Showing posts with label california. Show all posts
Showing posts with label california. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 02, 2018

California Governor Jerry Brown Issues Blow To Medical Cannabis Patients, Compassion


Protections for medical cannabis patients are eroding quickly in the state of California.  Two important medical cannabis bills that passed the legislature were not signed by Governor Jerry Brown this week, SB 829 and SB 1127, leaving what many think is a huge stain on Brown’s political legacy.

On September 11, 2015, the legislature passed MMRSA – Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act.  This set of rules was a clear violation of Proposition 215 as it made huge, sweeping amendments to a voter initiative.  In an act of diabolical genius immediately after MMRSA passed, AUMA – the Adult Use of Marijuana Act – was filed and signature gathering began soon thereafter quashing any effort to sue the State over MMRSA as any judge assigned to the case would suggest waiting until the outcome the election before moving forward with the case.  AUMA neatly umbrella’ed MMRSA making it part of their voter initiative and effectively compromising Prop. 215 – The Compassionate Use Act.  

Despite the diligent, articulate and informed arguments by patient advocates statewide that AUMA – Prop. 64 – greatly jeopardized The Compassionate Use Act, paid proponents of Prop. 64 worked to discredit and undermine decades of hard work by advocates to protect patients’ safe, affordable access to medical cannabis.  AUMA passed. The taxes and fees have skyrocketed.  Patients have stopped visiting licensed retail cannabis shops for unregulated sources.  Now a blow by the Governor to declare that Compassionate Care and allowing children access to their medicine at school are illegal.

As of January 1, 2018, giving cannabis away at no cost to vulnerable patients – the spirit of The Compassionate Use Act – became illegal.  SB 829 would have created a license for this activity to encourage the re-establishment of compassion programs allowing low-income patients and our veterans to have more livable lives.  SB 1127 would’ve allowed children with serious illnesses to have their medical cannabis available at school in case of an emergency. Many of these children suffer from Dravet Syndrome – a severe form of epilepsy that produces violent and debilitating seizures, often several times a day.  Medical cannabis alleviates the duration, frequency and severity of these seizures allowing children to have more livable lives.  Governor Brown is not concerned about the lives of Californians especially of they are poor, ill or use medical cannabis.

So, what are the options for medical cannabis patients, providers and their advocates? Taking the next several legislative sessions to make endless amendments to every part of these flawed laws is one burdensome option.  A legal challenge to Prop. 64, as it pertains to the claim that it doesn’t affect Prop. 215, is another option but not a long-term solution.  It appears more and more that the only way to protect patients and Prop. 215 is through the voter initiative process and specifically a constitutional amendment.  

However, statewide voter initiative campaigns are arduous and expensive.  Is there enough frustration to motivate a campaign?  Are there enough people willing to make a small donation to fund a campaign?  Patient Advocacy Network would like to hear your thoughts. 

Saturday, September 29, 2018

Weed Sells, But Who's Buying? California's Unregulated Market Takes Over


California is experiencing a significant decrease in revenue from medical cannabis sales than what state officials originally predicted.  Some cannabis industry analysts point to adult recreational use as the primary factor.  However, patients and providers will tell you that over-taxation and the added costs of testing, packaging and licensing fees have pushed patients to seek unregulated sources for their medical cannabis.

Cannabis retail providers will tell you that it’s not only patients that have stopped coming in, but local adults, that frequented dispensaries a year ago, also stopped coming in after the new taxes went into effect January 1, 2018. So, who’s buying from licensed and permitted cannabis shops in California?  Tourists.

This benefits cannabis retailers fortunate and/or foresight-full enough to secure a permitted location in a major tourist thoroughfare, such as the Haight-Ashbury or the Venice Boardwalk.  Boutique providers in lesser known communities report that they are having a tough time business-wise – daily visits are low, unregulated options are plentiful, and the cost of doing business is too expensive – unreasonably so.  

Many boutique cannabis business owners see California’s current regulatory system favoring large, wealthy corporations over smaller, local mom-and-pop businesses. Investment money is nearly mandatory these days to keep up and stay afloat.  However, this has always been the way of capitalism and big money and business regulations.  Big money gets what it wants from the rule makers.  The little guy gets hit the hardest.  The consumer ends up paying more in the end.  

Except most California cannabis consumers refuse to pay more and there are plenty of more affordable options outside of the licensed industry.  If smaller cannabis businesses in California want to survive, they are going to have to demand more affordable rules and lower taxation.  The price out of the door has to match or beat the price on the street and right now “black market is king” according to social commentary.   

The $35 affordable eighth to the $65 premium eighth has been the standard on and off the streets for many years.  If regulations can’t meet this consumer demand, then the consumer is going to get it at that price elsewhere.  Does the legislature realize that the excessive taxation and cost of regulation has caused the unregulated market or ‘black market’ to explode?  Do they already know and this is by design? Why?

Always follow the money.

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Some Of The Early Patient, Provider Survey Feedback



“The taxes are just too, damn high,” is the sentiment from most Californians and it’s now true for medical cannabis patients, too.  

PAN recently asked patients and providers how the new rules are affecting them.  Many patients reported no longer using retail outlets due to the cost and now use some other source, the un-regulated market.  

Shop owners are feeling this, too.  They report lower numbers of visits since the new taxes and fees took effect.   Some are frustrated with what they call rogue shops in their area, and state they know some of their patients have found growers to help supply them.  

Cultivators appear to be the most disgruntled with the licensing process, on both the local and state level.  In February of this year it was reported that only 0.78% of the estimated growers in California had been approved for a temporary license.  

The California Growers Association has filed a lawsuit against California Department of Food and Agriculture, the state agency that issues cultivation licenses.  The suit calls out new provisions in the regulations that allow a medium license holder to apply for an unlimited number of small cultivation licenses.  

The suit goes on to argue that Prop. 64 allowed a 5-year window for small growers to get established before the state issues what many refer to as the mega-licenses. This new policy of  “stacking” as the lawyers call it violates the intent of the voter initiative by basically creating a loophole to allow large-scale cultivation operations now.

California is not seeing the revenue it projected from the cannabis industry due to all of these issues.  

PAN continues take feedback, monitor the cannabis industry, work with the California legislature and help patients with Compassionate access.  

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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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Tuesday, August 18, 2015

California Senate Committee Hears AB 266 & AB 243

California Senate Room

Video - California Senate Hearing on AB 266

Video - California Senate Committee Hearing on AB 243


The California Senate Appropriations Committee heard two medical cannabis bills yesterday: AB 266 and AB 243.  Both have been moved to the suspense file meaning either or both will be voted on by the full Senate, or die in the file.

AB 266 is over-burdensome, pay-to-play regulation that supports coercive monopolies and bans.  Nowhere in the bill is a seat on the task force for a patient representative, only bureaucrats and lobbyists.  AB 266 is disguised to look like reasonable regulation but in reality dismantles Prop. 215. 


AB 243 creates a new tax on medical cannabis cultivation and states,  “the bill would impose a tax in an unspecified amount on marijuana flowers, marijuana leaves, and immature marijuana plants.”  It is a new tax on medical cannabis growers that will be passed on to the patient.  We already know that unreasonable taxation on medical cannabis only pushes patients to the black or gray market.


SB 643 will be heard in the Assembly Appropriations Committee but is not yet on the agenda.


Unfortunately, Sacramento gets is wrong again.  Instead of protecting patients, the California legislature continues to support industry lobbyists, bans, restrictions, and more taxation.  It is anticipated that AB 266 will be gutted and merged with SB 643 and/or AB 243.  However, these are the bills to watch as the 2015 legislative session will close on September 11, 2015.

To let your Senator or Assemblymember know where you stand, find your representative here: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov

Contact information for the full California Senate: http://senate.ca.gov/senators
Contact information for the full California Assembly: http://assembly.ca.gov/assemblymembers


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Monday, August 08, 2011

California Attorney General Drafts New Medical Cannabis Guidelines


The Office of the California Attorney General Kamala Harris is revising current medical marijuana guidelines. Here is a link to the leaked draft: http://drugsense.org/temp/New_California_Attorney_General_Guidelines_2011_draft.pdf

These GUIDELINES FOR THE SECURITY AND NON-DIVERSION OF MARIJUANA GROWN FOR MEDICAL USE [DISCUSSION DRAFT – April, 2011] are an expanded guide for patients, doctors, cultivators, collective/cooperative directors, local legislators and law enforcement. Any patient engaged in medical cannabis activities or who belongs to a collective should review this proposal.

PAN would like any feedback from patients and their collectives as to how these proposed revised guidelines would affect you.