Pubdate: Thu, 06 Jan 2011 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2011 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Kibkabe Araya Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) GROUP PLANS CANNABIS GROWING SEMINAR IN REDDING This weekend at the Redding Holiday Inn, Cannabis Industries Training Center will hold a two-day seminar and lecture series on how to enter and stay in the medical cannabis business. "It's an industry overview designed to enlighten whoever might be interested in either getting into this industry, taking it to the next level, (learning) what's legal and what's not," said Chris Staffin, first officer at Medicine Man Collective in Burney and co-founder of CITC. At the event, well-known medical cannabis grower Ed Rosenthal will have a book signing and court-qualified medical cannabis expert Chris Conrad will give advice. Representatives from local collectives, health professionals, growers, brokers and law experts will also speak. Speakers from Oaksterdam University, the first medical cannabis educational institution in the country with campuses in Oakland, Los Angeles and Sebastopol, will also provide business pointers. In 1996, California voters approved Proposition 215, allowing patients with valid doctors' permission and designated caregivers to possess and cultivate cannabis for medical purposes. In Shasta County, there are about 25 medical cannabis collectives. Last year, the state issued a total of 12,659 medical cannabis identification cards to California residents, including 51 cards to Shasta County residents. That's the highest number of new cardholders in the county since 2004. The first day will feature lectures by guest speakers familiar with the business side of medical marijuana. Staffin said the main goal for Saturday is to motivate the audience. "Everybody's going to walk out of there jacked up and wanting to go into the business. We have to light a fire, and a big one," he said. The second day will focus on the mechanics of indoor and outdoor harvesting the plant and processing its potential. Bliss Edibles, a nonprofit organization that infuses sweets with medical cannabis, will have its main representative and Oaksterdam professor, Miss Bliss, speak on how to effectively market the crop and how to cook and bake it. Also, a local doctor will discuss the medicinal part of cannabis, which lies in cannabinoids, the compounds responsible for alleviating distressful symptoms. Certain strains of medical cannabis show better results for certain illnesses. "There's a lot of (Prop.) 215 patients up here that are growers and we want to help educate them how to grow better medication and actually show them how to grow," said John Coonradt of Medicine Man Collective in Burney and co-founder of CITC. Coonradt's been using medical cannabis since 1967 after returning from the Vietnam War. With having cancer twice, arthritis and post-traumatic stress disorder, he said it's helped him lead a more productive life. He said he wants people to understand how medical cannabis can soothe the hardships of living with chronic diseases such as glaucoma and arthritis. The controversy surrounding marijuana in general has stigmatized the medical aspect, but the host venue said it doesn't expect anything out of the ordinary from the event. "We hold lots of different events from a lot of different groups," said Lori Nipar, director of sales and events at the Redding Holiday Inn. "We don't have the luxury of discriminating against any group. It's a training or seminar of some sort, and we do all kinds of medical and nursing training. This is just one more event." This will be CITC's first event, and the center plans to expand to a classroom and nursery facility that would better benefit those interested in the medical cannabis industry. IF YOU GO What: Cannabis Industries Training Center Launch Seminar When: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Where: Redding Holiday Inn, 1900 Hilltop Drive, Redding Cost: $100 a person. Call 866-416-CITC or 276-5460. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom