Pubdate: Fri, 14 Jun 2013 Source: Morning Sentinel (Waterville, ME) Copyright: 2013 MaineToday Media, Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/tLMIEnz1 Website: http://www.onlinesentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1474 Author: Michael Shepherd MAINE LAWMAKERS OK SOME PESTICIDE USE ON MEDICAL POT AUGUSTA - Medical marijuana dispensaries would be allowed to treat plants with certain low-risk pesticides if a bill enacted by the Maine Legislature on Friday makes it into law. The bill, L.D. 1531, an emergency measure sponsored by Sen. Thomas Saviello, R-Wilton, a former chairman of the Maine Board of Pesticides Control, passed the House of Representatives without a roll-call vote on Friday. The Senate passed it on Thursday. It would take effect as soon as Gov. Paul LePage, whose administration supports the bill, signs it. Saviello's bill would narrow currently broad Department of Health and Human Services rules that haven't allowed dispensaries to treat marijuana plants with any pesticide, even a natural substance such as vegetable oil. "Having anything in your arsenal is better than having nothing," said Glenn Peterson, owner of Canuvo, a dispensary in Biddeford. "It's a good thing." The department supports the bill, even though the loophole came into play publicly after its March investigation of the Wellness Connection of Maine, the nonprofit operator of four of Maine's eight dispensaries, in Portland, Hallowell, Thomaston and Brewer. That investigation found 20 violations of state law and program rules at Wellness Connection, from pesticide use to security breaches to a managerial conflict of interest. The state said nine types of pesticides were used at the group's Auburn cultivation site, violating medical-marijuana program rules that say no pesticides are allowed. However, Kenneth Albert, director of the DHHS' Division of Licensing and Regulatory Services, which oversees the program, allowed marijuana treated with pesticides to be sold, as the pesticides were substances anyone can apply to virtually all plants. The Portland Press Herald, after requesting an analysis of the pesticides from the Maine Board of Pesticides Control, reported five of the nine pesticides the group was cited for contain active ingredients that are safe for many uses and federally approved for use on tobacco. On Friday, Albert said the department supports the bill because it will help medical patients gain access to marijuana from state-regulated dispensaries. "That particular crop is challenging to grow without pesticides," he said. Substances allowed under the bill will be determined, in part, by a list of more than 30 active ingredients exempt from regulation under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act because they are deemed virtually harmless, including sesame oil, soybean oil and peppermint oil. However, Albert said, under the bill the pesticide also must be registered for use in Maine and its label must indicate that it can be used on all plants. If the substance is used on marijuana plants that will be turned into products that will be eaten, the pesticide will face more scrutiny, he said. Paul McCarrier, a lobbyist for Medical Marijuana Caregivers of Maine, a frequent Wellness Connection critic, called the bill the dispensaries' "flagship piece of legislation" this session. His group, which represents small-scale medical-marijuana growers, didn't take a position on the bill. He said while most small-time growers don't use pesticides on plants, dispensaries need a way to treat plants so pests, such as spider mites, don't infest large growing areas. Wellness Connection served about 2,400 patients in March, according to state figures. "I don't think it's very controversial," McCarrier said of the bill. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom