Ron Strider
Well-Known Member
From the outside, the building is nondescript, your typical medical office nestled near an acupuncturist, a doctor's office and steps from a CVS pharmacy.
From the inside, however, Bill Askinazi says he is watching medical miracles.
An example: The 35-year-old man, toes on both feet pointed inward, hobbling in on crutches. He'd been suffering muscle spasticity so long that his hands were knots, clenched tight.
A few days later, he returned, having received his first dose of medical marijuana. One hand was unclenched fully, the other partially. He walked in without crutches, on his own two feet.
"It was unbelievable," said Askinazi, principal of Potomac Holistics, one of the state's 22 licensed medical marijuana dispensaries.
Maryland legalized medical marijuana in 2014, and now the state is seeing the results, with dispensaries around the state slowly opening. Ohio in 2016 took that same leap and hopes to have its program fully functioning by September 2018.
If Ohio's launch mirrors the one in Maryland, the dispensaries will encounter some hurdles other businesses wouldn't mind having: demand that exceeds supply and a customer base willing to drive as much as 50 miles for the product.
Since Potomac Holistics opened on Dec. 1, they've seen steady traffic. Those who receive "recommendations" for medical marijuana – federal law bars doctors from technically prescribing the drug – are buzzed in from outside, signing in with a guard and waiting in a warm, inviting and locked waiting room before being given their dose and being sent on their way.
There are reminders showing some of the uniqueness of these businesses. Dispensary operators like Askinazi look to buy, not lease, space to guard against fickle landlords having a change of heart and putting them out on the street. Community outreach is a must, and so too is security, mandated in the state regulations.
But Askinazi, who became convinced about the merits of medical marijuana 20 years ago when a synthetic form helped ease his son's debilitating gastrointestinal condition, said whatever the hurdles, the work is worth it.
"We are absolutely thrilled we got into this," he said.
In all, the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission has licensed 14 growers and 12 processors as well.
One of those growers, Green Leaf Medical in Frederick, Md., will harvest its first batch Jan. 4, according to Philip Goldberg, CEO of the company.
The company's 45,000 square foot plant, tucked in a massive building formerly used as a printing press, is a far cry from what one might imagine a pot farm would be. Each room features a computerized box that closely monitors the conditions of the room — everything from light levels to carbon dioxide levels. The plant features an extensive, state-of-the-art irrigation system. Security is so tight that some rooms require two employee badges to enter. Goldberg's current pride and joy is an LED lighting system — the company is experimenting with using LED to grow the plant.
Despite the names of the plants themselves — labels on some plants designate them as "AK-47" or "Acapulco Gold" — Goldberg considers the plants an incredibly serious business. Each batch will undergo extensive testing as required by law, and outside of each room is an incredibly thorough binder describing conditions of the room and the plants three times a day. One room features the "mother" plants — plants whose clippings are used to breed new plants. The farm smells more like a greenhouse than Grateful Dead concert.
Some of the plants would hardly be considered a drug in the traditional sense.
"You could smoke this whole table and not get a buzz," Goldberg said of one plant, used to treat epileptic seizures in children.
Starting the business wasn't easy. Goldberg and his brother and business partner Kevin had to secure $11 million in investments — from 120 investors – in order to get started. They face intense regulation, inspection and oversight — necessary, he said, because of the medicinal purpose of the product.
And it takes their product three and a half months to get to harvest. That's before the lab testing and all the additional steps needed to get the plant to market.
"We're trying to put out clean medicine here," he said. "There can't be metals, can't be mold, can't be pesticides."
And they're just getting started, he said.
"What patients are going to see on day one is going to look so different on day 180, so different on day 365," he said.
Ohio, which passed its law in 2016, is one of 29 states to permit the medical use of marijuana, according to the National Council on State Legislatures. The Ohio Department of Commerce and State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy are required to have Ohio's Medical Marijuana Control Program fully operational by September 2018.
Last month, the state reported that it had received 370 applications to operate 60 dispensaries. It has issued 12 provisional licenses for large-scale marijuana grow operations out of 109 applicants.
Green Leaf was among those rejected.
Goldberg said he was appalled at reports that one of the three people on the board that reviewed Ohio grower applications had a felony drug conviction. A second had business ties to one of the license winners. He said he and some others who have established cultivator businesses plan to appeal.
They do not, however, plan to file an injunction that would stop the process. "We would never do that, because it hurts patients," he said.
Not all believe in the benefits of medical marijuana. Marcie Seidel, executive director of Drug-Free Action Alliance, wonders how much of the effectiveness of medical cannabis is truly medical and how much is placebo. She also worries that it's normalizing drugs for a new generation of Americans.
"There's a sales job going on out there that medical marijuana is a panacea," she said. "I'm concerned about patients not being duped into doing something that may end up doing more harm than good or prevent them from coming forward for a more tried and proven technology to deal with what they're dealing with."
But Askinazi said he's watched people come in for headaches, insomnia, loss of appetite and nausea.
He has personal reason to be invested: Twenty years ago, his son, then in middle school, had a debilitating gastrointestinal condition. He couldn't eat. He lost 25 pounds. He was finally prescribed Marinol, a synthetic marijuana.
"It saved his life," Askinazi said.
Now, he said, he's seeing others benefit. One of his partners came into his office the other day in tears. The 90-year-old mother of a friend had received her dose.
"And they were just so grateful for the medicine we were able to provide them," he said.
News Moderator: Ron Strider 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Medical marijuana launches in Maryland: What's it mean for Ohio?
