California Releases Medical Marijuana Rules

Ron Strider

Well-Known Member
More than two decades after legalizing medical marijuana and just months before recreational pot shops are due to start opening, the state of California issued comprehensive rules for the medical cannabis industry. The rules, which are now a few days into a 45-day comment period prior to becoming law, aim to make medical marijuana cleaner and safer. Medical pot businesses will face rising regulatory compliance costs, but the increasing expenses are widely seen as a welcome tradeoff for bringing law and order to the industry.

If the new rules become law, all medical cannabis will have to be lab-tested and tracked from seed to sale. Edible pot products would be able to contain a maximum of 10 milligrams of THC per serving and a maximum of 100 milligrams per package.

Medical marijuana dispensaries would face new restrictions, such as only being allowed to operate from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. Dispensaries would also have to stop giving away free samples.

Patients would be allowed to buy a maximum of 8 ounces of cannabis flowers a day. Additionally, 42 percent of indoor pot-farm electricity would have to come from renewable sources.

Regulators say medical marijuana business owners could see compliance costs increase by $524 per pound. Marijuana sells wholesale for about $800 to $2,500 per pound.

Overall, compliance costs could increase by $125,000 a year for a small operation and by $310,000 a year for an average pot business. Prices for patients may rise in the short-term but are expected to fall in the long-term.

California’s medical pot market generates about $2.4 billion a year in revenue. There are approximately 1,000 medical marijuana stores in the state and tens of thousands of growers.

The proposed medical marijuana regulatory scheme does not effect recreational use and sales of cannabis. State lawmakers hope to align the rules for the medical and recreational pot markets through legislation later this year. However, there are several special interest groups threatening to derail the process.

California must begin issuing recreational pot shop licenses by Jan. 1, 2018.

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"Regulators say medical marijuana business owners could see compliance costs increase by $524 per pound."

Thank you, Cali!!!
 
Like most state or governmental overreach, they will tax a low-hanging fruit like MMJ to plug most every budgetary gap. Who cares about a sin tax? Result: A thriving black-market economy ending in BOTH lower sales AND taxes from businesses playing by the rules. We've seen this before from the government.
 
Say goodby to 99% of the edibles currently on the market...

Edible pot products would be able to contain a maximum of 10 milligrams of THC per serving and a maximum of 100 milligrams per package.
 
Say goodby to 99% of the edibles currently on the market...

Edible pot products would be able to contain a maximum of 10 milligrams of THC per serving and a maximum of 100 milligrams per package.
You're so right. I barely notice 30 milligrams.
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Say goodby to 99% of the edibles currently on the market...

Edible pot products would be able to contain a maximum of 10 milligrams of THC per serving and a maximum of 100 milligrams per package.


For therapeutic benefits, most patients need/use more than 100mg per dose. A 10mg serving size is even only mildly recreational.
 
For therapeutic benefits, most patients need/use more than 100mg per dose. A 10mg serving size is even only mildly recreational.

I agree... all this is going to do is make medicine cost more because packaging costs are going to go up, the costs will go up per edible, and patients will suffer. Also most of the companies currently selling edibles will have to fork over cash to pay for new packaging, machines, etc to meet the new regulations... its sad...

welcome to microdosing...blah!
 
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