The session was helpful, but also leaves questions dangling about whether or not small independent growers can be expected to get squashed by well financed dispensaries which can afford to rent big--excuse me-huge spaces (which they will have to be to grow enough to distribute to an estimated 100,000 patients statewide by year's end). Even with a 70/30 program, those dispensary ops will be big, unless they just start buying their grower's homes, heh.
As an experienced gardener, no kids or schedule , I'm in position to be part of this legitimately, really just having trouble finding a rental with an informed & "on board" landlord has been my only hangup in the cgiver dept. **Hint-looking for a place to rent in SW CO people, llord first patient on my cgiver list even better...
MJ has been a theraputic part of my life for over twenty years, and is a treasure to this world. Why is the Legislature so bent on making it so hard for independents, like me, to do something they love for a living? Oh, because I can't afford my own lobby group. Great. Let's hope for the best folks.
TheHighCountryM Reviewed by TheHighCountryM on . hb10-1284 set to be voted on tomorrow Tomorrow from 1:30 to 7pm the Colorado House will come together at the state capitol building in Denver to vote on HB10-1284. The bill creates the medical marijuana licensing authority in the department of revenue. Much of the language of the bill treats dispensaries as liquor stores or cabarets, a stance that patients and caregivers donā??t relish. The bill is forty-five pages long. Here are some of the highlights or lowlights depending on where you stand: ā?¢ A primary caregiver may Rating: 5