Medi-Pot For Anxiety, Insomnia? Hawaii Lawmakers Looking At More Changes
It took 15 years to evolve from legalizing medical marijuana to allowing dispensaries, but additional聽changes could come much quicker.
It鈥檚 only been three months since Gov. David Ige signed a bill legalizing medical marijuana dispensaries in Hawaii, but lawmakers are already drafting new legislation to amend聽.
Potential amendments range from eliminating the ban against interisland transport of medical cannabis to adding new qualifying ailments such as anxiety and insomnia.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been identifying areas where there might not be as much clarity,鈥 said Rep. Della Au Belatti, who chairs the House Health Committee and was one of the main authors of the law.
Under Act 241, licenses to grow and sell medical marijuana can be issued starting in April and dispensaries can open in July.
Medical marijuana was legalized in Hawaii 15 years ago, but the law required patients to grow their own plants or rely on a certified caregiver. The dispensary law approved this year will allow up to eight companies to open two dispensaries each in July 2016.
Inter-Island Transportation
Belatti said that she’s been re-evaluating a prohibition against transporting medical cannabis between islands and may consider proposing an amendment to allow companies聽to send聽small amounts of marijuana between islands for lab testing.
She called the current ban a聽鈥減olitical compromise鈥 with law enforcement officials who opposed聽legalizing dispensaries at all. The state attorney general that allowing inter-island transport of marijuana would violate a federal law banning “possession on board vessels.”
Lawmakers approved the ban knowing that it would limit dispensary access for patients on Molokai and Lanai, who would have to continue cultivating their own marijuana.
Sen. Will Espero is considering advocating to add anxiety, insomnia, arthritis and stress as qualifying conditions for receiving medical marijuana.
But during a legislative hearing last week, attorney Mitzi Vaughn from the brought up another potential complication when she testified that it might be difficult to find a lab that would test medical cannabis solely for the two dispensaries located on Kauai.
She also suggested that the inability to send cannabis to other islands for testing may drive up the cost of the product on Kauai and urged lawmakers to consider what they鈥檙e doing 鈥渢o make the access to cannabis meaningful for the patients.鈥
Vaughn noted that Portland International Airport on in-state flights. The recreational use of聽marijuana became 聽earlier this year.
Belatti is also considering changing an aspect of the law that bans the transport of marijuana 鈥渢o, from, or within鈥 federal property. That could be interpreted to mean that marijuana can鈥檛 be transported on federal highways or on roads that travel through military-owned land. H1, H2 and H3 are all federally funded highways.
Expanding the Program
While Belatti said she鈥檚 not proposing any major overhauls to Act 241, Sen. Will Espero is more ambitious.
He wants to revisit the structure of the medical marijuana industry. In the midst of heated negotiations last session, lawmakers decided to issue licenses that allow the same businesses to both grow and sell medi-pot. Espero wants to raise the possibility of distributing separate licenses for growing and selling.
The senator is drafting legislation to create a medical marijuana commission 鈥 an oversight board made up of stakeholders. He said he鈥檚 still considering the possible commission鈥檚 duties and responsibilities but added, 鈥淭his could be one forum or area where people could go if they have issues or complaints or suggestions.鈥
Espero thinks it might make sense to allow patient-to-patient sales on neighbor islands that have fewer or no dispensaries to ensure that patients have a steady supply of cannabis if they have problems cultivating their own plants or the existing dispensaries aren’t producing enough supply.
The senator is also considering advocating to add anxiety, insomnia, arthritis and stress as qualifying conditions for receiving medical marijuana. According to the national advocacy group , only California and New Mexico consider some types of arthritis a qualifying condition for medical cannabis, and no states have approved it for anxiety, insomnia or stress.
Other measures that Espero may introduce would allow adjacent grow sites (currently producers must have two separated sites), dispensaries to sell medical cannabis on Sundays (that is against the law in the current legislation) and producers to grow marijuana in facilities with removable roofs (right now, cannabis must be grown in indoor facilities).
Despite his multitude of ideas, Espero said, 鈥渨e don’t want to get overloaded with amendments … I’m weighing which ones do we really want to go after, which ones we don’t.鈥
Because next year is the second half of Hawaii’s biennial legislative session, bills to decriminalize or legalize marijuana are still viable.聽Espero said the former is more likely than the latter, but both proposals have traditionally died in the House.
Rep. Richard Creagan said that since 2016 is an election year, it will be more difficult to pass any sweeping changes. The physician from the Big Island was a freshman legislator this year and introduced several medical marijuana bills that didn鈥檛 go anywhere.
Still, he is planning on re-introducing bills that would allow patients to cultivate more plants and permit doctors to prescribe cannabis for any ailment.
He also wants to make it illegal for companies to discriminate against employees who use medical cannabis. Lawmakers passed an anti-discrimination bill this year, but left out employee protections.
To Creagan, the newly approved dispensary system is a good step, but it鈥檚 too restrictive and cumbersome and may drive the cost of legal marijuana too high.
鈥淭he bill hasn’t already come into effect and we’re already realizing that it’s inadequate,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he way it’s set up right now it’s going to perpetuate the black market.鈥
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Anita Hofschneider is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at anita@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .