the anywhere medical cannabis was mentioned the word was changed to marijuana and anywhere marijuana was mentioned in rec it was changed to cannabis. Cartel 502's campaign against medical patients continues.
 
Just love this. Household usage for the two med patients here is around 1.5 lbs a month...
Won't be able to grow enough, won't be able to afford to purchase even at current dispensary prices...
 

RedEye_JeDi

New member
I think most of us aware of the State LCB vs Medical Marijuana community battle in Washington are in shock. How else to explain the lack of outcry? After resisting attacks on Medical for a couple years, Senate Bill 5052 is the death sentence to our rights. Blatantly misleading, called the "patient protection act", it reduces patient rights from 15 plants down to 4, or 6 if you sign up and release your name/address to the state. And half or more medical dispensaries must shut down.

Governor Inslee signed the bill into law just one week after he received it! This gave the working class insufficient time to formulate a response, or even finish reviewing the new pages of rules. This is dirty politics, stripping controversial rights in a heartbeat, in a race to gain tax dollars and nothing more.

The only path to resistance is getting mass signatures on Initiative-1372. We need a total of 250,000 signatures. One important reason this Initiative can save us, is because it was filed 6 days before SB5052. So if we can get the signatures by the end of June (We have 21 Days!!!), it will appear on the Washington 2015 Ballot, and we can have a real vote!

Here is the I-1372 Filing:
http://www.sos.wa.gov/elections...

I called the Olympia Elections Division today, and confirmed that anyone can can print out their own ballots here: (11 x 17 paper, must print Double Sided, color or black&white)

http://www.cppwa.org/

All signed, completed documents must be mailed to the author. He will collect and submit them by July 2nd. (You cannot submit them directly to the Secretary or State)

Mail completed Initiative 1372 Signatures to:
Cannabis Patient Protection
P.O. Box 12082
Seattle, Was 98102
Email: cppwa.2013@gmail.com


You do NOT have to complete a sheet before submitting! It can just have 1 or 2 sigs to count, every one is very important. This will NOT happen without tons of participation. We need to get the word out on the net FAST, and have some events or get this in the news more. We are being trampled very fast, its time for us ALL to do a little work to protect ourselves.
 
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