Pubdate: Sat, 28 Apr 2018
Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL)
Copyright: 2018 Orlando Sentinel
Contact:  http://www.orlandosentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325
Author: Kyle Arnold

FLORIDA'S YOUNG MEDICAL MARIJUANA INDUSTRY TAKES OFF

Florida's 16-month-old medical marijuana business is growing fast, as
dispensaries and growers rush to establish themselves. It's happening
even as court battles over state regulations for the young industry
rage on.

Florida's 16-month-old medical marijuana business is growing fast, as
dispensaries and growers rush to establish themselves. It's happening
even as court battles over state regulations for the young industry
rage on.

Rosa Howard spent 30 minutes in line Tuesday at a Trulieve medical
marijuana dispensary in Orlando, packed into a waiting room with
mothers, babies and seniors as the distinct smell of cannabis hung in
the air.

The 45-year-old from Oviedo spent nearly $180 on medical marijuana
products including a nasal spray she said instantly ends her seizures
and a vaping product to help with back pain from a car accident she
suffered seven years ago.

"Before medical marijuana was legal, I was getting it illegally," she
said. "Now I can come here, and it takes less time than going to a
pharmacy."

Florida's 16-month-old medical marijuana business is growing fast, as
dispensaries and growers rush to establish themselves. It's happening
even as court battles over state regulations for the young industry
rage on.

The state doesn't track sales figures, but Florida's Office of Medical
Marijuana Use reported April 20 that more than 100,000 Floridians have
signed up to receive medical pot, and the state is adding new
registrants at a pace of about 3,000 a week.

Florida now has 13 companies with 34 medical marijuana dispensaries.
There are three operating in Central Florida, all in Orlando, with
several more in the works. About 1,300 doctors have registered as well
to evaluate and approve patients for marijuana-based treatment of
dozens of ailments.

It's happened even as state lawmakers and local municipalities have
put heavy restrictions on medical marijuana, which the National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws said "is one of the more
dysfunctional programs in the United States."

"Rather than being a patient-centric program, it is largely a
political expedient program, where the whims of lawmakers and
regulators are placed above the interests of patients," said NORML
deputy director Paul Armentano.

Patients are prohibited from smoking or growing cannabis plants,
restrictions that surprised many after voters approved a
constitutional amendment in 2016. Central Florida municipalities such
as Lake County, Winter Park and Winter Garden have banned the shops.

Still, dispensaries have opened in every major population center in
the state, and many plan expansions.

"Medical marijuana got off to a rocky start with implementation and
the Legislature drawing the rules, but it's pretty clear that it is
popular," said Aubrey Jewett, a University of Central Florida
associate political science professor. "Lawmakers were less than
thrilled with the idea of medical marijuana, so they put laws in place
to restrict it to the degree that they thought they could."

Florida's licensed growers and dispensaries are careful to avoid being
too specific when discussing the evolving rules but say business is
expanding quickly, even though medical insurance won't cover it.

"We are absolutely seeing growth take off," said Victoria Walker, a
spokeswoman for Quincy-based Trulieve, which has 14 locations in
Florida. "It really comes down to physicians and access. As the
physician count grew, so did the number of people who had access."

Florida has lowered the original cost of the fee for doctors to be
licensed to prescribe medical marijuana to $250 from $1,000 and
reduced the training time to two hours from eight. It has increased
the number of physicians able to recommend medical marijuana by 48
percent since the beginning of the year.

Besides nasal sprays and vaporizers, Trulieve sells syringes and
creams. Other shops offer under-the-tongue-drops and suppositories.
The Florida Department of Health is still working on rules for edible
marijuana.

Several lawsuits are aimed at aspects of the law, such as a challenge
on the ban on smokable weed from Orlando lawyer John Morgan, who was a
major force in passing the amendment.

Orlando is the biggest market for Knox Medical, said spokesman Scott
Klenet, whose company has a marijuana nursery in Winter Garden and
opened Central Florida's first dispensary in Orlando in May 2017.

"We have more than 15,000 patients across the state from our six
dispensaries," he said. "The growth in the industry is
spectacular."

Medical marijuana in new markets such as Florida can be lucrative for
dispensaries, said Roy Bingham, CEO for marijuana industry data firm
BDS Analytics.

"In Colorado [where recreational use is legal], there are thousands of
dispensaries -- some are struggling to get by," he said. "But in some
places with less competition, they can be doing $2 million a month."

Florida's market is attracting attention, too. In January, Canadian
marijuana investment firm iAnthus Capital Holdings bought a Florida
operation called GrowHealthy for $47.5 million earlier this year.
Florida law requires medical marijuana companies to be based in the
state but does not restrict outside ownership.

iAnthus CEO Randy Maslow said GrowHealthy has a lease for a new
2,000-square-foot dispensary in Orlando to open by year's end,
although he declined to say exactly where it is.

"We are looking at Florida as the biggest medical marijuana market in
the United States," he said. "As more dispensaries open and more
doctors get qualified, you reach a critical mass at some point where
more and more people are hearing about it and it's easier to go to a
dispensary."
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MAP posted-by: Matt