Washington: Medical Marijuana Providers Want 'Good Guy' Status

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
In the medical marijuana business, Seattle has determined that there are good guys and bad guys.

Seattle and King County recently sent letters to all medical marijuana businesses, warning them they need to close. Seattle sent two kinds of letters: one to “good guys” who have a good shot at getting a state license, and another to “bad guys” who probably won’t.

King County took a harder line, telling all the dispensaries in unincorporated areas to close.

Transcript:

Chris Cody runs a medical dispensary called Herban Legends in White Center. It’s just outside Seattle. Which could have big consequences for him.

Reporter: “How far are we from the city line?”

Cody: “Like half a block.”

Cody opened in 2011 and that’s crucial – authorities are mostly cracking down on businesses that opened more recently.

He’s paid his taxes and belongs to his local chamber of commerce. He fits the criteria established this year by the legislature for medical businesses that should get new state licenses to sell marijuana. If he were in Seattle, Cody would likely be considered a “good guy.” Seattle is allowing these businesses to remain open until they can seek state licenses later this year.

But King County is taking a tougher stance against medical marijuana storefronts, whatever their history.

Cody: “I was not expecting it, to get a letter. Because we do have a path.”

The county recently sent letters to fifteen dispensaries, threatening them with forfeiture and prosecution if they don’t close, whether or not they plan to seek a state license. Several of the dispensaries including Cody’s had formed something of a cluster in White Center.

Cody: “I don’t think they’re trying to be unfair. You know, I was the first one to open in this neighborhood and then afterwards a lot of other folks moved in because landlords have a hard time renting down here in White Center, and it became something of social negative. I’ve always worked hard to make it a social positive.”

The letters are the latest step in Washington’s attempt to eliminate the gray market of medical marijuana, which has been competing with state-licensed recreational stores. The Liquor and Cannabis Board hasn’t said how many medical providers it will license, but Cody is hoping to be among them. He says the language of seizure and prosecution gives him pause, but he’s staying open for now.

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Full Article: Seattle Medical Marijuana Providers Want 'Good Guy' Status | KUOW News and Information
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More growing pains as the state pushes the consolidation of the med and rec markets.
At first the state said ALL dispensaries would get a chance to convert...than it was a chance to apply to convert, and now they'll let the local city/county do what they want, before the application process (extraordinarily slow, even for the LCB) gets done.
They have set an impossible high bar for those following the rules, while those that have and continue to bend the rules will have income to wait out the process.
Once again the state is punishing the small honest businesses that lead the industry for years, while advantaging the new big money suppliers, and does little to quash the black market.
 
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