Showing posts with label bureau of cannabis control. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bureau of cannabis control. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2019

California's Cannabis Taxes Drive Unregulated Market, Harms Patients And Providers



Earlier this month PAN reached out to each member of the California legislature, as well as department heads, seeking amendments to current cannabis regulations that will make medical cannabis more affordable for patients.

PAN has received some feedback from the legislature and at least one bill aims to reduce the excise tax but only temporarily.  There is still a lot of work to be done.  Below is PAN's letter to the California legislature.  We will continue to demand patient-friendly amendments.

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Patient Advocacy Network
Degé Coutee, President
P.O. Box 93845
Los Angeles, CA 90093

(323) 334-5282



Office of the Governor
Governor Gavin Newsom
State Capitol, Suite 1173
Sacramento, CA 95814



RE: My letter to the California Senate and Assembly Regarding Medical Cannabis

February 4, 2019


I write to you regarding the current state of medical cannabis in California. Since 1992, I have advocated for safe, affordable access for medical cannabis patients, provided social services and education to patients and their caregivers, and became a compliance expert in the medical cannabis industry where I have worked with nearly 3,500 cannabis business operators since 2003.  

January of last year I began asking patients about their experiences at cannabis outlets as the new rules came into effect.  After several dozen inquiries I got the same answer from all of them. None of the patients I spoke with are purchasing medical cannabis from licensed cannabis businesses.  They all said they found more affordable options and could no longer pay the prices at the regulated shops.  

I asked cannabis business operators if they still saw their patient members and one operator stated, “before I got my ‘A’ license I had 8,000 patient members – after January (2018) I haven’t seen any of them.”  Another operator told me he can’t blame patients for finding other means because his low-income patients are suffering under the new rules.

There are numerous ways in which the current regulations make medical cannabis unaffordable.  The fees and over-taxation from seed to sale and every process in between is currently driving the underground market, and this market appears to be expanding as is the demand for it.  No amount of enforcement will alleviate this unless the prices in the regulated market can come down.  Prices have increased under the current regulations 28% - 36% more than patients were paying a little over a year ago, and many have taken their business elsewhere.

I ask the California State Legislature to please make reasonable amendments to our medical cannabis regulations so that the price can return to what the patient market will bear, $30 - $55 per eight of an ounce of flower after tax.  Please make the rules reasonable for businesses that want to provide free and low-cost medical cannabis products to indigent patients. 

During the 2016 Election patient advocates were told repeatedly that Prop 64 would NOT interfere with Prop 215.  The lack of affordability that is pushing  patients to the black market, and the lack of compassion programs were not the intent of Prop 64.  California can have a lucrative cannabis industry and still take care of patients; this is what the voters intended. 

I thank you for your time and consideration and look forward to working the California legislature to restore Compassion to our state’s medical cannabis regulations. 



Sincerely,

Degé Coutee
President, Executive & Program Director
Patient Advocacy Network

@PAN4Compassion

www.CannabisSavesLives.org

PAN is a charitable 501(c)(3) organization

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

Compassionate Care Bill Continues Through Committee

California Assembly Chamber

California’s Compassion Care Bill – SB 829 is bill to remove some of the financial barriers to cannabis business operators that want to provide products to medical cannabis patients in need.  As the current regulations stand, small collectives dedicated to assisting patients are having a difficult time or closing altogether.

The bill’s author, Senator Scott Wiener, stated in a media interview that is was not the intent of the voters to over tax patients and put compassionate collectives and cooperatives out of business.  What Wiener apparently missed is that the Bureau of Cannabis Control is doing away with collectives and cooperatives on January 9, 2019. 

SB 829 is currently making its way through Assembly Committees.  The next committee to hear this bill is Appropriations.  PAN has written to all committee members and their staff in support of Compassionate Care with an important amendment – keep collectives and cooperatives, especially in conjunction with Compassionate Care.  This business model is a natural fit for operations that give away much of their product to indigent patients.  

If you want to contact the Appropriations Committee, please find more information below.  This bill is not scheduled for hearing yet but anticipated to be heard the beginning of August. If you want or need assistance writing your comments to the committee, please contact PAN.  We are here to help you be an effective advocate. 

