Pubdate: Mon, 24 Aug 2009
Source: Providence Journal, The (RI)
Copyright: 2009 The Providence Journal Company
Contact:  http://www.projo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352
Author: Cynthia Needham
Referenced: The meeting announcement and draft regulations 
http://drugsense.org/url/EWLPJo7k

R.I. MOVES TOWARD MARIJUANA CENTERS

PROVIDENCE -- The Rhode Island Department of Health is moving forward 
with plans to create the state's first medical marijuana clinic where 
patients who use the drug for medicinal purposes can legally purchase it.

Officials have released a draft version of the regulations regarding 
operation of such clinics and have scheduled "an informal community 
review meeting" Tuesday, inviting the public to share its thoughts.

In June, lawmakers closed a loophole in the state's medical marijuana 
law, approving the creation of up to three so-called "compassion 
centers" where they say authorized patients will be able to safely 
buy affordable marijuana.

With passage of that law, Rhode Island became the third state to 
allow the sale of marijuana for medicinal purposes.

New Mexico earlier this year passed a statute licensing nonprofit 
producers of medical marijuana. California, meanwhile, allows 
marijuana clinics to operate, but plays no role in regulating the centers.

Since Rhode Island changed its law, some have questioned the 
particulars of how such centers will function, and what role the 
Health Department will play in regulating them.

The new regulations provide some answers on topics from security and 
licensing, to personnel requirements and dispensing rules.

Compassion centers are to be operated as independent nonprofit 
entities overseen by boards or principal officers, to be regulated by 
the Health Department, much like a hospital or a nursing home. The 
state will not play a role in the day-to-day operations, but it will 
check to ensure that protocol is followed.

Centers must have "a fully operational security alarm system" with 
marijuana to be stored in locked areas within the clinics, according 
to the regulations. If clinics elect to grow marijuana at a second 
site, that location too must be equipped with proper security.

Staff and board members may not have felony drug convictions and must 
undergo background checks to be conducted by the attorney general's 
office. They must also participate in training sessions at the facility.

But the rules remain silent on many specifics. For example, who is 
expected to train employees, or what constitutes an adequate security system.

Health Director David Gifford said many of those details can only be 
worked out once the regulations are in place and a group is selected 
to run the first center.

Gifford cautioned that while health officials will give the public a 
chance to ask questions and learn more about the centers at Tuesday's 
meeting, they don't have the power to substantively change the 
statute. Only the General Assembly can do that through a formal vote. 
The draft regulations are simply a reflection of what the legislature required.

"I am already guessing people pro and con will ask us to change the 
language here, but we don't have the authority to do that," Gifford said.

Stephen Hogan, executive director of the Rhode Island Patient 
Advocacy Coalition, estimates that about 30 individuals have thus far 
signaled an interest in applying to open the first center. That group 
recently held an information session to help those interested learn 
more about the center. But it says it will not endorse any one applicant.

Applications will not be distributed until the regulations are signed 
and in place.

Asked how he would describe an ideal applicant for the state's first 
compassion center, Gifford hesitated.

"We'll have to weigh the whole picture," he said. "To a degree it 
will end up being subjective, but we will try to make it as fair and 
transparent as possible."

Hogan said he hopes the first center will open as early as May, at 
which point the application process will begin anew for groups 
interested in operating the second center.

Gifford declined to commit to a specific time frame, given that the 
state has never before embarked on such a process, but he did not 
reject Hogan's estimate.

Tuesday's meeting will be at 2 p.m. in the auditorium of the Cannon 
Building, 3 Capitol Hill, on the lower level. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake