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Monday, September 12, 2022

Clarkston Cares 2022 Wins Appeal

 


Clarkston Cares 2022 Wins Appeal

by Ben Horner 

A three-judge panel from the Michigan Court of Appeals unanimously upheld the Oakland County Circuit decision to allow the question on medicinal marijuana to be on the ballot for the Village of Clarkston in November.

Advocate Clarkston Cares 2022 had gone through the necessary steps to get the question to amend the city charter to authorize and regulate marijuana “provisioning centers” on the ballot. Upon getting the wording approved, Clarkston Cares 2022 canvassed the city to attain the needed petition signatures. 

Having turned in the signatures forty-five days prior to the deadline, the petition was in the hands of the village clerk, Jennifer Speagle, to certify the signatures. Speagle argued that she was not given enough time to do the necessary steps to certify the signatures, among other steps that end at the governor’s desk for final approval, to get the question on the November ballot. 

Clarkston Cares 2022 responded to her argument stating that forty-five days gave Speagle enough time, and the county clerk simply chose to purposely procrastinate to keep the question off the ballot.

With the unanimous decision, the order takes immediate effect, thus allowing the people of Clarkston to vote in November on whether they will allow medical marijuana provisioning centers in their community. 

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Where Have All the Hippies Gone?



Where Have All the Hippies Gone?

by Amy Wilding-Fox

As a proud Gen Xer, second-generation activist, and fellow victim of the War on Drugs as I watched my mother held at gunpoint over possession of weed by multiple Flushing, Michigan, police in July 1988, like she was modern-day Ma Barker and given two years’ state time, my life’s mission has been to help end the negative Euro-American stigma attached to marijuana and its users. The ties run so deep in my connection to this fight that I was even conceived as a direct result of the War on Drugs (a longer story for another day, perhaps), and my dad, like so many of my generation’s dads, attributed marijuana to keeping him sane and alive while fighting in Vietnam.

Nestled between the boomers and millennials, our smaller-than-average generation had a unique perspective on cannabis. It was a tool for our boomer hippie parents to promote peace and self-care, yet still a teen rebellion act for us prior to the technological boom of the millennials where a camera is pointed toward your person at any given time. Therefore, for many like me, we seemed to innately take on the challenge that so many of the boomer legends began ahead of us to “Legalize It!” and “Free the Weed!” We were the 1980s-early 2000s counterculture of hippies, stoners, black sheep, geeks; but most of all “they” liked to label us “slackers,” mainly because of our love for Mary Jane. 

While on the outside it may have seemed as such, little did they know that we were busy internally carrying on the movement that would lead to the legalization of cannabis that we are seeing today. We were taking that baton handed to us and running with it. With anthems like “Hits from the Bong” and “You Don’t Know How It Feels,” we were networking in our own ways. Slowly the winds started to change, and medical states began to emerge beginning with California in 1996. Our home state of Michigan finally approved marijuana for medicinal use in 2008 and more have followed since, reaching nearly 75 percent of the country.

Part of what I like to think of as “the golden years” of legalization were the events that took place to protest the criminalization of a plant that grows freely and had so many promising uses beyond just getting high. Prior to legalization for medicinal use, there was common knowledge that there was some risk involved, yet we would meet by thousands at festivals, concerts, events, and protests at local state and national levels. We would smoke tons of weed. We truly felt that we were making the change we wanted to see, though by some it was still perceived as slacking.

Then, as we created the caregiver systems for patients who needed the medicinal benefits of cannabis, the events naturally morphed into even larger events where patients and caregivers could meet. Thousands of hippies would be in attendance. Patients had the luxury of finding their perfect caregiver who could grow the medicine best suited for them. The caregivers could survive because they had the patients to help offset costs to grow. The event sponsors would find even more consumers. It was a win-win for all involved. 

Next came the competitions. I can somewhat understand this concept because we had grown up idolizing the “High Times Cup” in Amsterdam, yet I never really participated. It was then this activist could see the greed creeping in. Local events turned grower against grower. Those little trophies would allow the grower to sell their products at the highest market price possible. Nepotism and cronyism prevailed. Which vendor donated the most as a sponsor became a prominent factor. The brotherhood and sisterhood we had built during those golden years began to dismantle themselves.

With the greed of the caregiver system setting in quietly like a cancer, Michigan pushed ahead with legalizing marijuana recreationally. While some still had the original goal to simply free the weed once and for all, the dark money that was piling up behind the initiative was really looking to capitalize on the greed and infighting of caregivers. Some of the same people who were involved in creating the caregiver policy Michigan has in place today are fighting to dismantle the caregiver program altogether. 

As licensed and even national brands have popped up in communities all over the state, the market has intentionally become flooded with less-expensive, mass-produced cannabis. Large commercial growers are offering pounds to recreational dispensaries at prices as low as $500 a pound to admittedly put the caregivers out of business. While some can argue quality, at a time when inflation is on the rise, cheap buds from licensed dispensaries are becoming more and more appealing than the craft cannabis of caregivers, even to the older generations like me and the boomers.

With these licensed dispensaries come actual state-sanctioned events full of big-name sponsors. Younger generations see the shiny new signs and packaging, and like moths to fire, they flock to the sanctioned events featuring celebrities and lots of free swag. That actual feeling of change and having purpose no longer seems to be needed. 

Over the weekend of August 26-27, Michigan Marijuana Report was invited to two simultaneously planned caregiver events, the 7th Annual Clio Cultivation Cup, in Clio, and Gems n Genetics in Morley. Both were beautifully organized with vendors offering products ranging from metaphysical crystals to some of the most sparkly buds you will see. Music filled the air as live bands played at each event. The smells from the food trucks wafted by just in time to kick in the munchies from the last joint smoked. Most importantly, plenty of marijuana was being smoked. 

There was one notable difference, it seemed, in both events. Attendance was at a low. “Where had all the hippies gone?” I thought. Gone are the shoulder-to-shoulder vibes from events of a decade ago. Don’t get me wrong. There was a decent turnout, but when compared to previous years or events we have attended, the count was just not there. Why could that be? 

Well, though by no means am I an expert, my best guess after discussing this with the staff, is that the biggest factor is simply “We won!” At least here in the state of Michigan we have. Though we got our wish to free the weed, we failed to foresee the commodity cannabis would become once that big, dark money started to roll in. Our market has become so saturated with mass-produced weed, events for caregivers and patients almost seem obsolete. 

When observing the attendees at the events, they were mainly the diehards. For those of us, like me, who fought for so many decades, it is saddening to see the shift. Yet in so many ways this shift was inevitable as the Cookies and Skymints moved in, just as Walmart killed so many local mom-and-pop stores.

Where will this leave the locally sponsored events in the future? I like to ask myself, “WWJGD?” What would Jerry Garcia, an OG of our counterculture, do? My hope is the shiny newness of the commercial brands will eventually wear down, and the nostalgic appeal of the local events will never completely fade away. I would hope that instead of letting these wonderfully unique and inspiring events full of small artisans and hippies fade away, they can withstand the shift into this next era. Jerry, I believe, would have embraced the commercial but never would have forgotten his roots. Plus, like mentioned at the Gems n Genetics event, our fight to end this war on drugs is not over, but rather refocused. So come, hippies of all ages, sizes and genders, we still need you! Next on the agenda: psilocybin!

 View this article on our website.

Detroit Starts Taking Recreational Applications



Detroit Starts Taking Recreational Applications

by Ben Horner

After two years of uncertainty, Detroit has finally begun the license application process for those seeking to open a recreational marijuana dispensary within the city. 

From September 1 to October 1, those hoping to be among the first to open a recreational facility in Michigan’s largest city will be allowed to apply for the first phase of Detroit’s recreational marijuana licenses.

Of the 160 licenses to be awarded in three phases, the first phase will approve a total of 60, at least half of which will be awarded to social equity applicants. To qualify as a social equity applicant, the applicant must be a qualified resident of Detroit, or another community deemed disproportionately impacted by the prohibition of marijuana. If co-owned, at least 51 percent of the business must be owned by a person who qualifies as a social equity applicant. 

Of the first 60 licenses issued, 40 will be for retail, or businesses that sell marijuana and marijuana-related products. Ten will be for micro-business licenses, or small businesses that will be vertically integrated by growing, processing, and selling the resulting products of 150 plants. The final 10 will be for consumption lounges, or commercial locations that will allow adults to consume cannabis on the premises for recreational purposes. 

Each category in each phase will be given an equal number of general and social equity licenses. 

Phases 2 and 3 will each have 30 retail, 10 micro-businesses, and 10 consumption lounge licenses up for grabs using the same rules as those of Phase 1. Dates have yet to be announced for the next two phases.

View this article on our website.

Smoke Shop Busted


 

Smoke Shop Busted 

by Amy Wilding-Fox

ARIZONA, — According to a press release, police discovered an illegal “cannabis dispensary” in Maricopa County, Arizona. Early August, the sheriff’s office stated that they had stumbled upon the illegal operation on Phoenix’s south side.

Disguised as a smoke accessories retail store, Korporate Smoke is said to have been the cover for the illegal drug ring. Hidden beyond the glass pipes, bongs, and rolling paper, police claim that there was a secret room used to commit the alleged crimes.

Along with marijuana, police stated that they confiscated mushrooms, four guns, and “other drugs.” Two men, James McCoy and Corey Cashman, were also found hidden in the room and taken into custody, along with $35,000 in cash.

Also in custody is one female, Alisa Simpson, who the police claim was the mastermind behind the whole thing. A public records search shows Ms. Simpson as the registered agent, and one of the male alleged perpetrators, James McCoy, is listed as a manager. The business itself has been active only since April 2021. 

While this is an ongoing case, all parties are assumed innocent until proven guilty.

View this article on our website.

Got Munchies? How About Some Snoop Loopz?

 


Got Munchies? How About Some Snoop Loopz? 

by Amy Wilding-Fox

 CALIFORNIA, — What does a chart-topping, hip-hop artist known for claiming to smoke 81 blunts a day do when looking for a change of pace? If you are Snoop Dogg, the answer is to invest in making munchies, of course.

Partnering with fellow rapper and friend Percy Miller, aka Master P, Snoop, or Calvin Broadus, Snoop has founded Broadus Foods. According to their website, Snoop Dogg’s family-owned business was founded “to continue Mama Snoop’s legacy of her generous love and passion for feeding families in our communities.”

The two, who some are calling the “Kings of Breakfast Foods,” are committed to bringing diversity to grocery aisles near you. The line will include Mama Snoop’s grits, pancake mix, syrup, oatmeal, and, of course, everyone’s favorite Saturday morning tradition, breakfast cereals. 

The first cereal that will be released under the Broadus Foods label is fittingly called Snoop Loopz. Described as a nutritious fruit-flavored cereal with marshmallows, it is both multigrain and gluten-free. With its premium quality “Made in the USA” stamp, Snoop Loopz is 100 percent satisfaction guaranteed, so there is nothing to lose. Also, with each purchase, a percentage of the sale will go to charities that support families facing homelessness and food insecurity, like Doors of Hope. 

So, the next time you find yourself with the munchies, mindlessly wandering down the aisles, grab yourself some Snoop Loopz to try. Not only might you find your next go-to munchie, but you will also be helping others while curbing that cannabis-induced craving!

View this article on our website.

Florida—Should Cannabis Users Carry? DOJ Says “NO!”

 


Florida—Should Cannabis Users Carry? DOJ Says “NO!”

by Amy Wilding-Fox

 

FLORIDA, — There has long been a debate since the legalization of medical (and recreational) cannabis, now reaching nearly 75 percent of the country, on whether those with medical prescriptions for marijuana should legally be able to carry a firearm.

The state of Florida’s agriculture commissioner, Nikki Fried, is among the latest to ask this question. Taking on the advocacy role for those prescribed marijuana by a physician, she argues that denying legally prescribed cannabis users the right to bear arms goes directly against their Second Amendment right to do so. 

In her quest to change such policies, Commissioner Fried is suing the Biden Administration’s Department of Justice, trying to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court. 

In response to the motion, the DOJ has asked that the case be dismissed, citing centuries-old rhetoric in its defense. Some defense arguments include that the scheduling of cannabis at the federal level finds there is no current acceptable reason to consume cannabis medically. Citing laws like the 1771 New York law prohibiting people from shooting guns on New Year’s because they were traditionally intoxicated on liquor, DOJ lawyers went on to claim that drug users, even marijuana users, are mentally ill and cannot be trusted. They also argued that because marijuana is still illegal, it poses a greater threat than alcohol consumption, and marijuana users “have difficulty exercising self-control, making them dangerous to possess firearms.” 

Fried and plaintiffs responded with the argument that when the ratification of the Second Amendment was created, marijuana was indeed legally prescribed at the time, so it was deemed medicinal prior to the prohibition laws. They also claimed that denying such citizens the legal avenue to purchase firearms incentivizes them to either lie on applications, buy guns on the black market, or simply forgo their right entirely.

While this case is ongoing, there have been previous efforts to reschedule marijuana at the federal level, but to no avail. Congress has also tried to pass protections for medical patients in the past, yet nothing has ever been enacted. The Marijuana Report will keep an eye on this as news unfolds.

View this article on our website.

DoorDash With a Side of Weed

 


DoorDash With a Side of Weed

by Amy Wilding-Fox

OHIO, — Finding an extra fry in your DoorDash can feel like hitting a small scratch-off lottery win, but for one Ohio customer, their find went far beyond that of an extra fry or drink. Tucked into the bottom of the bag with their plasticware was a bag of cannabis. 

To many who are reading this, it may have been a very welcome surprise, but to this health-care worker, it was nothing of the sort. They noted the possibility that a minor could have been the one on the receiving end, and not someone educated about health care. They also mentioned that they do not condone the use among young people because of firsthand experience seeing negative effects on younger minds. 

A few moments later, they stated, there was a knock on the door. It was indeed the driver who made the mistake, asking for their medicine back. Like so many claimed as teenagers to their parents when busted with a bag of weed, they said that it was for a “friend” and needed it back.

Unfortunately for the driver, the customer had already made a report to DoorDash and had called the police to confiscate the cannabis. 

DoorDash has since released the driver in question and they will no longer be allowed on the DoorDash platform. It is unclear at the time of this report if any charges will be made by the police.

 View this article on our website.

 

Move Over Coffee, Here Comes Mary Jane!

 


Move Over Coffee, Here Comes Mary Jane!

 by Amy Wilding-Fox

COSTA RICA, — Known the world over for their delicious coffee beans, Costa Ricans recently elected a new president. With this new administration comes the promise of legalizing marijuana on both the medical and recreational levels, as well as industrial hemp, in the hopes of creating a new booming agricultural industry for the Central American country.

Marking his first 100 days in office, Costa Rican president Rodrigo Chaves gave a speech outlining his plans on legalizing marijuana. Though legalized prior to his win, creating a lucrative and booming marijuana industry was a key promise in his election campaign. According to the Tico Times, the president stated in this speech that his administration is actively preparing the regulations involving medical use and industrial cultivation of hemp. He went on to state that the boundaries for both businesses and consumers will be rolling out soon.

While slightly disappointed that nothing was mentioned in the speech about recreational use, with such an announcement, eager investors are waiting to see the rules roll out so that they can be among the first to capitalize on the new industry.

 View this article on our website.

Guyana Decriminalizes Industrial Hemp

 


Guyana Decriminalizes Industrial Hemp 

by Amy Wilding-Fox

 Lawmakers in the small South American nation of Guyana have finally passed an industrial hemp law that decriminalizes hemp cultivation, paving the way for a new legal revenue that Minister of Agriculture Mustapha Zulfikar reportedly called “a valuable source of foreign exchange.” 

First introduced to the National Assembly of the Parliament of Guyana in May, the Industrial Hemp Act finally passed on August 8, 2022. The new law consists of a creation of a special governing board for the Guyana Industrial Hemp Regulatory Authority. This board will oversee the issuance of licenses to both individuals and companies looking to cultivate and/or produce hemp products. According to the new law, some of the products included will be foods, textiles, furniture, medicine, and cosmetics.

Licenses for research purposes will also be allowed. 

While cannabis use is still illegal in the small country, in response to the new law, Guyanese president Mohamed Irfaan Ali told local news sources that he hopes this will serve as an opportunity to convert growers of the still illegal marijuana into legal hemp growers.

View this article on our website.

Andrew Brisbo’s Departure And The V. I. Lenin Methodology


 

Andrew Brisbo’s Departure And The V. I. Lenin Methodology

 by Tim Beck

On August 9, the Michigan cannabis community was rocked by an announcement from the governor’s office that Cannabis Regulatory Agency (CRA) director Andrew Brisbo will be leaving his post in September to assume a new position in state government. He will be leaving the CRA to head the Michigan Building Codes Department. Accordingly, he will also be resigning as head of the National Cannabis Regulators Association, a position he was elected to by his national peers.

According to the government watchdog website Open the Books, at the end of 2021, Brisbo was drawing a salary of $152,466.16 and was classified as a senior management executive under civil service rules.

Across the board, top level cannabis groups ranging from the Michigan Cannabis Industry Association to the Michigan Cannabis Manufacturers Association to Michigan NORML had nothing but good things to say about his tenure in statements to the media. At the Michigan Cannabis Industry Association summer conclave at Shanty Creek Resort in Northern Michigan, on August 10-12, the couple hundred or so industry executives, lobbyists, elected officials, and small canna business owners in attendance were virtually unanimous in their praise of Brisbo and in their bewilderment as to why he was moving on. He was most appreciated for his openness, accessibility, and lack of pretense.

On the other hand, in social media and private Listserv posts, the knives quickly came out. People who hated Brisbo for one reason or another expressed their satisfaction at his demise. Some had not gotten what they wanted from the CRA. Others blamed his decisions for the collapse in flower prices through overproduction, leading to big layoffs and major pain in the Michigan cannabis market. Others accused him of playing footsie with big cannabis businesses and bending the rules for their benefit. Some said the Viridis Labs recall disaster was the nail in his coffin.

The governor’s office did not have much to say about Brisbo. Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s media spokesperson,  Bobby Leddy, did not mention Brisbo by name in a statement to the media. Instead, he declared, “We are proud of the incredible team at the CRA for establishing Michigan as one of the top cannabis markets in the country.”

At this juncture, it seems only the governor’s inner circle and Brisbo himself really know what went down and why. It is likely to remain that way for some time.

On the other hand, there is a time-tested method to discern these things and get closer to reality.

Bolshevik leader Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, who took over Russia early in the 20th century, had millions killed, and ensconced himself at the top of the newly created Soviet Union, gave real-time advice to those confused by a political development. Lenin’s advice was to “ask oneself who does the action benefit, and you will have a good idea where it is coming from.”

Using the Lenin methodology, the biggest beneficiary in all this is Governor Whitmer.

For a tough and remorseless partisan political player who leaves nothing to chance, Whitmer gains some advantages with Brisbo’s removal. Specifically, it seems to inoculate her from the fallout from a number of cannabis-related issues swirling around.

First, there is the growing crisis (for some people) over the explosion in Michigan flower production, which has caused prices to collapse, layoffs in the industry, and many small operators to shut their doors. Deep-pocketed major players, too, are disappointed that the gold mine they expected is turning into fool’s gold. With “Croptober” coming up soon, some industry pundits are predicting an even deeper disaster, as thousands more pounds of newly harvested weed hits the market. Brisbo has been blamed for the overproduction problem by allowing “license stacking” and creating a special Excess Grower License.

