Results 1 to 10 of 57
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07-05-2012, 03:30 PM #1OPSenior Member
Shortages
DOH is not doing the job tasked to them.
alfonso2002 Reviewed by alfonso2002 on . Shortages DOH is not doing the job tasked to them. Rating: 5
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07-06-2012, 10:47 PM #2Junior Member
Shortages
Time to grow own
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07-06-2012, 10:57 PM #3Junior Member
Shortages
Time to grow your own!!!!!
oops last post
need more non-profits
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07-07-2012, 02:55 AM #4Senior Member
Shortages
Originally Posted by alfonso2002
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07-07-2012, 04:01 AM #5OPSenior Member
Shortages
CFO whats your take on how to solve the problem. You say there are med.s down south? Have you asked yourself why. I live in the Albuquerque area and the producers that are producing quantity med.s run out the day that they release it.I think it is sold out before it is even released.I myself do not have to purchase much but I do like to try new strains.I do not know solid numbers on who is producing but I think some of the producers out there are wasting there license. Will be interesting what happens at licensing time.What is it this time around 20 or 30 ?
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07-08-2012, 06:15 AM #6Senior Member
Shortages
Originally Posted by alfonso2002
I would say there is medicine in Las Cruces because the producer knows what they are doing combined with the fact that there is a smaller number of patients in Dona Ana County than the rest of the state. Since they cannot deliver North, East or West of Las Cruces (basically) their medicine is available to fewer patients so it lasts a little longer. I think too that patients that purchased Desert Creeper and were dissatisfied are missing out by not giving them another shot. Some strains have limited availability and have sold out quickly. Others have been popular and are repeated on a regular basis. I receive the newsletters from some of the other producers and know they run out on a regular basis so one has to act fast when meds are released. With most of the producers in the Santa Fe/Albuquerque area and most of the patients there too, those producers have got to produce as much as they possibly can. No holding back or keeping their plant numbers down. They have to produce at full capacity.
I agree, some of the producers are wasting their license. Heard there have been some crop failures at a few. Regardless....all but 4 of the producers will be paying the $20,000 license renewal fees. The other 4 will be paying $30,000. That is a lot of money.....especially with crop failures! Curious to see what DOH does with that money. Hopefully hire more people. $500,000 should hire more than 7 people! next year, if there are still only 23 producers, they will all be at $30,000 license renewal fees. That is $690,000!!! DOH needs to reduce those fees. That is money off the backs of us patients. If the producers didn't have to worry about those sky-high fees, they could probably lower the prices.
Blessed Be!:hippy:
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07-08-2012, 12:48 PM #7Member
Shortages
So--what I'm getting is that after I get approved--I might not be able to purchace??--is this true??---all of the producers run out??
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07-08-2012, 05:59 PM #8OPSenior Member
Shortages
Originally Posted by pinkcar
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07-08-2012, 09:39 PM #9Member
Shortages
I live in Otero county--what choices will I have?--have delivered?
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07-08-2012, 11:43 PM #10OPSenior Member
Shortages
Originally Posted by pinkcar