Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Mormons Oppose Marijuana Initiative in Utah Despite History of Cannabis Use

Mormons with Mexicans in Northern Mexico, 1908

In 1885, the prophet and president of the Mormon Church, John Taylor, purchased about 100,000 acres of land in Mexico—in Chihuahua and Sonora, to be exact, some 200 miles south of the US border. More than 300 polygamous Mormon families from Utah migrated south to settle the land and to proselytize (even today you see the traveling twosomes of fresh-faced young men in their white shirts, ties and black name tags) and, many theorize, to preserve the practice of polygamy.

At the time, Mormon polygamists were being jailed and having their property seized. Utah itself was denied statehood by the federal government to halt the practice. Former presidential candidate Mitt Romney is descended from the Mexican settlements; his father, George, and grandfather, Marion, were born in Colonia Dublán, Mexico, in 1907.

But in 1910, many who had settled in northern Mexico began an exodus back to Utah due to anti-American sentiment fueled by the Mexican Revolution. Some say they returned with a local plant introduced by the natives: cannabis.

The Mormon Church, formally known as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (LDS), were and still are infamous for their teetotaler ways and as abstainers of vices of all kinds; hence, they didn’t look kindly on the brethren partaking of the plant, viewing it as a violation of Mormon scripture from the “Doctrine and Covenants,” section 89 (D&C 89), commonly referred to as the “Word of Wisdom.”

Mormon Church founder Joseph Smith

Church founder and prophet Joseph Smith wrote D&C 89 at the strong urging of his wife, Emma, who was tired of Smith’s friends gathering in their home and spitting tobacco on the floor. But Smith went far beyond forbidding tobacco; D&C 89 also bans the use of wine, coffee, tea and liquor. And it promises that those who follow the doctrine will receive health, protection, knowledge and wisdom from God.

So when the settlers returned from Mexico with marijuana in hand, church leadership urged the legislature to officially outlaw cannabis in 1915. Four years earlier, Massachusetts became the first state to prohibit marijuana, followed by California, Indiana, Maine and Wyoming in 1913; New York in 1914; Utah and Vermont in 2015; and Colorado and Nevada in 1917.

19th Century map of Mormon colonies in Mexico

This version of events seems to have first appeared in 1995, when a University of Southern California law professor, Charles Whitebread, floated his theory in a speech to the California Judges Association, “The History of Non-Medical Use of Drugs in the United States.” Riddled with historical and cultural inaccuracies, Whitebread said that he “had help from some people in Salt Lake City associated with the Mormon Church and the Mormon National Tabernacle in Washington,” which does not exist.

At the instruction of Smith’s successor, Brigham Young, 19th-century Mormons became incredibly self-sufficient, raising their own cotton, flax, silk and, yes, hemp to limit interactions with non-Mormons. In the Journal of Discourses, a pioneer-era magazine written by church leadership in the late-1800s, leaders advised members, “We must make our own woolen, flax, hemp and cotton goods or we must go naked.”

Nonetheless, Whitebread drew the line straight from Mexico to Salt Lake City and blamed the cannabis ban on the morals of the church. Mormon historian Ardis E. Parshall challenges Whitebread’s logic in her 2009 article, “The Great Mormon Marijuana Myth,” a comprehensive, if dense, takedown citing LDS conference talks, newspaper editorials and even arrest records, making Whitebread’s explanation much less tidy.

Former presidential candidate Mitt Romney is descended from the Mexican settlements; his father, George, and grandfather, Marion, were born in Colonia Dublán, Mexico, in 1907.

“There is no hint whatsoever that Utah’s law—which you now see did not specifically target marijuana or even show particular awareness of marijuana, but merely incorporated the language used by other entities to name marijuana among a whole host of regulated drugs—was spurred by religious concerns,” Parshall wrote.

Parshall’s contention that religion had nothing to do with the original 1915 ban, however, does not seem to hold much water today. In November, Utahans will have the opportunity to vote on Prop 2, a.k.a. the Utah Medical Cannabis Act—a ballot initiative that, if it passes, will blow open Utah’s legal cannabis landscape.

LDS leadership has taken a position against Prop 2, even going so far as to commission Salt Lake City law firm Kirton McConkie to conduct a legal analysis of its implications. In May, based on the firm’s findings, the church concluded that “serious adverse consequences could follow if it were adopted,” citing “grave concerns,” like an increase in youth use, a lack of traditional research, taking power out of the hands of pharmacists, a mandate to destroy patient records after 60 days and providing legal cover to doctors that make recommendations.

DJ Schanz speaks at a Utah Patients Coalition event.

Even though Prop 2 has strong support among Utah voters, the Utah Patients Coalition (UPC), the group spearheading the legalization effort, has faced stiff opposition—and some would argue shady tactics—from Drug Safe Utah, the anti-legalization group that tried to keep medical marijuana off the ballot.

Comprised of the Utah Medical Association, the ultra-Conservative Eagle Forum, the Sutherland Institute and the Utah Chiefs of Police Association, Drug Safe is closely aligned with the all-male church leadership. Drug Safe has received $167,000 contributions (including $100,000 from a private citizen named Walter J. Plumb III and $20,000 from the Medical Association). UPC has raised $767,000 (including $261,000 from the Marijuana Policy Project and $50,000 from Dr. Bronner’s).

The Mormon church has not been shy about stating their views, especially around matters that intersect with perceived moral issues like drug use. For example, leadership counseled its members in 2008 to vote for California’s Prop 8 initiative that made gay marriage illegal and applied the same tactic with recreational cannabis initiatives in Nevada and California. When given as a directive, members tend to rally behind church guidance.

UTAH PATIENTS COALITION’S DJ SCHANZ: “The challenge in Utah, which may be somewhat unique to our state, is the influence that a single religious denomination can have on a huge swath of the population.”

Mormons are not necessarily opposed to cannabis, per se, but have strong opinions about how and why it should be used. Opinions about Prop 2 seems to boil down to the word “medical.” A Dan Jones & Associates poll from 2016 showed that support even then for medical marijuana hovered around 66%. But when asked about legalizing recreational marijuana, the results were flipped, with 77% opposed.

“The challenge in Utah, which may be somewhat unique to our state, is the influence that a single religious denomination can have on a huge swath of the population,” UPC’s campaign director DJ Schanz tells Freedom Leaf. “It’s a constant balancing act of winning over supporters in this demographic without being confrontational and abrasive to the organization, even with said religious organization’s subtle efforts to derail the ballot initiative.”

Currently, Utah has a very restrictive, lawmaker-driven medical marijuana program in place. HB 195 allows those diagnosed with terminal illnesses access to medicinal cannabis and HB 105 (a.k.a. Charlee’s Law, named for Charlee Nelson, was enacted in 2014) permits CBD-only treatment for children with intractable epilepsy.

Utah Patients Coalition

Many stakeholders and policymakers in Utah believe marijuana can’t be a medicine if it’s smoked. Prop 2 does not allow for marijuana to be packages pre-rolls and specifies vaping only. Section 51 reads, in part:

“(6)(a) Except as provided in Subsection (6)(b), a cannabis dispensary may not sell medical cannabis in the form of a cigarette or a medical cannabis device that is intentionally designed or constructed to resemble a cigarette.

“(b) A cannabis dispensary may sell a medical cannabis device that warms cannabis material into a vapor without the use of a flame and that delivers cannabis to an individual’s respiratory system.”

H.B. 195 is also smoke-free.

Mormons are not necessarily opposed to cannabis, per se, but have strong opinions about how and why it should be used.

In the view of church leadership and many members, marijuana used in any way outside of a strictly-regulated, medicinal application turns it into a habit-forming and addictive narcotic. This leaves faithful members and ward leaders feeling torn about medical use, especially since the church has not provided clear guidance.

At a 2010 conference in Colorado Springs, priesthood leaders were asked what the official church policy was on medical cannabis. “It’s an issue between the church member, the member’s bishop and the Lord, to be made in consultation with the scriptures and Word of Wisdom,” was the general answer, the Salt Lake Tribune reported.

A Mormon bishop who wishes not to be named says he hasn’t had any members ask him for advice about using medical marijuana yet, but is certain it will eventually come up. “The counsel I would give them would have a lot to do with specific circumstances,” he confides. “I hope this is an evolving policy and that [church leaders] are open to further clarification in the future.”

Temple Square in Salt Lake City, UT

The church says they want more research, stating: “It’s in the public’s best interest, when new drugs undergo the scrutiny of medical scientists and official approval bodies.” Even Mormon Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) is pressing the federal government to lift the delays on cannabis research approvals.

But none of this may matter to Utah voters, about half of whom are active Mormons. A late August Dan Jones & Associates poll indicated that, despite the church’s vigorous disapproval, support for the initiative remains high, at about 64%, though down from 78% in July.

Unless the winds shift, Prop 2 will most likely pass. Win or loss, when Utahans wake up on Nov. 7, they’ll still be tussling with the church about marijuana. Guaranteed.

More Marijuana Ballot Initiatives in 2018

Michigan Is Poised to Become the 10th State to Legalize It

Dueling Initiatives in Missouri Likely to Confuse Voters

Recreational Legalization on the North Dakota Ballot

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Source: https://www.freedomleaf.com/mormons-utah-medical-marijuana-initiative/

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Are you ready to #SmokeTheVote?

??Happy National Voter Registration Day!??

It’s critically important that we make sure all reform supporters are registered and turnout to vote for pro-cannabis candidates this year for the “Marijuana Midterms.”

With just six weeks until Election Day, NORML is proud to roll out the following educational tools for you to take with you to the ballot booth.

Smoke the Vote: NORML has graded every incumbent and major candidate for federal office throughout the country – making it easy for you to get the facts.

NORML chapters around the country have recorded many of the positions of candidates for state-level offices. This scorecard is meant to be a living document, and with over 10,000 legislators at the state and federal level across the nation, we NEED your help to keep it up to date. If you see that we’re missing a candidate’s position or a great quote from them regarding marijuana policy, send it our way.

NORML Election Central: Learn about the various ballot initiatives around the country and see all of the NORML PAC endorsed candidates.

NORML Voter Registration Tool: NORML has partnered with Rock the Vote making it easy and fast for you and your friends to register to vote!

We need more voices supporting reform in the political process. If our supporters are not registered and voting, lawmakers will not hear the need for legislative action. Make sure your friends, family, and neighbors are registered to #SmokeTheVote and make 2018 the Marijuana Midterms!

Share our Voter Registration Tool on Facebook

Share our Voter Registration Tool on Twitter

Below are a few more resources that should come in handy over the next couple of months.

Resources and Tools for Voter Registration:

Stay informed – Rock The Vote offers voter registration resources, election FAQs, and opportunities to help build the political power of young people in the United States.Voter Registration Deadline – Use U.S. Vote Foundation to find your state’s deadline.

Long Distance Voter – Is a website where you can request an absentee ballot.

Verify your Registration Status – Vote.org offers an online tool to check the status of your voter registration.

Polling Place – Check out Rock the Vote to find a polling location near you.

Additional Resources:

Election Laws: https://bit.ly/2MdVn1s

State Information: https://bit.ly/2xb1SPW

Voting Rights: https://bit.ly/2NrVM57

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/09/25/are-you-ready-to-smokethevote/

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Monday, September 24, 2018

Exercise your civic duty on National Voter Registration Day

Are you ready to legalize marijuana? Registering to vote is the first step. Tomorrow is National Voter Registration Day, and you can help NORML make sure everyone knows voting is an essential part of the fight to end the prohibition. It is crucial that supporters of reform register to vote in time to cast their ballots in the November 6th election.

Are you registered to vote? Check the status of your voter registration here.

Ready to register to vote? You can do so by clicking here.

We need more voices supporting reform in the political process. If our supporters are not registered and voting, lawmakers are will not hear the need for legislative action. Make sure your friends, family, and neighbors are registered to vote.

Share our Voter Registration Tool on Facebook

Share our Voter Registration Tool on Twitter

As the old adage goes, elections are decided by those who show up. The 2018 midterm elections will be decisive for marijuana reform. NORML is working to bring as many supporters of responsible marijuana policy to the polls as possible. Will our communities voice be heard on November 6?

Let’s finish what we started. Let’s legalize it.

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/09/24/exercise-your-civic-duty-on-national-voter-registration-day/

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FBI: Marijuana Arrests Spike For Second Straight Year, Far Outpace Arrests For All Violent Crimes

The total number of persons arrested in the United States in 2017 rose for the second consecutive year, according to data released today by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation.

According to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report, police made 659,700 arrests for marijuana-related violations last year. That total is more than 21 percent higher than the total number of persons arrests for the commission of violent crimes (518,617) in 2017.

Of those arrested for marijuana crimes, just under 91 percent (599,000) were arrested for marijuana possession offenses, a slight increase over last year’s annual totals. Total marijuana arrests in 2017 increased for the second straight year, after having fallen for nearly a decade. The uptick comes at a time when ten states, including California, have legalized the adult use of cannabis – leading to a significant decline in marijuana-related arrests in those jurisdictions.

“Actions by law enforcement run counter to both public support and basic morality,” NORML Political Director Justin Strekal said. “In a day and age where twenty percent of the population lives in states which have legalized and nearly every state has some legal protections for medical cannabis or its extract, the time for lawmakers to end this senseless and cruel prohibition that ruins lives.”

As in previous years, marijuana possession arrests were least likely to occur in the western region of the United States, where possessing the plant has largely been either legalized or decriminalized. By contrast, in Midwestern states, marijuana-related arrests comprised over 53 percent of all drug arrests.

The 2017 FBI report, “Crime in the United States,” is available online here.

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/09/24/fbi-marijuana-arrests-spike-for-second-straight-year-far-outpace-arrests-for-all-violent-crimes/

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Friday, September 21, 2018

Gauging the Cannabis Industry at Green Market Summit

From left: Vivien Azer, Debra Borchardt, Emily Paxhia, Jessica Billingsly, Jeannette Ward Horton, Cynthia Salarizadeh and Tahira Rehmatullah

“This is the most interesting investment concept today,” TV personality Jim Cramer said about the high-flying cannabis industry as he kicked off the Green Market Summit at New York’s World Trade Center on Sept. 14.

Industry experts shared a vision of legal cannabis as a trillion dollar-plus disruptor of the pharmaceutical, food and beverage industries as more Fortune 500 companies take aim at the sector. Panel topics focused on the economics of cannabis, reaching out to consumers and the potential for marijuana to become more mainstream.

One major theme of the one-day conference that drew about 200 people centered around the growing role of Fortune 500 companies in the space, such as Constellation Brands and Molson Coors.

“Rob Sands is a very smart guy,” Cramer said about Constellation’s CEO, who inked a $4 billion deal with Canopy Growth over the summer to produce non-alcoholic cannabis beverages in Canada. It’s the largest investment yet by any major company in cannabis, but more are expected. Constellation owns Corona, Mondavi and many other alcohol brands.

The hemp/CBD industry is estimated to grow from $5.7 billion in 2019 to $22 billion by 2022 if hemp is legalized by Congress.

The sudden interest from the alcohol industry in cannabis comes after a 17% decline in wine, beer and other alcoholic beverages in Colorado since legal cannabis sales began there in 2014. In addition, Coca-Cola is negotiating with the Ontario-based Aurora Cannabis to enter the industry with a CBD-infused drink.

While the size of the cannabis industry is typically estimated well in the billions and even tens of billions, the plant may ultimately have a much more transformational macro effect as a food additive, medicine, recreational substance, pet treat, travel industry attraction and usable fiber, among other things, panelists pointed out.

To be sure, plenty of investors will profit from the growth, but success isn’t guaranteed since many businesses may fail or be outflanked by competitors.

Citing data from Brightfield Group, Green Market Report recently published estimates for the hemp/CBD industry to grow from $5.7 billion in 2019 to $22 billion by 2022 if hemp is legalized (meaning removed from the Controlled Substances Act) as proposed in the current Farm Bill now under review by Congress.

The sudden interest from the alcohol industry in cannabis comes after a 17% decline in wine, beer and other alcoholic beverages in Colorado since legal cannabis sales began there in 2014.

If you add in countries around the world and their potential role in cannabis, the big picture gets even larger. The recreational cannabis market in Canada is considered to be about $7 billion, with the U.S. up to 10 times that amount.

Brian Athaide, CEO of the Ontario-based Green Organic Dutchman Holdings Ltd, joined the industry this year after spending 25 years at Procter & Gamble. He sees beverages outshining other categories in sheer potential. The top pharmaceutical, alcohol and tobacco companies have a combined market cap of well over $1 trillion. Meanwhile, the top five Canadian cannabis companies are currently valued at nearly $50 billion. “They’re just getting started,” he said.

MedMen Enterprises’ chief marketing officer David Dancer noted that the core consumer for cannabis products is typically 25-35 years old, but also 55-plus and women. “About 50% of cannabis customers are women going toward more wellness focused products,” he said. “Women are coming in when you get away from flower and toward concentrates and edibles. We’re seeing a huge amount of interest in that area.”

Mothers are also using cannabis in smaller dosages in recreational markets, particularly chocolates and vape pens to be more discreet. “Moms may want to swap out a glass of wine for a puff of a vape pen to get them through a tough day with a toddler,” Bethany Gomez, Brightfield’s director of research, noted. “You can’t pick up kids smelling like cannabis – not even in California or Oregon – even if it’s becoming less stigmatized.”

Medical vs. Recreational

In an afternoon session on the economic effect of medical marijuana on adult use, panelists said recreational sales will not necessarily wipe out the older business of selling cannabis to treat illnesses.

“The perception is that medical sales in states with recreational programs would disappear,” said Adam Oren, a senior expert with the Marijuana Policy Group. “The medical business is like Costco – you have to pay to join, but then the pricing is lower and the selection is very good. Recreational cannabis is like going to the 7-11. It’s more convenient and things come in smaller packages, but it’s more expensive.”

If insurance companies start reimbursing for medical cannabis, that’ll boost the business even more. Thus far, Sun Life Financial is the only insurer to cover marijuana expenses for health care plans in Canada. None exist in the U.S.

Jeannette Ward Horton, vice president of global marketing and communications for MJ Freeway, said patients frequent dispensaries less often than adult-use customers, but spend more. Medical sales may drop when adult use kicks in, but then revenues recover. “Women are spending as much as anyone,” she added.

ADAM OREN: “Recreational cannabis is like going to the 7-11. It’s more convenient and things come in smaller packages, but it’s more expensive.”

While customers are willing to pay more for legal cannabis, the black market remains an option in some areas because it’s often more affordable due to high taxes and other expenses tied to legal cannabis. The price difference is often about 30%.

On the investment front, Emily Paxhia, founding partner and director of relations at Poseidon Asset Management, said her firm has invested in more than 30 companies. Poseidon urges cannabis companies seeking investments to build up diverse boards of directors, partly because companies with a more varied makeup tend to perform better.

“There’s a real opportunity in the space to serve older women and seniors,” she commented. “There are people who stepped away from cannabis and are looking to participate again.”

More Financial News

The Meteoric Rise of Canada’s Legal Cannabis Industry

The Top 12 Canadian Pot Stocks

What You Need to Know About High Times’ Public Stock Offering

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The post Gauging the Cannabis Industry at Green Market Summit appeared first on Freedom Leaf.

Source: https://www.freedomleaf.com/green-market-summit/

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Weekly Legislative Roundup 9/21/18

Welcome to the latest edition of NORML’s Weekly Legislative Roundup!

This week, reports circulated that  the US Customs and Border Protection Agency will enforce a federal policy denying entry into the United States any individual involved in Canada’s burgeoning marijuana market. Under the policy, US officials are to bar entry to Canadians who acknowledge having consumed marijuana at any time in their past, as well as those who are either employed or invested in legal cannabis enterprises. NORML responded here.

The U.S. Senate’s VA Medicinal Cannabis Research Act of 2018 got one more cosponsor, for a total of five. And The U.S. House’s Fairness in Federal Drug Testing Under State Laws Act got two new cosponsors, for a total of three.

At the state level, the New Jersey Department of Health removed the ban that prohibited licensed medical cannabis dispensaries from selling concentrates to patients. Separately, details arose about New Jersey’s soon-to-be-filed marijuana legalization bill, which includes what would be the lowest tax rate in the country, home delivery, social consumption sites, and provisions benefiting small and minority owned businesses, but nothing about home cultivation. Nothing is final yet.

Several New York Assembly committees have scheduled the first of what will be four joint hearings this fall on the prospect of legalizing marijuana in the Empire State. This comes as Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration is holding a series of separate listening sessions across the state to gather public input on cannabis legalization.

Mississippi activists kicked off their signature gathering effort for a 2020 medical cannabis ballot initiative. Massachusetts recreational marijuana stores are unlikely to open until late October at the earliest after regulators failed to issue any final licenses at its Thursday meeting. Kentucky lawmakers held an interim hearing on medical cannabis, and the West Virginia Legislature’s Joint Committee on Health met to discuss banking access issues for medical cannabis businesses.

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Gov. Ralph Torres (R) signed a marijuana legalization bill into law, making the territory the first place in the U.S. to end prohibition without first having a medical cannabis program.

California Gov. Jerry Brown (D) signed two bills into law this week,  one preventing marijuana businesses from sharing consumers’ information for commercial purposes, and another clarifying that marijuana distributors can transport products to other distributors and that labs can test home-grown cannabis. Brown also vetoed a bill that would have allowed marijuana businesses to deduct business expenses under the state’s personal income tax law.

At a more local level, the Broken Arrow, Oklahoma City Council adopted ordinances regulating medical cannabis businesses.

Following are the bills we’ve tracked this week pending before California Governor Jerry Brown, and as always, check http://norml.org/act for legislation pending in your state.

Don’t forget to sign up for our email list and we will keep you posted as these bills and more move through your home state legislature and at the federal level.

Your Highness,
Carly

Priority Alerts

Federal

Decriminalize Cannabis: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is sponsoring the Marijuana Freedom and Opportunity Act, to remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act and to provide funding for the expungement of criminal records for those with past marijuana convictions.

Click here to email your senators in support of this important legislation

California

Assembly Bill 1793 seeks to allow automatic expungement or reduction of a prior cannabis conviction for an act that is not a crime as of January 1, 2017, or for a crime that as of that date subject to a lesser sentence. The bill was approved by the Senate last week.

Update: AB 1793 awaits action from Governor Brown.

CA resident? Click here to email your Governor in support of expungement

Senate Bill 1127 would help students with severe medical disabilities attend school by allowing a parent or guardian to come on school grounds to administer medical cannabis to them in non-smoking and non-vaping forms. The bill was already approved by the Senate earlier this year.

Update: After failing to gain enough votes for passage in the Assembly on 8/23, a motion to reconsider was granted and on 8/27, SB 1127 was approved by the Assembly with a 42-29 vote. The bill now awaits action from Governor Brown.

CA resident? Click here to email your Governor in support of allowing students’ medical marijuana at school

Senate Bill 829 would exempt compassionate care programs from paying state cannabis taxes when they are providing free medical cannabis to financially disadvantaged people living with serious health conditions.

Update: SB 829 was approved by the full Assembly with a 65-2 vote on 8/29. The bill now goes back to the Senate for concurrence since it was amended in the Assembly. SB 829 is being heard by the Senate Governance and Finance Committee on Friday 8/31, and then will go to the Senate floor for a vote.

CA resident? Email your senators in support of supporting compassionate care programs

That’s all for this week!

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/09/21/weekly-legislative-roundup-9-21-18/

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Thursday, September 20, 2018

Floyd Prozanski Wants to Divert Oregon’s Primo Weed to Other Legal States

State Senator Floyd Prozanski is one of the Oregon’s legislative leaders and chair of the State Senate’s judiciary committee. He’s been heavily involved in crafting the state’s social-use legislation as well as its retail medical-marijuana program. He’ll be appearing at the International Cannabis Business Conference (ICBC) in Portland on Sept. 28. We conducted this interview with on Sept. 14.

How is Oregon dealing with its reported marijuana surpluses and what some describe as excessive cultivation licensing?

In 2017, my Senate Bill 1042, which passed out of the Senate Judiciary Committee that I chair, was going to give the governor what I call a tool in her toolbox to be able to enter into compacts with adjacent, adjoining states that had marijuana programs, either or both medical and recreational, and allow for the flow of cannabis products across state lines. I believe Oregon that the quality and the strains we produce in the medical arena would be in high demand for patients and individuals in the adjacent states. Unfortunately, the Senate leadership moved it to another committee for more consideration and it was not able to get out of that committee.

You’re talking about making Oregon-grown cannabis available in adjoining legal states like California and Washington?

Yes. Clearly, what we’d be doing at that point would be establishing a method to allow for these transfers to occur that would not be in violation of interstate commerce. To do that, we would to move the product from the Oregon into one of the three adjacent states that do have marijuana programs: California, Nevada and Washington. It would have to be through ground transportation only, because the federal government regulates air travel and marine travel.

“Allow cannabis to be available throughout the country. That would take away all of the diversion issues.”

This would allow us to address a lot of the concerns the Feds have regarding illegal diversion, because we would have a legal process for this to occur. There are multiple ways to implement that program to ensure the products that are being transported from Oregon are in compliance with the law, and that you don’t see a secondary diversion of that product.

The state has an overabundance of cultivation licenses. Does that concern you?

One of the things I hoped we could’ve done in 2015, when we started implementing Measure 91, was to limit the production of cannabis flower in the state to just residents. I lost the argument when it came down to the votes and amendments that were made, that would have put a limitation to just Oregon residents being able to continue to grow for a four-year period to allow for the market to kind of balance itself out. There were other people who clearly disagreed with that and talked about needing to have additional capital coming into the state.

“Why should another state that has no medical program try to create one out of thin air when they could actually be ordering their products from Oregon growers and Oregon producers?”

We also lost out on setting up a secondary type of license that would’ve been a vertical one which allowed someone that didn’t meet the residency requirements to still be able to come in and have business opportunities in the state, but at the same time they’d be limited as to what they could do with the product. Basically, this would be a vertical license. It would say that you could grow up to whatever the limits were under state law, but you would not be able to take that product – either as flower or processed into some other type of product – and flood the market. My proposal was that you would have to have your own retail shop.

That would curb the amount that would be growing, in my opinion, by vertically licensing growers. They would not have a market except through their retail outlets.

What’s the current status of the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program? Are there more changes on the horizon?

That’s sort of a difficult question for me to answer at this stage. I expect that there will be additional proposed legislation by various individuals that will come in with different perspectives as to what they think should or shouldn’t occur in the medical arena. I personally want to see how we can retain the current leadership that we have as a state in the medical program, because I believe it’s one of our strongest economic drivers for a national model when we go interstate with cannabis throughout the country.

I think it’s fair to say that, over the 14 years we’ve had the medical program, Oregon has developed strains that have a direct, positive impact for medical patients. Why should another state that has no medical program try to create one out of thin air when they could actually be ordering their products from Oregon growers and Oregon producers? Heck, when it comes to liquor, you think about Kentucky. The same thing could be said about marijuana in Oregon.

“Oregon has been recognized as one of the leaders, if not the leader, in the cannabis industry.”

One of the things I think we can do to assist in this area is to create a medical license through the Oregon Liquor Control Commission that would, in fact, allow for those growers to be able to anecdotally report how their strains are being used and the impact that they’re having with their patients. We don’t have the scientific research that we would have had over these past 40-plus years, so this is a need I think that Oregon would be able to be on the cutting edge with a process and procedure and outcomes that we could actually utilize to market quality medicine from Oregon to fill the need of multiple states across the country.

Oregon has been recognized as one of the leaders, if not the leader, in the cannabis industry. I feel that we would actually have a market edge along with Colorado and Washington State. Those three have programs that have been in existence some length of time.

Advocates in Oregon are hoping that the legislature will approve cannabis social clubs next session. What’s your position on social use?

My position has been that we need to take this step by step. I believe we’ve taken the necessary steps to allow for that component in our industry to occur, move forward and evolve. Think about tourism. Take Portland. You have a lot of individuals that come into the city; they’re staying at hotels and would like to be able to partake, but, clearly, they can’t do it in their rooms. You have individuals that are in rent situations with prohibitions about smoking or use of controlled substances that are not sanctioned by the Feds; those individuals should have the opportunity to utilize these medicines as well as recreationally.

“I like the idea of a farm stand type of approach that would allow individuals to go out to a farm where it’s being grown.”

We’ve had two attempts in the last two sessions. I know there will be a bill introduced in the next session; I’ve been working with some of the proponents. I hope to have that discussion in a very meaningful way and move the state forward.

How about social use at cannabis farms like they have at wineries?

I like the idea of a farm stand type of approach that would allow individuals to go out to a farm where it’s being grown, to learn and be educated about the product and be able to have samples there. Southern Oregon is the area that I focus on; I’ve had two or three inquiries from the Ashland area and Jackson and Josephine Counties. I do believe we’ll see legislation for that as well.

What do you plan to speak about at the ICBC?

I’ll focus on what needs to be done from the users’ perspective and also what’s going to be viable for us to look at in the 2019 session, such as the diversion issue and how we can do that in a way that will actually be a positive for moving the industry forward while we still have a prohibition at the federal level.

The easiest thing would be for Congress to do what they should’ve already done: Allow cannabis to be available throughout the country. That would take away all of the diversion issues. Oregon would be exactly where I want it to be, positioned to take product that is now being grown and processed here and actually be able to service multiple individuals throughout the country. That’s what I’ll be talking about at the ICBC.

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The post Floyd Prozanski Wants to Divert Oregon’s Primo Weed to Other Legal States appeared first on Freedom Leaf.

Source: https://www.freedomleaf.com/floyd-prozanski-interview/

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