A year out from legal Medical Marijuana, legislature makes final updates

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A year out from legal Medical Marijuana, legislature makes final updates

Kentucky is a year closer to legalized medical marijuana, and the state legislature is making its final preparations.

In 2023, the General Assembly voted to legalize medical cannabis. However, the legislature pushed the start date to Jan. 1, 2025, to give the Cabinet for Health and Family Services time to develop the necessary regulations.

This year, Rep. Jason Nemes, R-Middletown, filed House Bill 829 to update the bill before it takes effect next year.

After earning a favorable Senate State & Local Government committee vote Friday, the Senate passed HB829 26-12 early Monday afternoon.

Most of the votes aligned with last year’s medical cannabis vote, but Sen. Mike Wilson, R-Bowling Green flipped from a no to a yes, while Sen. Lindsey Tichenor, R-Smithfield, switched from yes to no.

How will legalized medical marijuana work?

In 2025, eligible Kentuckians can become medical cannabis cardholders.

They must have one of the following qualifying conditions:

  • any type or form of cancer regardless of stage;
  • chronic, severe, intractable or debilitating pain;
  • epilepsy or any other intractable seizure disorder;
  • multiple sclerosis, muscle spasms or spasticity;
  • chronic nausea or cyclical vomiting syndrome that has proven resistant to other conventional medical treatments;
  • post-traumatic stress disorder; or
  • any other medical condition for which Kentucky Center for Cannabis determines medical cannabis has evidence-backed medical, therapeutic or palliative benefits.

In January, the Team Kentucky Medical Cannabis Workgroup and the Board of Physicians and Advisors sent a letter to the legislature asking for 14 additional qualifying conditions, including ALS, Parkinson’s disease, severe arthritis, muscular dystrophy, HIV/AIDS and terminal illness.

None were added.

Prospective cardholders must be seen by a physician, who will look into their medical records, current medications and potential risks and side effects. They will also be subject to a criminal background check to determine whether they were previously convicted of a felony offense disqualifying them from receiving medical cannabis.

Nemes said it should take about 30 to 45 days for eligible Kentuckians to receive their cards, and potentially quicker for end-of-life situations.

Cardholders can then get cannabis from the state’s dispensaries. However, they cannot smoke or vape the product, and cannot use cannabis in public. If they do so, cardholders would face potential prosecution and revocation of their card. The product would be ingested via edibles, oils and tinctures, which are concentrated herbal extracts.

“You cannot smoke in this,” Nemes said. “This is not a wink wink, nod nod move to recreational. This is to help people who need to be helped. If you’re smoking, you won’t only lose your card, you should go to jail. It is still a felony in Kentucky to do that.”

One budget item could complicate medical cannabis’ launch. The budget appropriates $15.3 million to the Office of Medical Cannabis, only if the Board of Physicians and Advisors finds there is a “propensity of peer-reviewed, published research with sufficient evidence as to the efficacy of medical cannabis for the persistent reduction of symptoms of diseases and conditions.”

Gov. Andy Beshear line-item vetoed this provision, but his veto was overridden.

Under HB829, dispensaries can start growing hemp in July, six months before they can legally sell it. However, localities also have that time to opt out of legal medical cannabis.

Localities can call for a local election, similar to a wet/dry vote, in which voters decide whether to allow dispensaries to operate. Or they can pass an ordinance banning cannabis businesses in their jurisdiction.

If the ban occurs through an ordinance, 10% of registered voters can sign a petition calling for an election to overturn the ordinance.

If localities wait until after Jan. 1, 2025, to ban dispensaries, businesses that have already gotten their licenses would be grandfathered in.

“Everyone should know, if you get licensed and get set up before this time, you’re taking a bit of a risk,” said Sen. Stephen West, R-Paris. “But it does allow these businesses and the growers especially to get up and running, start growing product, so there’s actually something there to sell Jan. 1.”

Kentucky hemp businesses already in good standing with the Department of Agriculture have “front of the line” status for licensing.

Schools can also opt out and refuse to administer medical cannabis on their premises. If schools opt in, they must create a process to determine who administers the medication – a nurse or parent – and ensure it occurs out of view of other students.

HB829 passed committee in an 8-1 vote. Senate Majority Leader Damon Thayer was a “reluctant yes” after saying he did “everything (he) could to try to kill this bill.”

He said he appreciated the choice to not add any more qualifying conditions.

“I think that would have gone against the legislative intent of the deal we cut last year that convinced recalcitrant members like me to vote for the bill,” Thayer said.

Nemes said he doesn’t want to expand conditions before the program is operating, and even then, only if necessary.

On his way out, Thayer warned against expanding cannabis access.

“I hope that future general assemblies will resist the temptation to consider adding smoking on medical cannabis, and especially hope that the temptation to pass recreational marijuana is avoided here in Kentucky,” he said. “Just because other states are doing it and getting lots of tax revenue from it, it’s a high price to pay.”

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Region: Kentucky

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