Look up the bill here:


Learn more about the Committee here:


Email list of Assembly Committee members, their chief of staff where available, and the Committee Consultants

Jay Dickenson – Chief Consultant Appropriations Committee  

Jennifer Galehouse – Deputy Chief Consultant  

Lorena S. Gonzalez Fletcher (Chair)

Frank Bigelow (Vice Chair)

Richard Bloom
assemblymember.bloom@assembly.ca.gov, sean.macneil@asm.ca.gov

Rob Bonta

William P. Brough

Ian C. Calderon

Wendy Carrillo

Ed Chau

Susan Talamantes Eggman

Vince Fong

Laura Friedman

James Gallagher

Eduardo Garcia

Adrin Nazarian

Jay Obernolte

Bill Quirk

Eloise Gómez Reyes

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Friday, June 22, 2018

Moving Forward – Medical Cannabis In California Since Legalization


Since the passage, implementation, and constant addition of new provisions to Prop. 64, Patient Advocacy Network has been observing how the roll out of the new laws is affecting safe and affordable access to medical cannabis by California’s most vulnerable patients.


Medical Marijuana Deserts
One of the biggest issues is what is known as medical marijuana deserts.  These are the areas of the state where there are many concentrated local bans and therefore, patients must travel quite a way to access medical cannabis.  Low-income and disabled patients already have a hard time accessing transportation; California’s gas prices don’t help.  Helping patients overcome this obstacle is a large priority for PAN.


Compassionate Care, Collectives & Cooperatives
California SB 829 is a bill to create a Compassionate Care License that would be issued to M-license holders to allow the businesses to provide medical cannabis to qualified patients at no cost.  The businesses would not be subject to cultivation or excise taxes for donating products down the chain that ultimately ends up with the patient as no cost.  


There are patients that simply cannot afford the medicine they need for their condition, whether that is the disabled veteran on a fixed income that needs a couple joints a week, or a working class patient with cancer that needs to eat at least a gram of hash as day for a few months.  There are providers and producers that remain committed to this charitable effort to help people be well who cannot afford the only remedy that works for them. 


Patient Advocates are pleased to see that the California legislature is taking this on sooner than later which is important as there is one huge glaring omission that we can fix before the end of the session.  The Bureau of Cannabis Control (BCC) will end collectives and cooperatives by declaring that on January 9, 2019, that Section 11362.775 of the Health and Safety Code will no longer be in effect. 


Compassionate Care licensing, and the collective and cooperative business model work very well together for the purpose of providing cannabis for free to vulnerable patients.  When done correctly, it is already a tax-exempt project for authentic compassion services. This business model is not for everyone.  Many medical cannabis businesses are glad to move away from the closed loop, not-for-profit structure.  However, there are several entities that would like to operate solely as a Compassionate entity and the state of California should absolutely allow it. 

SB 829’s author Senator Scott Wiener said in a statement that, “Applying taxes to compassionate care will shut down collectives, and I can’t imagine that was the intent of voters.” Well, the BCC is shutting down collectives anyway and Wiener clearly believes that this is not the intent of the voters. It is going to be up to us to remind the bill’s authors and the legislature that collectives and cooperatives must be maintained and can be protected them under this bill.

Take Action
You are urged to contact the bill’s authors and let them know that you support Compassionate Care and retaining the collective and cooperative model for authentic low-income patient providers.  


Senator Scott Wiener
(916) 651-4011


Assemblymember Jim Wood
(916) 319-2002


SB 829 will be heard in the Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation on June 25, 2018.   You can FAX your comments to (916) 319-2198 for the entire committee.  Make sure your letter states SUPPORT SB 829 WITH AMENDMENTS or OPPOSE SB 829 WITH AMENDMENTS near the top so the committee knows your position.  The suggested amendments would be to include collectives and cooperatives in the bill for those businesses that want to operate this way and that this business model works well with the Compassionate Care license.


If you want to know more about this committee or reach out to them – maybe one is your representative,  you can find them here:  http://arev.assembly.ca.gov/membersstaff


For updates follow Patient Advocacy Network on twitter  @PAN4Compassion
or sign up for email updates at http://www.cannabissaveslives.org

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Dear, Senator Scott Weiner –

I write you as a medical cannabis patient advocate for over two decades.  My biggest concern with the implementation of the new cannabis business regulations thus far has been the lack of opportunity for truly compassionate providers in the industry.  These medical cannabis providers give away some to all of their products to some of California’s most vulnerable patients, but these compassionate providers can’t afford to participate under the regulations.  These businesses should not be erased.

You were recently quoted as stating that taxing compassionate care will shut down collectives and this was not the intent of the voters.  The Bureau of Cannabis Control announced it will end collectives and cooperatives, declaring that on January 9, 2019, that Section 11362.775 of the Health and Safety Code will no longer be in effect.   The amendment SB 829 needs is to preserve collectives and cooperatives. Compassion Care, and collectives and cooperatives go together.  

A for-profit M and A retail license holder may offer 5 - 10% of its product to indigent patients and have no desire to be a collective or cooperative, but should have the Compassionate Care exemption for the products donated to patients. However, California has a history of authentic collectives and cooperatives that give away ALL medical cannabis to qualified patient members.  

The feedback I’ve received is that most in the industry want not-for-profit collectives and cooperatives to be preserved, especially as an option for entities that give away most to all of their products and want to operate as a not-for-profit.  Some of these groups are working with hospice programs, veterans and other vulnerable patients. The groups that formed in the Bay area by 1993, specifically to give away cannabis and food primarily to AIDS and cancer patients, are what prompted the Compassionate Use Act and the medical marijuana movement as a whole.  Not-for-profit, compassionate work is the foundation of California’s medical cannabis law and history.

I ask you for your consideration in working with your colleagues to preserve collectives and cooperatives as a medical cannabis business license option, especially for operations, vertically integrated or not, that operate as a not-for-profit and/or give away most or all of its product.  I thank you taking on this important issue and for your time and consideration.  

 Sincerely,

Degé Coutee
President, Executive & Program Director
Patient Advocacy Network

(323) 334-5282
P.O. Box 93845, Los Angeles, CA 90093

@PAN4Compassion
www.CannabisSavesLives.org
https://www.facebook.com/xoFreeMaryJaneox

PAN is a charitable 501(c)(3) organization

cc: Assemblymember Jim Wood,  Senator Jeff Stone,  Senator Scott Wilk,  Assemblymember Ken Wilk,   M. David Ruff - Chief Consultant, Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

California's First Temporary Cannabis Business Licensees



Update: 12/20/17 - Several more businesses have been added to the State's website.  The State site has been adding several approved businesses daily.  We will update the list provided below when we learn if/when the State is done issuing the temporary licenses. In the meantime visit the Bureau's link provided below to see the most recent complete list .

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The Bureau of Cannabis Control has posted its list of the first cannabis businesses to receive temporary licenses.  This initial list of 51 businesses is below.  To access the complete list yourself visit the the following page; you will need to enter a Start Date of 12/15/15 and End Date of 01/02/18.



A11-17-0000001-TEMP
Adult-Use - Distributor Temporary License
Pure CA, LLC
05/01/2018*
Active 
01/01/2018
           
M11-17-0000001-TEMP
Medicinal - Distributor Temporary License
Pure CA, LLC
05/01/2018
Active
01/01/2018
           
M12-17-0000001-TEMP
Medicinal - Microbusiness Temporary License
Buddy's Cannabis
05/01/2018
Active
01/01/2018
           
M11-17-0000002-TEMP
Medicinal - Distributor Temporary License
HERBL Distribution Solutions
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A12-17-0000001-TEMP
Adult-Use - Microbusiness Temporary License
Buddy's Cannabis
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M11-17-0000003-TEMP
Medicinal - Distributor Temporary License
Golden State Sciences
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
C8-17-0000001-TEMP
Cannabis - Laboratory Testing Temporary License
pH Solutions, LLC
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000001-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Torrey Holistics
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M11-17-0000004-TEMP
Medicinal - Distributor Temporary License
KindPeoples (formerly KindPeoples Collective)
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A11-17-0000002-TEMP
Adult-Use - Distributor Temporary License
KindPeoples (formerly KindPeoples Collective)
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000001-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
Torrey Holistics
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000002-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
KindPeoples
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000002-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
KindPeoples
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M12-17-0000002-TEMP
Medicinal - Microbusiness Temporary License
KindPeoples (formerly KindPeoples Collective)
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000003-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
KindPeoples (formerly KindPeoples Collective)
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000004-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Hueneme Patient Consumer Coop
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000004-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
530 CANNABIS
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000005-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
530 CANNABIS
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A12-17-0000002-TEMP
Adult-Use - Microbusiness Temporary License
KindPeoples (formerly KindPeoples Collective)
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000003-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
KindPeoples (formerly KindPeoples Collective)
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018


A11-17-0000003-TEMP
Adult-Use - Distributor Temporary License
Golden State Sciences
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000006-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Green Mammoth
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M11-17-0000005-TEMP
Medicinal - Distributor Temporary License
Gaiaca
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A9-17-0000001-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary Nonstorefront License
Big Moon Sky, Inc
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M11-17-0000006-TEMP
Medicinal - Distributor Temporary License
Berkeley Patients Group, Inc
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000005-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
Berkeley Patients Group, Inc
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000007-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Berkeley Patients Group, Inc
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A12-17-0000003-TEMP
Adult-Use - Microbusiness Temporary License
Kure Wellness, Inc.
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000006-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
Ecological Cannabis Organization
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000008-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Ecological Cannabis Organization
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000009-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Green America Inc
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000010-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
IE Gardens, Inc.
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000011-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Purple Lotus Patient Center
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000007-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
Purple Lotus Patient Center
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M12-17-0000003-TEMP
Medicinal - Microbusiness Temporary License
White Fire, Inc
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
C8-17-0000002-TEMP
Cannabis - Laboratory Testing Temporary License
Steep Hill Labs, Inc.
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000008-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
Urbn Leaf
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000012-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Valley Health Options Collective, Inc.
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
C8-17-0000003-TEMP
Cannabis - Laboratory Testing Temporary License
Pure Analytics
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
C8-17-0000004-TEMP
Cannabis - Laboratory Testing Temporary License
ORCA Cannalytics
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018

