Medical marijuana compromise bill, intended as Proposition 2 replacement, updated for a 2nd time

Medical marijuana compromise bill, intended as Proposition 2 replacement, updated for a 2nd time

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SALT LAKE CITY — The compromise medical marijuana bill intended to supersede Proposition 2 early next month was updated for a second time Wednesday.

The bill now permits the state to license up to seven medical marijuana pharmacies, rather than five as previously proposed in the compromise. It also increases the number of such licenses which may be granted in the event that a state-run central fill pharmacy is not operational by Jan. 1, 2021, upping that number to 10.

The bill now also removes a restriction on landlords prohibiting them from refusing to rent to a person solely because they have a medical cannabis card, or penalizing them in some other way on that basis.

The updated measure requires any patient under 21 years old to get secondary approval, beyond that of their doctor, from a state-appointed panel made up of medical professionals called the Compassionate Use Board. In Proposition 2, that board is made up of five medical providers, but the new version of the compromise expands that to seven and requires that two members be pediatricians.

The latest version of the compromise bill decreases the number of allowed state-issued cannabis growing facility licenses, from 15 to 10, though it allows for an additional five such facilities at the discretion of the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food.

The measure limits marijuana growing facilities to 100,000 square feet for those that are indoors, and 4 acres for those that are outdoors, though growers may apply each year to increase their size limit by up to 20 percent.

For the full story, visit DeseretNews.com

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