Weekly Opinion Editorial
POTENCY OF POT SHOULD BE LIMITED!
by Steve Fair
This week, the Oklahoma Board of
Health voted unanimously to repeal some of the regulations passed just three
weeks ago. They voted to eliminate the
ban of smokeable marijuana and the requirement to have a pharmacist on site at
dispensaries. They also removed the
limitation on THC content, the requirement to have a pregnancy test before
getting a license, and to lower the age of workers at dispensaries from 21 to
18.
Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is one of over
one hundred chemical compounds found in marijuana and is clearly the most
potent. THC reaches the bloodstream more
rapidly when smoked than when ingested.
When ingested as an edible, the effects of THC take longer but tend to
be stronger and last longer than smoking.
THC is activated by heat, either by smoking or the cooking process.
By voting to remove the THC potency limit
in marijuana sold in Oklahoma, the board of health likely created potential
problems down the road. According to a
Dutch study, conducted over a sixteen year period, the more potent the pot, the
more people sought treatment for marijuana-related problems. The study found that 15% THC was the highest
level that should be sold because higher levels resulted in addiction and
health issues. In a February 2018
editorial, the Washington Post, citing the Dutch study, said marijuana potency
should be as regulated as drugs and alcohol potency.
Ron Durbin, the attorney for Green the
Vote, the Oklahoma group who ran SQ #788, said the health board’s changes were
worse than the previous rules. “Lack of careful attention to detail
has created these problems. These regulations are worse than the old ones,” Durbin said. Durbin has asked Health Department interim
commissioner of the Health Department to hold off a week so the so-called ‘rule
conflicts’ are addressed. Durbin has
sued the state, claiming the health board commissioners violated Oklahoma’s
Open Meeting Act by having secret discussions in regard to how SQ #788 will be
implemented.
The real ‘lack of attention to detail’ was
those who ran SQ #788. By being vague in
their language, they granted the legislature and state government a great deal
of latitude in how medical marijuana will be grown, sold and used in
Oklahoma. Make no mistake Green the Vote
knew what they were doing. By cloaking #788
in a ‘medical marijuana’ package, they gained the support of many who suffer from
chronic pain or have family who do. When
you couple that with the opioid epidemic in Oklahoma among the elderly, it gave
medical marijuana justification in many voters mind.
On Thursday the Health Department posted
applications for licenses to grow, sell and use medical marijuana. No application can be submitted until August
25th. Licensees must be Oklahoma
residents and no more than 25% of their company equity can be held by
non-Oklahoma residents. Legal medical
marijuana sales reached nearly $10 billion last year in the U.S., so it is big
business and there is no doubt there will be no shortage of applicants to grow
process and distribute.
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