M10-17-0000013-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
ALL ABOUT WELLNESS
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000014-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Pure 710SF
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000015-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
MISSION ORGANIC CENTER
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A12-17-0000004-TEMP
Adult-Use - Microbusiness Temporary License
White Fire, Inc.
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M11-17-0000007-TEMP
Medicinal - Distributor Temporary License
Kind House Distribution
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000016-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Monterey Bay Alternative Medicine
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000009-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
Monterey Bay Alternative Medicine
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A12-17-0000005-TEMP
Adult-Use - Microbusiness Temporary License
The Cypress Group
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000018-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
SKUNKMASTERS
Expires 05/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018
           
A10-17-0000010-TEMP
Adult-Use - Retailer Temporary License
Purple Heart
Expires             (blank)
Active 01/01/2018
           
M10-17-0000017-TEMP
Medicinal - Retailer Temporary License
Purple Heart
Expires 5/01/2018
Active 01/01/2018

* The date the temporary license expires.




Sunday, October 08, 2017

Advocates In California Urge Protection For Medical Cannabis Patients From Hyper-regulation, Over-taxation, & Corporate Takeover



The Bureau of Cannabis Control is slated to start issuing and processing applications on January 1, 2018.  Further regulations will be presented in November of this year, and the California Department of Consumer Affairs just seated the long-waited Cannabis Advisory Committee mandated by the state’s new cannabis rules.  

What is absent on this committee is any authentic patient voice or social justice advocates.  However, this has been the case in Sacramento during all medical cannabis policy discussions.  Patient advocates have had to demand to be heard or be ignored.  Now that the potential revenue from adult recreational cannabis sales and production is being projected, affordable access to medical cannabis for disabled and low-income patients is the furthest thing on the minds of the new Cannabis Bureaucracy.

Hopefully, the California Cannabis Bureaucracy realizes that we could find ourselves back in a federally hostile environment.  Who did they seat to tackle the possibility that our U.S. Attorney General and Department of Justice may decide to enforce the Controlled Substances Act, again?  Who will deal with the fallout and stand up for the political prisoners?


What is present on this committee is the Drug Policy Alliance.  Members of the Drug Policy Alliance are gaining seats on committees and commissions around the state.  Since DPA’s political action committee donated a significant amount of money to Prop. 64, this would seem to be a conflict.  However, this works out wonderfully for George Soros, who founded and funds DPA, and is heavily vested in Monsanto.   Monsanto stands to win the most from Prop. 64, by acquiring the largest permits and controlling the seeds for recreational, medical and hemp stains.  With Soros’ employees serving around the state the mega-corporate take over of California’s cannabis industry is moving right along.

Despite how the advisory or oversight bodies may be stacked, the regulations themselves equate impractical policy.  Many current businesses will find it burdensome and too expensive to comply.  This creates a monopoly for wealthy, elite players to saturate the marketplace.  True patients and their providers will be priced out and in jeopardy.  Some operations will go deep underground, adding to existing environmental concerns about unregulated cultivation.


Patients are urged to contact:

Department of Consumer Affairs – Bureau of Cannabis Control

Attn: Lori Ajax, Chief, Bureau of Cannabis Control;
Dean R. Grafilo, Director, California Department of Consumer Affairs;
And Members of the Cannabis Advisory Committee

Or (800) 952-5210


Let them know that you are patient that relies on consistent and affordable access to medical cannabis, and you are concerned that over-regulation, permitting fees and taxes for medical cannabis are going to put your collective out of business or make it so you can no longer afford your medicine. 


Send your comments and concerns to your California state representatives as well:
Find Your California Representative


*****

Some related links:
Department of Consumer Affairs Announces Appointments to Cannabis Advisory Committee


L.A. City Council approves new Cannabis Department head


George Soros And Big Agriculture Move The Marijuana Movement


How Monsanto & Bayer Are Trying To Take Over The Cannabis Industry


The Corporate Billionaires’ Hostile Attempt To Take Over The California Cannabis Industry in 2016


Legalization, 4 Years Later: What Happened In Washington State?



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