There is also ongoing fear associated with the infamous Viridis Labs testing debacle. Last November, Brisbo’s agency instituted a $230 million recall of cannabis tested by Viridis Labs. Lots of damage was done to many parties and the CRA does have clean hands. The issue is still in litigation and it is possible Viridis could win in court. Such a win may cost the state of Michigan millions in damages. During this brouhaha, Republican legislators pointed at the CRA and suggested it was to blame for the Viridis problem. While GOP leaders are not known for liking weed, they have no problem using any tool in the box to keep or attain power. The governor can now claim to have preemptively gotten a handle on the problem by removing Brisbo.

While the owners of Viridis Labs may be delighted by Brisbo’s plight and are said to be very well connected, it is not likely they had any direct hands-on role in a decision that was ultimately made by Governor Whitmer.

Finally, as a special torte de la creme, when the new CRA was created out of what was originally the Marijuana Regulatory Agency (MRA), the director position was removed from civil service (Brisbo was grandfathered in and that’s why he is still on the state payroll) and the position is now a political appointment made by the governor. That is a big plum for Whitmer to be able to hand out to one of her loyal supporters or a would-be ally. The CRA director spot is a glamorous, high-visibility job, controlling an ascendant segment of the Michigan economy.

Some folks suggested that Brisbo was also a beneficiary of Whitmer’s move and can now get a lucrative job in the cannabis industry. Others are not so sure. There happens to be a clause in the rules that says he cannot take any cannabis industry position for four years in the state of Michigan. Some legal eagles say this clause could also be interpreted to mean anywhere in the U.S.

Nonetheless, when all is said and done, it seems lots more people regulated by his department liked and respected Andrew Brisbo, as opposed to those who are gloating over his current demise.

View this article on our website.

Jerry's Picks Hit the Stage

 


Jerry's Picks Hit the Stage

by Ben Horner

 

What? Jerry Garcia is grateful and dead, but not enough for the “family” going all out on a mega licensing deal that takes aim at being the number one corporate cannabis brand. I reached out to Kyle Barich, who has the honor of being Garcia Hand Picked corporate marketing executive, to get a better understanding of this new mainstream approach to commercial cannabis. Then I was off to sample the strains at the Michigan dispensary chain, where I met great staff and let it all sink in.

Jerry Garcia was the iconic musician and leader of the jam band, the Grateful Dead, which has a long tradition and cult following of “Deadheads.” Deadhead roadies toured around the country often immersed in the drug culture of psychedelics, pot, and other flower power-like ideologies. Jerry was a bridge from the beatniks, blues, and jazz grass smokers to the hippies and then, later, the heads. He paid tribute to lost poets like Herbert Huncke by paying his rent in New York in his later years, preserving the tradition and history of how white scholars like Ginsberg and Burroughs opened white America to music and weed as a gateway to a new way of thinking and being.

Before the interview with Kyle, we looked at his background to find that he was deeply involved with marketing for the Pfizer drug Viagra, which made sense in some way in this new corporate cannabis business model. The company that he now works for, Holistic Industries, is a multistate operator (MSO) with dispensaries, called Liberty, with licenses and vertical integration in many states, including Michigan. Kyle explained that with each state’s different set of rules, the cannabis space was unlike—and more challenging than—most industries. 

On the phone, Kyle sounded pretty hip. He was excited about the Garcia Hand Picked brand and bragged about recently going to a Phish concert. He explained that Trixie, Jerry Garcia’s daughter, was the picker of award-winning strains that made the new brand. She did her hunting while being a celebrity judge at the Emerald Cup in California. Kyle also explained that people like himself and other professionals like lawyers, accountants, and financial officers are required in the new licensed cannabis space, all the while trying to maintain an image of social and historical relevance.

After the long-distance phone interview with the marketing man, I was provided a local contact at the Liberty dispensary in Madison Heights. I made arrangements with the store and came down to meet the staff and get samples of the Garcia Hand Picked products. The dispensary was very nice and the display of Jerry Garcia books and memorabilia was supercool. However, being vertically integrated, the dispo lack the variety of products many people like to see. Behind the store was the commercial grow facility that produces all the flower for the three Liberty stores in Michigan.

The staff was very culturally diverse and excited to be working in cannabis. They showed off their products and gave me a pack of Garcia Hand Picked Florida Kush prerolls, which was in a beautiful package containing five joints, a glass smoking tip, and a poem by Jerry. They also gave me some Garcia Hand Picked gummies. The joints were pretty good, but not as nice as the packaging, and the gummies were typical gummies. Overall, the brand is impressive, but there’s some room for it to become truly top shelf in Michigan, though Liberty really doesn’t have any tiers of products. All of Liberty’s cannabis products are made in-house. The cannabis market is evolving, and big names are being licensed by investors. I am glad to see that the Garcia family is getting its tributes, as the legacy has its place in history.

View this article on our website.

 

CRA Updates Edible Packaging Regulations

 


CRA Updates Edible Packaging Regulations

by Ben Horner

On September 2, the Michigan Cannabis Regulatory Agency issued its newest bulletin with updates to the packaging of cannabis-infused products. 

To help eliminate confusion and curb the appeal to those seventeen and under, the CRA has made several updates to the prior guidelines released in April of this year. The first focused on the wording of the actual product. The package description must include words such as “contains cannabis,” “cannabis-infused,” or “contains THC” and be clearly labeled in a font just as large as or larger than the brand name.

Furthermore, any images considered appealing to children are gone. For example, the use of cartoon characters, animals, designs, caricatures, and even certain wordings are forbidden, like simply calling the product a milk chocolate bar or gummy. Now, they must clearly be labeled with “cannabis” or “THC” before the name to correctly describe the product, like “THC Gummies” or “Cannabis-Infused Milk Chocolate.” Also, the required removal of any packaging that has a likeness of that of a known national brand must be done promptly.

With production lines currently being updated to reflect such changes, what are the retail businesses to do with noncompliant products until new ones reach the shelves? The CRA has given them multiple options, such as using nontransparent stickers or tape to cover the trouble areas like smaller logos containing images deemed enticing to children. Retailers could also use nontransparent stickers with “cannabis” or “THC” in a font as large as or larger than the logo to either cover the image or add in front of words such as “gummy” or “chocolate.” 

Products that cannot be fixed using stickers must be pulled from the shelves. While inconvenient to all retailers, it serves an even larger blow to medical products. Recreational dispensaries have the option to return unused and unopened edible products, but medical facilities cannot return edibles because of previous legislation forbidding such actions. They will be forced to destroy those products. Products that fall under this category are those with packaging that is entirely cartoonish or resembles national branding because of color and images, like Peanut Budder Cups, for example.

Look for these changes to be hitting your local dispensary soon.

View this article on our website.

Spectrum Health Eliminates Pre-employment Drug Screen

 


Spectrum Health Eliminates Pre-employment Drug Screen

 by Ben Horner

One of West Michigan’s largest employers, Spectrum Health, has decided that it will no longer screen potential employees for cannabis. 

Since the legalization of recreational cannabis in Michigan, mainstream views and stigmas attached to marijuana seem to have been slowly changing. This announcement from Spectrum Health only strengthens the perception of a more accepting society.

In a statement released to local news station 13 On Your Side, a spokesperson representing Spectrum Health said:

“To reduce barriers to employment and because recreational marijuana is legal in Michigan, BHSH System no longer includes THC, or marijuana, in its pre-employment drug screen for most positions. Our patients and community members can be confident that we comply with the applicable laws establishing drug-free workplace requirements and that we will take all measures necessary to establish a safe environment of care.”

As implied, this new rule does not apply to all positions, but to a majority.

Decisions like this are at the sole discretion of each employer, whether the state laws have changed or not. While Spectrum Health may be loosening up to the idea of a legalized culture, the question remains just how quickly other large corporations will follow suit. Regardless of if or when they do, there are cannabis advocates who consider this a step in the right direction.

View this article on our website.