As pot shops start to sprout in Florida, cities are struggling with how — or whether — to regulate the state’s new marijuana industry.
Last week, the state’s first medical-marijuana dispensary, operated by Trulieve, opened its doors to customers in Tallahassee.
Health officials gave the go-ahead to a second group, Surterra, to start distributing its cannabis products. Both marijuana operators have permission to deliver products statewide, and Surterra plans to open a dispensary in Tampa next month.
After competing for a handful of highly coveted “dispensing organization” licenses, pot operators now have to convince local officials to let them open retail storefronts where they can sell products to patients.
Several dispensing organization executives agree they’ve encountered “a mixed bag” when it comes to local regulations.
For now, the state’s six dispensing organizations are growing, processing and distributing marijuana and derivative products that are low in euphoria-inducing THC and high in CBD, as allowed under a 2014 law.
Doctors can order the treatment for patients with chronic muscle spasms, cancer or severe forms of epilepsy.
Soon, the dispensing organizations will be able to sell full-strength marijuana for terminally ill patients, something added to the 2014 law by legislators this year.
This year’s law in some ways helps set the stage for a medical marijuana proposal on the November ballot — similar to a measure that narrowly failed to pass in 2014 — that would vastly expand the number of patients eligible for the full-strength cannabis treatment.
State law bars counties or cities from restricting where marijuana can be grown or processed. But the law leaves it up to locals to decide how to regulate retail establishments where products are sold.
In the two years since Florida first legalized medical marijuana, more than two dozen cities have passed or considered ordinances regulating or banning the sales of cannabis products.
As Florida’s six medical marijuana operators start opening dispensaries throughout the state, more cities and counties are likely to consider similar regulations or outright prohibitions.
And even more communities might join in, if the November initiative passes.
Like state lawmakers, many local officials have expressed concerns about “a pot shop on every corner,” using marijuana sales in states like Colorado and California as examples of what they want to avoid.