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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
 

EvergreenState

Active member
Business wins,as they always do and patients now have to spend more. We all knew the state would eventually gut the medical in this state. My biggest hope is that all of these stores go broke.
These new laws that allowed recreational sales have now sucked in the medical and it was always revenue for the state. Legal marijuana in Washington is now a state run monopoly that primarily is there to fund other state programs. Period!
The next move will be corporations buying up these stores, growing all the pot and donating to politicians. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
 

EvergreenState

Active member
I can't wait for Oregon to get their stores going. They will be getting all of my business. After Washington has lied over and over again about how they were going to leave medical alone in order to get people to vote for these ballot initiatives and then it turns around and does exactly what it said it wouldn't do. The state of Washington isn't getting a dime of my money.
Medical patients are, many times, lower income and can't afford to get their medicine from these stores. The state of Washington has never given a shit about mj med. patients. It has been about getting revenue for their other pet projects. They say that 40% of the revenues raised is going to go into the general fund and 60% will go to programs for drug treatment and prevention.
Just like the fed does with social security they will raid that fund for other projects anytime they want. I really don't know why anyone ever trusts politicians. The only they are expert at is lying.
I tried to tell anyone who would listen to vote no for Washington's legalization scheme as it was written but a lot of people said, " Yeah it's not very good right now but at least it will be legal and we can always fix it in the future." I tried to tell them that if they left anything open ended and not plainly and clearly spelled out in the law that the state would fuck people but they didn't listen and now all they do is whine about how the state has fucked it up.
Of course they did. Never leave any loopholes for government agencies to slither though because the snakes that they are they will find them and you will be wondering what the hell happened once they do.
Oregon I look forward to doing business with you.
 

stihgnobevoli

Active member
Veteran
you guys are growing about it the wrong way. pun intended. it's "legal" just grow your weed and continue fucking the police. what are they gonna do arrest everyone? if it's all about medical then just grow your weed and don't sweat it. but if this is just because you wanna grow more weed to sell with legal protections. i dunno what to tell you...continue fucking the police?
 

geneva_sativa

Well-known member
Veteran
Hey stignobevoli, :tiphat:

surely there are many that are doing what as you mentioned, but also many that genuinely make use of medical for their, or a family members legitimate medical conditions.

Plant counts being reduced and possibly having to register for oversight by law enforcement are pretty blatant violations of patients rights, imho

Some may say 15 plants is a lot for any medical condition, however to consider having access to the many different varietals that are to aid specific conditions and the amount of plant material required for topical preparations, it doesn't appear excessive, again, imho. There are many people that fit this scenario here in Wa.

There are people that are using this plant to save, prolong, or make life bearable for themselves in general.

And especially after promises were made that medical would not be touched if 502 passed, it just doesnt sit right with many folks.

Anyway, just my view
 

theJointedOne

Well-known member
Veteran
Thanks for posting this yortbogey .

Glad to see they are allowing homegrown for medical. Pretty bummed patients will have to go to recc shops, the weed at recc shops is horrible and horribly overpriced!

Herb scene is interesting in Seattle. I'm up here for the summer this year if anyone want to get together and burn a j gimme a shout
 

NW Wheeze

Member
I make lots of RSO and topicals out of my crops. There is no way I can grow enough 'bulk' out of the new plant limits to experiment with new techniques. Not to mention the RSO that is available locally is usually $50-75 a gram, and of dubious quality.

Looks like it is time to go back underground ladies and gentlemen. It is pretty obvious the State does not have the patient in mind... just the patients pocketbook.
 

stihgnobevoli

Active member
Veteran
Hey stignobevoli, :tiphat:

surely there are many that are doing what as you mentioned, but also many that genuinely make use of medical for their, or a family members legitimate medical conditions.

Plant counts being reduced and possibly having to register for oversight by law enforcement are pretty blatant violations of patients rights, imho

Some may say 15 plants is a lot for any medical condition, however to consider having access to the many different varietals that are to aid specific conditions and the amount of plant material required for topical preparations, it doesn't appear excessive, again, imho. There are many people that fit this scenario here in Wa.

There are people that are using this plant to save, prolong, or make life bearable for themselves in general.

And especially after promises were made that medical would not be touched if 502 passed, it just doesnt sit right with many folks.

Anyway, just my view
don't get me wrong bro i'm all about fucking the govt all day everyday, i'm not saying this law....these laws are just, i'm just saying you gotta roll with the punches.

shit man 10 years ago before all this medicine there were people begging for a law like this...any law that would open the gates to rational thinking and legalization.

gotta move in degrees. 1 at a time.
 

huligun

Professor Organic Psychology
Veteran
This is disappointing. I seen it happening, but I have no legal rights in the USA (voting) and can only watch.

15 plants is about right if you have a perpetual garden. This is flower while those in veg. You have to maintain clone mothers too.

They just want everyone to go through the rec shops collect tax. That is all this and any government cares about.
 

theJointedOne

Well-known member
Veteran
Bingo, its a money grab. What they don't realize is the taxes are what is driving black market to thrive.

My guy here does ounces for 150 of organic, grams of some top shelf hash for 25. At the recc shops I'd be paying 500 an ounce at least, and 60 a gram for hash.

Ridiculous
 

VenturaHwy

Active member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
2 months to get enough signatures for the initiative to keep MMJ from being destroyed. I hope everybody helping out.
 

theJointedOne

Well-known member
Veteran
Is there a specific group or even a website that has info on how to help? If anything I can collects sigs, or put up some flyers ect.

I wonder the cost to take out a full page ad in the times?
 

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