CTI is a trade lobby, like CMMR. Both groups are funded by the industry. To the extent that these groups are trying to protect consumers, they should be applauded, but all industry groups are ultimately self-serving, as they should be. However, the question of patient protection can't be reduced simply to pro and con 1284. Big parts of 1284 do protect patients: health inspection, prohibitions on felons, explicit medical privacy rules, scale certifications etc. Other parts of the bill, and the rules that followed, seem unreasonably onerous to business owners and without clear benefits to the consumers or the community. A few things in there are positively sinister. The goal of the ongoing debate (as I see it) is to find out which rules work, which rules don't, which provisions turned out to be unnecessary and which ones have unintended consequences on the industry, patients and the state. Even though I don't agree with Chippi's zero-regulation stance, I'm glad she's part of the process.
HighPopalorum Reviewed by HighPopalorum on . Wanda bitches about the rules she helped create Medical Marijuana Enforcement Division rules for moving MMJ extreme, says Wanda James - Denver News - The Latest Word ​It's a crazy time for Wanda James, co-owner of Simply Pure Products, a medicated edibles company. Not only is she in the midst of introducing a bold new initiative -- Simply Home Cooking, for people who want to make their own edibles -- but she's readying for tomorrow, when Colorado's medical marijuana regulations officially go into effect. And she admits that many of them Rating: 5