Pubdate: Thu, 01 Oct 2015 Source: Statesman Journal (Salem, OR) Copyright: 2015 Statesman Journal Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/QEzJupzz Website: http://www.statesmanjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/427 Note: The Register-Guard, Eugene, Sept. 28 MARIJUANA EMERGES FROM OREGON'S SHADOWS TODAY [Today] medical marijuana dispensaries in Oregon that choose to do so can begin selling dried pot leaves and flowers to people other than the patients they've been serving the past 18 months. The Oregon Health Authority - which oversees the medical marijuana program - will allow dispensaries to sell it for non-medicinal use through Dec. 31, 2016, a couple of months after state-approved rules for selling recreational marijuana are due to go into effect. Possession and use of recreational marijuana became legal in Oregon in July. One of the reasons Oregonians voted to legalize recreational use last November was to try to kill off the black market for the drug. Fearing it would get a boost once recreational use became legal, officials agreed to allow medical marijuana dispensaries to also sell their product for recreational use until a recreational sales program is in place. That was the right decision, but it's put some medical marijuana dispensary owners and managers in an awkward position. Most of them went into medical marijuana dispensing intending to help people who deal with chronic pain and debilitating medical conditions obtain marijuana legally. Many have struggled because they're basically not allowed to make a profit from marijuana sales. The dispensaries buy marijuana from growers who are allowed to charge only enough to cover the "normal and customary cost of doing business." The dispensaries then pass those costs on to their patients. Because no markup's allowed, dispensaries have to make their profits elsewhere, often from the sale of marijuana-related products. Recreational marijuana sales will be different. Sellers will be allowed to make a profit and will pay taxes on their earnings - in the interim program, 25 percent. Some people worry that the profit incentive will cause dispensaries to shift some or all of their business to recreational sales, and that could cut into the supply of marijuana for medicinal use, which would likely increase prices, currently about $10 per gram. Recreational sales could also prompt some medical marijuana users to drop out of the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program, in which they pay $200 per year for a medical marijuana card. In addition to saving the $200, they'd no longer have to register with the state. The patients most likely to drop out would be those who didn't need marijuana for medical reasons but managed to use the program as a surrogate until recreational marijuana was legalized. On Sept. 17, the OHA sent each of the state's 340 medical marijuana dispensaries "opt in" paperwork for the recreational sales program. Eighteen of Lane County's 31 dispensaries said they're joining the program. Ten didn't respond to inquiries and two said they hadn't made a decision. Only one ruled out selling recreational marijuana. Ronnie Schmidt, general manager at a Springfield dispensary, spoke for others when he said his business wasn't losing sight of its patients but, "in this market, it's necessary for most dispensaries that want to remain in business to go to recreational." Bringing the sale of marijuana out of the shadows will be good for users and for society in general, by eliminating the criminal aspects of the business. And the hypocrisy of some people using marijuana recreationally under the guise of medical need will disappear. But if the introduction of recreational sales adversely affects those who need the drug for medicinal purposes, either by reducing their supply or putting the price out of reach, that would be bad. Hopefully, a balance will be struck. And who knows? Maybe the interim solution that goes into effect Thursday - a temporary marriage of medicinal and recreational sales - will turn out to be a permanent solution. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom