Quote Originally Posted by justpics
Pharmacies are not operating under the medical marijuana law, because the product they deal with is not schedule 1.


If you are talking about medical marijuana dispensaries in WA, they operate by having their designated providers only provide to 1 patient at any one time.

For example;

Patient A signs provider agreement covering 12:06-12:15

Patient B sign provider agreement covering 12:16-12:25

ad infinitum.
Its also valid if a group of people get together and designate the next person to join as their provider. That gives the group the ability to serve each other. Just like a chain, the one before is the provider for the one who follows. That makes it a collective or co-op that sets its own rules of operation with a valid Sec of State Corporate Certificate. :thumbsup:
gypski Reviewed by gypski on . How are Phamacies legal? Seems to me that wording from another thread shows pharmacies aren't legal... "Law Enforcement loves to perpetuate the myth that providing for a price is not authorized in RCW69.51A, however, if you actually read the law, the only restrictions on designated providers are that they, not use the medicine they are providing to their patient, be at least 18 years of age, be designated in writing by the patient, and not service more than 1 patient at the same time." Since a pharmacy is acting as Rating: 5