Author: Jessica Wehrman
Contact: https://myaccount.daytondailynews.com/Feedback.aspx
Photo Credit: Emblem
Website: Dayton Daily News | Latest news for Dayton & Miami Valley
From the inside, however, Bill Askinazi says he is watching medical miracles.
An example: The 35-year-old man, toes on both feet pointed inward, hobbling in on crutches. He'd been suffering muscle spasticity so long that his hands were knots, clenched tight.
A few days later, he returned, having received his first dose of medical marijuana. One hand was unclenched fully, the other partially. He walked in without crutches, on his own two feet.
"It was unbelievable," said Askinazi, principal of Potomac Holistics, one of the state's 22 licensed medical marijuana dispensaries.
Maryland legalized medical marijuana in 2014, and now the state is seeing the results, with dispensaries around the state slowly opening. Ohio in 2016 took that same leap and hopes to have its program fully functioning by September 2018.
If Ohio's launch mirrors the one in Maryland, the dispensaries will encounter some hurdles other businesses wouldn't mind having: demand that exceeds supply and a customer base willing to drive as much as 50 miles for the product.
Since Potomac Holistics opened on Dec. 1, they've seen steady traffic. Those who receive "recommendations" for medical marijuana – federal law bars doctors from technically prescribing the drug – are buzzed in from outside, signing in with a guard and waiting in a warm, inviting and locked waiting room before being given their dose and being sent on their way.
There are reminders showing some of the uniqueness of these businesses. Dispensary operators like Askinazi look to buy, not lease, space to guard against fickle landlords having a change of heart and putting them out on the street. Community outreach is a must, and so too is security, mandated in the state regulations.
But Askinazi, who became convinced about the merits of medical marijuana 20 years ago when a synthetic form helped ease his son's debilitating gastrointestinal condition, said whatever the hurdles, the work is worth it.
"We are absolutely thrilled we got into this," he said.
In all, the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission has licensed 14 growers and 12 processors as well.
One of those growers, Green Leaf Medical in Frederick, Md., will harvest its first batch Jan. 4, according to Philip Goldberg, CEO of the company.
The company's 45,000 square foot plant, tucked in a massive building formerly used as a printing press, is a far cry from what one might imagine a pot farm would be. Each room features a computerized box that closely monitors the conditions of the room — everything from light levels to carbon dioxide levels. The plant features an extensive, state-of-the-art irrigation system. Security is so tight that some rooms require two employee badges to enter. Goldberg's current pride and joy is an LED lighting system — the company is experimenting with using LED to grow the plant.
Despite the names of the plants themselves — labels on some plants designate them as "AK-47" or "Acapulco Gold" — Goldberg considers the plants an incredibly serious business. Each batch will undergo extensive testing as required by law, and outside of each room is an incredibly thorough binder describing conditions of the room and the plants three times a day. One room features the "mother" plants — plants whose clippings are used to breed new plants. The farm smells more like a greenhouse than Grateful Dead concert.
Some of the plants would hardly be considered a drug in the traditional sense.
"You could smoke this whole table and not get a buzz," Goldberg said of one plant, used to treat epileptic seizures in children.
Starting the business wasn't easy. Goldberg and his brother and business partner Kevin had to secure $11 million in investments — from 120 investors – in order to get started. They face intense regulation, inspection and oversight — necessary, he said, because of the medicinal purpose of the product.
And it takes their product three and a half months to get to harvest. That's before the lab testing and all the additional steps needed to get the plant to market.
"We're trying to put out clean medicine here," he said. "There can't be metals, can't be mold, can't be pesticides."
And they're just getting started, he said.
"What patients are going to see on day one is going to look so different on day 180, so different on day 365," he said.
Ohio, which passed its law in 2016, is one of 29 states to permit the medical use of marijuana, according to the National Council on State Legislatures. The Ohio Department of Commerce and State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy are required to have Ohio's Medical Marijuana Control Program fully operational by September 2018.
Last month, the state reported that it had received 370 applications to operate 60 dispensaries. It has issued 12 provisional licenses for large-scale marijuana grow operations out of 109 applicants.
Green Leaf was among those rejected.
Goldberg said he was appalled at reports that one of the three people on the board that reviewed Ohio grower applications had a felony drug conviction. A second had business ties to one of the license winners. He said he and some others who have established cultivator businesses plan to appeal.
They do not, however, plan to file an injunction that would stop the process. "We would never do that, because it hurts patients," he said.
Not all believe in the benefits of medical marijuana. Marcie Seidel, executive director of Drug-Free Action Alliance, wonders how much of the effectiveness of medical cannabis is truly medical and how much is placebo. She also worries that it's normalizing drugs for a new generation of Americans.
"There's a sales job going on out there that medical marijuana is a panacea," she said. "I'm concerned about patients not being duped into doing something that may end up doing more harm than good or prevent them from coming forward for a more tried and proven technology to deal with what they're dealing with."
But Askinazi said he's watched people come in for headaches, insomnia, loss of appetite and nausea.
He has personal reason to be invested: Twenty years ago, his son, then in middle school, had a debilitating gastrointestinal condition. He couldn't eat. He lost 25 pounds. He was finally prescribed Marinol, a synthetic marijuana.
"It saved his life," Askinazi said.
Now, he said, he's seeing others benefit. One of his partners came into his office the other day in tears. The 90-year-old mother of a friend had received her dose.
"And they were just so grateful for the medicine we were able to provide them," he said.
News Moderator: Ron Strider 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Medical marijuana launches in Maryland: What's it mean for Ohio?
Author: Jessica Wehrman
Contact: https://myaccount.daytondailynews.com/Feedback.aspx
Photo Credit: Emblem
Website: Dayton Daily News | Latest news for Dayton & Miami Valley