Ron Strider
Well-Known Member
The Meadowlands – already set to be the home of the state's largest shopping and entertainment complex – will also be the site of the state's largest dispensary of medical marijuana.
Once it opens for business, the dispensary plans to serve up to 4,000 patients a month with a variety of strains of cannabis.
The Christie administration this week issued a permit to grow medical marijuana to Harmony Foundation and will consider issuing a permit to dispense marijuana after the crop is tested later this year.
The nonprofit foundation will operate the 10,000-square-foot facility on Meadowlands Parkway in Secaucus.
"After two years of designing and constructing this state-of-the-art facility, we are excited to finally put it into action," said Shaya Brodchandel, Harmony's president and CEO. The strains selected "are well suited for New Jersey medical patients' conditions and to our unique growing system," he said.
New Jersey currently has 13,200 patients registered to purchase medical marijuana, which can prescribed for certain medical conditions only by physicians who have registered with the program.
Medical marijuana in New Jersey is the most expensive in the country, according to Ken Wolski, the head of the Coalition for Medical Marijuana-New Jersey. It sells for about $500 an ounce, he said.
The state Legislature has begun considering a measure to legalize recreational marijuana, which is projected to generate as much as $300 million in tax revenue. Phil Murphy, the Democratic candidate for governor, has said he favors legalization. That would make it easier to purchase marijuana and would change the environment in which dispensers of medical marijuana operate.
Once the Secaucus center opens, New Jersey will have six marijuana dispensaries, which state officials call alternative treatment centers. The others are in Montclair, Egg Harbor, Woodbridge, Cranbury and Bellmawr in Camden County.
Former Gov. Jon Corzine signed New Jersey's law allowing compassionate use of marijuana to treat certain medical conditions in 2010, leaving it for Gov. Chris Christie to implement.
Christie, who vehemently opposes legalization of recreational marijuana, enacted some of the strictest regulations in the nation for medicinal marijuana.
Wolski said he welcomed the new dispensary, but added: "We're very disappointed with the pace of the process." Approval of the sixth center, he said, "is long overdue." The law had anticipated that additional centers would be approved by the state after the first six.
The Health Department says its permitting process for new growers is modeled after the background checks for casino operators.
The examination of Harmony Foundation's executives and funding sources began in December 2014. The leaders and financing have changed since then, said Donna Leusner, a spokeswoman for the Health Department, prolonging the vetting process.
"The permit was issued after a comprehensive review, including several site inspections, background checks of its corporate officers and a review of its security operations and cultivation facility," she said.
Brodchandel, who is 30, has no previous experience in the marijuana industry, but led a company that produced products used in nuclear medicine, a highly regulated industry that prepared him for this role, said Leslie Hoffmann, a spokeswoman for Harmony. He joined the foundation in 2015.
The company's automated, robotic growing system is designed to produce a consistent, high-quality product in an environment where light, temperature, humidity, water, nutrients and carbon dioxide are strictly controlled and tracked, Hoffmann said. It will produce an "extremely consistent, pure product," she said.
News Moderator: Ron Strider 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: State gives OK to grow medical marijuana in Secaucus
Author: Lindy Washburn
Contact: Customer Service | NorthJersey.com
Photo Credit: Harmony Foundation
Website: North Jersey News and Information | NorthJersey.com
Once it opens for business, the dispensary plans to serve up to 4,000 patients a month with a variety of strains of cannabis.
The Christie administration this week issued a permit to grow medical marijuana to Harmony Foundation and will consider issuing a permit to dispense marijuana after the crop is tested later this year.
The nonprofit foundation will operate the 10,000-square-foot facility on Meadowlands Parkway in Secaucus.
"After two years of designing and constructing this state-of-the-art facility, we are excited to finally put it into action," said Shaya Brodchandel, Harmony's president and CEO. The strains selected "are well suited for New Jersey medical patients' conditions and to our unique growing system," he said.
New Jersey currently has 13,200 patients registered to purchase medical marijuana, which can prescribed for certain medical conditions only by physicians who have registered with the program.
Medical marijuana in New Jersey is the most expensive in the country, according to Ken Wolski, the head of the Coalition for Medical Marijuana-New Jersey. It sells for about $500 an ounce, he said.
The state Legislature has begun considering a measure to legalize recreational marijuana, which is projected to generate as much as $300 million in tax revenue. Phil Murphy, the Democratic candidate for governor, has said he favors legalization. That would make it easier to purchase marijuana and would change the environment in which dispensers of medical marijuana operate.
Once the Secaucus center opens, New Jersey will have six marijuana dispensaries, which state officials call alternative treatment centers. The others are in Montclair, Egg Harbor, Woodbridge, Cranbury and Bellmawr in Camden County.
Former Gov. Jon Corzine signed New Jersey's law allowing compassionate use of marijuana to treat certain medical conditions in 2010, leaving it for Gov. Chris Christie to implement.
Christie, who vehemently opposes legalization of recreational marijuana, enacted some of the strictest regulations in the nation for medicinal marijuana.
Wolski said he welcomed the new dispensary, but added: "We're very disappointed with the pace of the process." Approval of the sixth center, he said, "is long overdue." The law had anticipated that additional centers would be approved by the state after the first six.
The Health Department says its permitting process for new growers is modeled after the background checks for casino operators.
The examination of Harmony Foundation's executives and funding sources began in December 2014. The leaders and financing have changed since then, said Donna Leusner, a spokeswoman for the Health Department, prolonging the vetting process.
"The permit was issued after a comprehensive review, including several site inspections, background checks of its corporate officers and a review of its security operations and cultivation facility," she said.
Brodchandel, who is 30, has no previous experience in the marijuana industry, but led a company that produced products used in nuclear medicine, a highly regulated industry that prepared him for this role, said Leslie Hoffmann, a spokeswoman for Harmony. He joined the foundation in 2015.
The company's automated, robotic growing system is designed to produce a consistent, high-quality product in an environment where light, temperature, humidity, water, nutrients and carbon dioxide are strictly controlled and tracked, Hoffmann said. It will produce an "extremely consistent, pure product," she said.
News Moderator: Ron Strider 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: State gives OK to grow medical marijuana in Secaucus
Author: Lindy Washburn
Contact: Customer Service | NorthJersey.com
Photo Credit: Harmony Foundation
Website: North Jersey News and Information | NorthJersey.com