there is no need to lock in certain entities as the only legal suppliers. It's anti-competitive, keeps prices high, and supply limited. This serves no purpose other than to protect select dispensaries, and it has no business being in this bill.

the best thing our legislators could do, for the sake of their careers, is to just let the bill die.

If supply is further limited, there will be a crisis in a year if not sooner. With the resources we have now, all put together, without regulation, we are still in a shortage and the cost is prohibitive for patients that need larger quantities for extreme conditions.
copobo Reviewed by copobo 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