While marijuana remains illegal under federal law, voters in
Washington state and Colorado sanctioned the recreational use of
cannabis in landmark votes in 2012 that ushered in licensed and
taxed retail stores offering adults a range of products.
But in Washington state, a loosely regulated medical marijuana
industry runs alongside the recreational-use system, with retail
business owners complaining they are at a disadvantage.
"Regulations on the market had to happen," said John Davis, who owns
two medical dispensaries in Seattle. "Keeping a non-commercial and a
commercial medical system open, ultimately, is going to serve the
patients."
The Washington Senate on Tuesday voted 41-8 for the bill that will
remove collective gardens, which supply medical dispensaries, from
July 1 next year, in favor of four-person "cooperatives."
Some existing collectives can continue to run if granted a license
on the basis of factors such as the applicant's tax history.
The bill will let state-licensed pot retailers obtain a medical
marijuana endorsement to sell products.
It also creates a database of medical patients and lets authorized
patients possess three times the amount of marijuana allowed by the
recreational-use law. They can also grow up to six plants at home.
Washington Governor Jay Inslee, who has been pushing lawmakers to
act on the issue for a year, is expected to sign the measure into
law but can veto parts of it. A similar version of the bill passed
the House last week.
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Opponents have criticized the measure as the equivalent of a sick
person having to get medicine in a liquor store, saying regulators
were already "overtasked" in managing commercial pot, while patients
feared higher retail prices.
Many unanswered questions remain, such as the number of dispensaries
to survive under the bill and how actively police would clamp down
on shops violating the law, besides the fate of another bill on the
industry's tax structure.
Republican Senator Ann Rivers, the bill's sponsor, called the
measure a "first step" in reconciling the two marijuana markets,
saying: "I am certain we'll be back fine-tuning this next year."
(Editing by Curtis Skinner)
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