Pubdate: Sat, 19 Jun 2010 Source: Colorado Daily (Boulder, CO) Copyright: 2010 New Colorado Daily, Inc. Contact: http://www.coloradodaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1557 Author: Erica Meltzer Camera BOULDER POT DISPENSARIES STRUGGLE WITH NEW STATE RULES ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA Boulder-area providers of medical marijuana are scrambling to comply with new state regulations that require them to grow most of their own pot, keep detailed records of all transactions and apply for state licenses through a process that includes criminal background checks. The new rules, signed into law by Gov. Bill Ritter earlier this month, are predicted to put at least half of the state's 1,100 medical marijuana dispensaries out of business. Local dispensary owners agree their numbers soon will be fewer, but each business owner is doing everything possible to be one of the survivors. "When I look six months down the road, we're either going to be very successful because we made it through this, or we're going to be out of business," said Ryan Hartman, owner of Boulder Wellness Center on Arapahoe Avenue. The biggest hurdle for Hartman is the requirement that dispensaries grow 70 percent of their own marijuana by Sept. 1. Hartman doesn't have the resources to hire employees right now, and he and his partners -- his wife and another couple -- are working "triple-time" to ramp up what had been a very small growing operation. The new rules also require that dispensaries -- called "medical marijuana centers" -- have a local license by July 1 and apply for a state license through an as-yet-undetermined process by Aug. 1. The state license requires criminal background checks for all owners, officers and employees and calls for detailed security and record-keeping measures to account for all the marijuana that moves through a center. "I think ultimately the goal of the legislation is to centralize the industry so it's easier to keep track of and control and tax," said Eric Moutz, a Boulder attorney who specializes in advising clients who work with medical marijuana. While some of the law's requirements are clear, many of the details still need to be worked out through a state rule-making process that could take most of the year. "Everything is in a holding pattern until the rules get set," Moutz said. "And those could be crippling or they could be very reasonable." At the same time, marijuana advocates are pursuing several lawsuits aimed at blocking the new laws. Matt Cook, senior director of enforcement for the Colorado Department of Revenue, already has spent hours in meetings with people with a stake in the outcome -- dispensary owners, patient advocates, makers of edibles -- and expects the rule-making process to take the better part of the year, though a basic application for a state license should be available sometime in July. The rest of the law won't go into effect until July 1, 2011. Cook said the state has several licensing standards for controversial industries, such as liquor stores and casinos, from which to draw in developing requirements for medical marijuana centers, and he's committed to an open process that includes input from a variety of sectors. The law also allows municipalities and their voters to ban dispensaries, as well as regulate their location and the total number of dispensaries. Superior recently became the first town in Boulder County to completely ban dispensaries. Lafayette, Louisville and Longmont all extended existing moratoriums on new dispensaries into next year. That gives the towns more time to see how state regulation develops and consider what local regulations to implement. Boulder spokeswoman Sarah Huntley said the city attorney's office is studying the new law and how it relates to local regulations adopted earlier this year. Those require dispensaries to pay expensive licensing fees and limit how many dispensaries can locate in a given area. As of the end of April, 125 people had active sales tax licenses for marijuana-related businesses in Boulder, Huntley said, but city officials believe there are only 40 to 50 dispensaries open and operating. Ernie Travis, owner of Boulder Vital Herbs on north Broadway, said the new requirements represent a significant cost. He'll have to come up with fees for both the city and the state, but the real hurdle is growing more of his own supply. Setting up a grow operation large enough to meet his business' needs will cost $50,000, he said. "I always wanted to be the store where you could come in and shake the hand of the farmer who grew your medicine, but it's just not humanly possible," he said. Over the last year, he supplied about 10 percent of his store's marijuana and bought the rest from area growers. To meet the new requirements, he's selling shares in his business to some of his growers, turning them into part-owners and counting their efforts toward his 70 percent. Moutz said such arrangements between growers and retail operations may not pass muster with regulators. However, the new regulations explicitly allow dispensary owners to have employees who work on growing pot, whereas before, anyone who dealt with marijuana had to be either a caregiver or a patient. "Now you won't have to have this fiction of being a caregiver" if all you do is grow marijuana for sale, he said. However, sticking with caregiver status would allow providers to avoid many of the new regulations, including the detailed record-keeping that could come back to hurt providers if the federal government cracks down on pot. "You have to keep detailed records of the sale of a product that still is illegal at the federal level," Moutz said. "That's what would scare me. You're required to keep records that would implicate you in federal drug crimes." Moutz said he expects to see some dispensary owners getting out of the business and setting up as caregivers whose patients have a doctor's recommendation that allows them to have a large number of plants. The surplus will end up in a gray market or even a black market for marijuana, but the business will take place out of sight of the public and regulators. "I don't condone that," Moutz said. "It's clearly illegal. But it's easier than complying with the law." - ----------------------- [sidebar] New medical marijuana regulations State regulators will create a licensing process for "medical marijuana centers." The licensing process will include fees, criminal background checks and strict record-keeping and security requirements. Centers must grow 70 percent of their own supply. Any additional marijuana can only be bought from other licensed centers. Wholesale growing operations are not allowed. Only Colorado residents can run medical marijuana centers. Recently convicted felons and anyone with a drug-related felony cannot own a dispensary. Local governments or their voters can ban dispensaries in their communities. The law distinguishes between retail operations and primary caregivers, whose role is protected by the state constitutional amendment that legalized marijuana for medical use. Primary caregivers cannot have more than five patients. Doctors who recommend marijuana must complete a full assessment of a patient's medical history and be available for follow-up care. Doctors cannot get paid by dispensaries to provide recommendations. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D