*Note: This article was published preceding the November 2014 elections.
SEE THE UPDATED NOVEMBER 2016 INITIATIVE HERE

 

Winners of Florida’s five, highly sought-after medical marijuana licenses could be selected through lotteries, according to a draft rule released last week by the Department of Health.

The Florida law recently signed by the Governor doctors allows doctors to prescribe low-THC marijuana treatment for state residents with epilepsy, cancer and afflictions causing “seizures or severe and persistent muscle spasms.”

The law also requires that cultivation, processing and distribution of the final product take place at the same locations and allows for one dispensary in each of five different regions of the state. Growers are limited to nurseries that have been doing business in Florida for at least 30 years and are producing at least 400,000 plants. Currently, 41 nurseries meet that criteria, according to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

The draft rule, generally considered a starting point, outlines how the state intends to implement a new law:

  • If there is more than one applicant within a region, “a public lottery will be held to determine the order in which applications are considered” The first complete application that meets all of the eligibility requirements would be the winner.
  • The chosen dispensary would have 30 days to pay $150,000 for a license and post a $5 million performance bond. If the applicant fails to meet the financial obligations, the department would start the selection process over again.
  • Applicants would have 10 days to apply once the rule goes into effect.
  • Dispensaries would have to be open a minimum of 30 hours per week and operate between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. Sales of any edible products like cookies or candy is prohibited.
  • Applicants would also have to provide documentation that they have the ability to obtain the premises, resources and personnel necessary to operate as a dispensing organization, including maps showing the location of facilities; site plans drawn to scale of the cultivation, processing and dispensing areas; and photographs showing the parking lot and entryways into the building.
  • Applicants would be required to include a list of staff members, who must all be over the age of 21, and prove that they have passed background screenings. The application must also include proof that individuals who are owners have passed background screenings.
  • The department could refuse to renew a license if a dispensary is within 500 feet of a school that existed before the organization submitted its initial application. Applications could also be revoked if a dispensing organization does not begin cultivation within 60 days of approval or does not begin dispensing within 120 days. The products would have to be tested to verify the THC-CBD content and for the presence of chemical additives.
  • Any sample that has more than .8 percent THC or less than 10 percent CBD would have to be reported immediately to law enforcement officials. The entire batch would have to be destroyed.
  • Dispensaries would have to document each day’s beginning inventory, seeds and cuttings, harvest, processed products, sales, disbursements, disposal of unusable plants or products and ending inventory. Growers would also have to keep track of the cannabis harvests, including the harvest number; whether the harvest originated from seeds or cuttings; the origin and strain of seeds or cuttings; the number of seeds or cuttings; the date the seeds or cuttings were planted; lists of all chemical additives; the number of plants grown to maturity; the date of harvest; final harvest yield weight; disposal of plants or plant parts not used for production; and the reason and methods of disposal, including the name of the agent responsible for the disposal.
  • All of the cultivation, processing, “any other activity involving low-THC cannabis” must take place “in an enclosed and locked facility.”

Read Full Story On: tallahassee


Join the conversation! 9 Comments

  1. Just save the money because we are voting out current group and making new rules when yes on 2 passes with real weed that can actually help more then 2% of the sick in Florida

    Reply
    • We should also vote on doing away with this whole lottery system BS and allow any Floridian who wants to pursue this opportunity. get involved. Why does this state always limit small business growth in this way?

      Reply
  2. […] the new medical marijuana law, five Florida nurseries will be allowed to grow cannabis. But one very big question remains: How will they get the ganja in the first […]

    Reply
  3. […] Florida legislature already demonstrated its wisdom by limiting the number of dispensary licenses to five, and it needs to hold fast at that number. By limiting the number of licensees (but not the […]

    Reply
  4. And definitely have to be able to sell edibles, I gotta figure a way to bypass that or come to terms

    Reply
  5. oh! because the good ole boy network wants to be greeddy-sure that they get all the pie. imagine having to have a farm or plant nursery for 20 years in Florida as a business in order to even qualify to pay the ridiculous fees upfront to even get a growers license. bull… fckin shit .

    give the small guy a way in. this rigged shit has got to stop. let the small guy develop a pot biz then come by later and buy them up. not lock everyone out.

    Reply
  6. I MEANT the Mexican ragweed we used to buy when I lived in San Diego at $10 an ounce had a higher THC content than what there proposing IT WOULD BE ALMOST IMPOSSABLE TO FIND A STRAIN THAT ONLY PRODUCED THAT LOW OF A THC CONTENT WHY NOT JUST SELL SND GROW THE GOOD STUFF THAT WIL REALLY HELP PEOPLE DOESNT MAKE SENCE ITS LIKE SELLING WATERED DOWN CHEMOTHEREOPY DRUGS ITS NOT GOING TO HELP THAT MUCH AND 99% of people who are going to ask for it HELL YOU MIGHT AS WELL ASK FOR THE THC PILL IT HAS A HIGHER THC CONTENT FOR THAT ITS GREAT FOR CANCER PATIENTS AS A ANTI NUSIA AND PAIN IYS LIKE IT WOULD BE LIKE DRINKING ODOULS IF YOU WANTED A BEER LIKE A BEER WITH 1/10% alchahol
    Totally stupid YES LETS NOT RE ELECT THE PEOPLE WHO MADE THE RULES ELECT SOMEONE WHOS USED IT MEDICALLY BEFORE IN OTHER STATES AND HAVE DISPENSARYS AVAILABLE TO ANYONE WHO HAS THE MONEY TO OPEN AND OPERATE A DISPENSORY IT COSTS 10’s of thousands JUST to buy the right hydroponic systems to grow it inside in quantity AND ONLY IF THEY PASS THE BUYING A HANGUN BACKGROUND CHECK EVERYONE SHOULD HAVE A CHANCE 5 MILLION DOLLARS GIVE ME A BREAK AND JUST CAUSE A NURSURY HAS BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR 20 years doesn’t QUALIFY THEM TO GROW GOOD MARIJUANA

    Reply

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