Showing posts with label testing labs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label testing labs. Show all posts

Maine’s Legislature Confronts the Unintended Consequences of Required Marijuana Testing, Before Those Consequences Even Happen

Thursday, January 23, 2020

The Maine Legislature’s Joint Standing Committee on Veterans and Legal Affairs will consider a host of marijuana-related bills next Monday, January 27. Check all five of them out here. The one I want to focus on is LD 1545, An Act Regarding the Testing of Adult Use Marijuana and Marijuana Products because this bill tries to address what has been a serious problem in most states launching adult use programs: a shortage of testing labs and resulting bottlenecks in those products.

For starters, LD 1545 seeks to amend language in Title 28-B, governing adult use marijuana in Maine, which currently requires ALL adult use marijuana or marijuana products to be tested by a licensed lab before sale. So what’s the problem with this? There’s serious and well-founded concerns that Maine simply won’t have enough testing labs at least for the launch of the program. This will lead to bottlenecks and significant delays in selling products to consumers. LD 1545 addresses this by permitting any product that has been held by a testing lab for five days without being tested to be sold anyway, with a disclaimer that the product hasn’t been tested.

This seems like a straightforward solution to an anticipated problem, but it seems worth looking briefly at the experience of other states with testing bottlenecks and lab shortages.

California’s lab shortages and bottlenecks circa 2018 were the stuff legends are made of. Now, if anything, California seems to have overcompensated in response and has 27 licensed labs (which isn’t that many, considering the state’s population), none of which report being at full capacity. These labs are facing business problems of their own, with many customers not paying timely or not paying at all. Some suggest that this is a symptom of the broader problem that California’s illicit marijuana market remains dominant and may even be getting stronger.

Closer to home, a shortage of testing labs has been a problem for Massachusetts. As is expected for Maine, Massachusetts started off with only two licensed testing labs. Labs were reporting demand for up to 4,000 tests per day, though, within a year of the adult use program’s launch, the state’s Cannabis Control Commission was reporting that, even with two labs, wait times were down to just a couple of days.

It’s hard to know exactly how Maine’s testing laws will affect the adult use market until that market has really taken off. Certainly, any serious impediments to selling product quickly will encourage return to the black market. I’m sure this will be part of the discussion in the VLA committee on Monday. See you there!

Lots of Different Rules Governing Maine’s Marijuana Programs Are Going to Become Official Soon – But When?

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

We are waiting on final and effective versions of several different sets of rules governing Maine’s marijuana programs. I’ll start with the Rules for the Certification of Marijuana Testing Facilities, since the public hearing for these rules was just yesterday. The hearing was sparsely attended and public comments were not particularly noteworthy. Readers probably know that the Emergency Rules for the Certification of Marijuana Testing Facilities already took effect in September. This is allowed during rulemaking under Maine’s administrative procedures act in certain situations, and so rulemaking continues anyway. Final written comments are due October 10. At that point, we can expect about a month until final testing rules are released since the Office of Marijuana Policy (OMP) will need to work with the Office of the Attorney General to sort through and incorporate any comments.

We are, of course, also still waiting with baited breath for the final adult use rules to be released. These will incorporate, at a minimum, the changes required by the legislature last June. The legislature required some fairly broad changes to the residency requirements in these draft rules, and we are waiting to see how OMP reacts and what the final rules look like accordingly. These adult use rules, the OMP has stated, will be released within the next 60 days.

Don’t forget that the rules governing Maine’s medical marijuana program are outdated. The current rules were enacted before the legislature significantly revised the program in 2018. So expect OMP to also tackle a rewrite of these rules sometime, perhaps this winter.

The Public Hearing on Proposed Adult Use Cannabis Rules Is Over, But the Public Comment Period Continues

Thursday, May 23, 2019

The public hearing on the proposed adult use cannabis rules took place this morning at the Holiday Inn in Portland. The room was packed with a pretty diverse group of industry folks – banks, towns, and marijuana establishments large and small were all well-represented today. Comments were limited to three minutes per person, and the hearing took barely more than two hours total. Some of the reoccurring issues throughout the morning included: 

  • Concerns that testing labs will be a serious bottleneck and drag on the adult use industry
  • A number of smaller operators are worried that the rules are too comprehensive and "onerous" and will drive the industry underground
  • Concerns that the rules will limit out-of-state investment and make it difficult to work with experts and consultants from other states
  • Questions about confidentiality provisions in the rules and the degree that applicant info will be publicly available

The panel of regulators from Department of Administrative and Financial Services (DAFS) and the Office of Marijuana Policy (OMP) seemed to be diligently taking notes this morning, and we’ll have to wait and see how amenable they are to changing the rules as a result of this process. It’s a safe bet that written comments (due June 2) will be more impactful than today’s three-minute spiels, but how impactful, we don’t know. The OMP says that they plan to provisionally adopt final rules and send those rules to the legislature for approval in June. If approved by the legislature, then the rules would likely be scheduled to take effect 90 days later.