Pubdate: Mon, 23 Dec 2013 Source: Metro (Toronto, CN ON) Copyright: 2013 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/toronto Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3462 WILL SOME USERS OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA BE PRICED OUT? Worries New Federal Rules Will Leave Some High and Dry Mark Gobuty isn't raising cattle or cultivating corn on his farm north of Toronto - he's growing medical marijuana. His company, The Peace Naturals Project, is one of the first to be approved by Health Canada to commercially produce and distribute dried cannabis ahead of changes next spring to Ottawa's marijuana medical access program. Starting April 1, the program that began in 2001 will no longer require medicinal marijuana users to buy their medication through Ottawa's one approved supplier, grow their own plants, or designate someone to be their personal grower. Instead, users will be restricted to buying their cannabis from a list of approved suppliers. Gobuty, Peace Naturals' chief executive and co-founder, says his company is focused on providing a quality product, but he also understands the compassionate side of drug dispensing. "We certainly have vision. We want to help people," said Gobuty during an interview at his secluded and highly secured farm in Clearview Township. "It's really (about) the purpose and intent of the medicine we can provide. If we can do one thing, we want to provide people with peace." But that peace will come at a price. And some prescribed users, such as Marcel Gignac, Marcel Gignac, a 51-year-old from Amherst, N.S., from Amherst, N.S., are worried that privatizing the medical cannabis industry will come at too high a cost. Gignac's supplier is a designated grower, but his wife, who also uses the herb to ease the pain from arthritis, knee and hip replacements, grows her own plants. He estimates she pays about five cents per gram for her medication. He said he and other members from the volunteer-run Medicinal Cannabis Patients' Alliance of Canada, some of whom are unable to work due to their conditions, will not be able to afford market prices. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom