Pubdate: Sat, 10 Jul 2010
Source: Morning Sentinel (Waterville, ME)
Copyright: 2010 MaineToday Media, Inc.
Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/tLMIEnz1
Website: http://www.onlinesentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1474
Author: Rebekah Metzler

CALIFORNIA-LINKED NONPROFIT SCORES WELL

AUGUSTA -- A nonprofit with California roots was selected Friday to
operate four of Maine's six new medical marijuana dispensaries.

Cathy Cobb of Maine's Department of Health and Human Services, who
served on the four-member selection committee, said security and
patient education plans, along with a clear nonprofit mission, were
the keys for the winning applications.

Northeast Patients Group, which features outgoing Cumberland County
Sheriff Mark Dion as a board member, received the best score in four
out of the five counties for which it sought licenses.

"The committee looked for the skills and abilities of running
organizations, we looked at how they projected the number of patients
they would be serving and the price per ounce and more importantly,
what the organization planned to do with this excess net income," Cobb
said. "Lastly, we wanted to make sure that all the dispensaries were
adequately addressing the patient education needs."

Cobb was joined in the decision-making process by two other DHHS
officials -- Kathy Bubar and Jason White -- and John McElwee, a
retired District Court judge, who represented the public's interest on
the Medical Marijuana Task Force.

The task force was formed by Gov. John Baldacci to help ease the
implementation process after a citizens approved medical marijuana
dispensaries in a referendum last fall. Medical marijuana has been
legal in Maine for about 10 years, but patients had a difficult time
obtaining pot legally, advocates said.

State officials could have approved up to eight dispensaries -- one in
each public health district.

But Cobb said no application submitted for the York County district --
or the Hancock and Washington counties' district -- scored high enough
for approval.

Failed applicants from all districts have the opportunity to appeal
the decisions. The deadline for new applications in those two
districts is Aug. 20.

All but $1,000 of the $15,000 application fee was rebated to failed
applicants.

"We had objective criteria, objective scoring weights, we had an
unbiased committee of four people and we selected and scored the best
applications," Cobb said. "I'm sure that our decisions are going to
come under scrutiny, and we're prepared to defend our decisions."

Members from Northeast Patients Group, which will have four
dispensaries around the state, including Portland and either Augusta
or Waterville; and Remedy Compassion Center, which will be located in
Wilton, have prior experience, Cobb said. The group Safe Alternatives
of Fort Kent does not.

All three groups are registered as nonprofits, as required by law, and
offered specific security plans that impressed the panel, Cobb said.
DHHS will also hire a full-time manager to inspect the dispensaries
and growing facilities.

Cobb also defended the committee's selection of Northeast Patients
Group for a majority of dispensaries, saying it submitted strong
applications that were each weighed individually. She pointed out that
organization was beat out by another group in one district.

"I know that a lot of people feel that, because (NPG) come from away,
that they shouldn't have been selected. But when you are going through
a legal process like this, where you have established the criteria for
what you are looking for, you choose the best application and you
can't legally vary from that," Cobb said.

Northeast Patients Group plans on using a business plan modeled after
the Berkeley Patients Group, which includes an emphasis on charity
donations and increasing access for those who cannot afford medicinal
marijuana on their own. NPG anticipates charging $340 per ounce of
usable marijuana, according to its application.

"For some people, depending on the district, it's anywhere from $3,000
to $7,000 a year that people would be anticipating to pay for
medicinal marijuana -- and that's a lot of money," Cobb said, adding
that the committee looked favorably upon the applications offering
discounted prices to lower-income patients.

In addition to the price of the product, medical marijuana patients
must pay a $100 registration fee to the state in order to receive
their eligibility card. MaineCare patients only pay $75 for their
registration card, but would have to pay full price for any pot.

Maine's new medical marijuana dispensary system is to be
self-supported based on fees paid by patients and dispensary owners,
according to the law.

Potential patients also need a recommendation letter from their
physician to be submitted along with their official application, which
is available online at the DHHS website. Only doctors with "bona fide"
relationships with their patients can recommend medicinal marijuana as
an option, Cobb said.

Jonathan Leavitt of Maine Citizens for Patients Rights, the group that
spearheaded the initiative, said in a statement he was pleased with
the speed at which state officials moved to implement the new law.

"We are confident that, as people throughout Maine see these new
dispensaries providing good jobs and good medicine to people in their
communities in a responsible way, that the way will be opened for more
organizations to develop new and innovative ways of providing access
to high quality medicine from the plants around us," Leavitt said in a
news release.
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