News (Media Awareness Project) - US ME: Some Mainers Object To California Connection |
Title: | US ME: Some Mainers Object To California Connection |
Published On: | 2010-08-15 |
Source: | Kennebec Journal (Augusta, ME) |
Fetched On: | 2010-08-17 03:00:16 |
SOME MAINERS OBJECT TO CALIFORNIA CONNECTION
Maine has so far licensed six medical marijuana dispensaries.
Five of them have direct connections to California's cannabis
industry.
Some state officials are welcoming the experience and resources from
the West Coast. The new arrivals should help Maine's experiment with
dispensaries get off to a smooth start, they say.
Others, however, fear the California connections are a troubling way
to begin.
Most of the concerns focus on Northeast Patients Group, which was
granted the licenses to open dispensaries in or near Portland,
Augusta, Thomaston and Bangor. Northeast is an offshoot of Berkeley
Patients Group in Berkeley, Calif., one of the oldest and most
successful dispensaries in that state.
Rebecca DeKeuster, former general manager at Berkeley, and Tim Schick,
a Berkeley director and Maine native, first came east last winter to
provide advice to Maine officials writing the guidelines for the new
dispensary system.
The group did not play a role in organizing or financing last fall's
referendum campaign that opened the door to dispensaries in Maine,
according to state records and the leaders of that campaign.
DeKeuster moved to Augusta earlier this year and is leading the
start-up venture in Maine with the help of a new Maine-based board of
directors. Schick has helped launch the Maine operation but is
remaining at Berkeley.
DeKeuster moved to Augusta earlier this year and is leading the
start-up venture in Maine with the help of a new Maine-based board of
directors. Schick has helped launch the Maine operation but is
remaining at Berkeley.
The financial ties between Northeast and Berkeley are still taking
shape, representatives said.
Berkeley Patients Group provided a $300,000 line of credit to
Northeast, along with a promise to help secure additional loans,
according to filings with the state.
Northeast, meanwhile, will pay Berkeley a licensing fee for use of its
business model and operating policies and will pay Berkeley for
consulting services. Representatives of Berkeley and Northeast say the
dollar amount of those contracts has not been settled. The arrival of
operators from California, and the potential for medical marijuana
revenues to leave the state, is exactly what some Maine lawmakers
hoped to avoid, said state Sen. Stanley Gerzofsky,
D-Brunswick.
He and others pushed for a requirement that Maine dispensaries be run
by Maine residents, but the rule may now need to be tightened further
so that people can't simply move here to qualify, Gerzofsky said.
The law now says officers and board members have to live in Maine at
least 183 days a year, but there is no rule -- at least not yet --
about how long they have to be a Maine resident before they are
awarded a license.
"I think a Mainer can grow a tomato as good as a Californian,"
Gerzofsky said.
Wendy Chapkis, a University of Southern Maine sociology professor who
co-authored a book about California's medical marijuana movement, said
Berkeley Patients Group is one of the most professional dispensary
operators in California.
"On the other hand, I think it's a missed opportunity for Maine to
figure it out for Maine," she said.
Catherine Cobb, head of licensing for the Maine Department of Health
and Human Services, said the West Coast experience, and resources,
will help Maine.
"Regardless of where the investment is coming from, it's bringing
capital into the state to create jobs and revenues," she said.
DeKeuster, the chief executive of Northeast, said Maine will
ultimately be pleased with the care provided to patients and the
benefits provided to the state economy. She said Northeast needs some
help from Berkeley but will hire local contractors, too.
For instance, Northeast plans to use Berkeley's human resource
policies and employee handbooks, DeKeuster said. Berkeley also has
helped with some initial marketing and the Northeast group's website.
"A year from now, many of those concerns will have been alleviated,"
she said. "This is a Maine program for Maine patients."
Another licensed dispensary, Remedy Compassion Center, also has
California roots, but has not generated the same kind of
controversy.
Tim and Jennifer Smale plan to open their dispensary in the Lewiston
and Auburn region. The couple also hopes to win a license for a York
County dispensary. The state reopened the application process there
after rejecting all six proposals filed in the first application round.
Jennifer Smale is a Yarmouth native and the couple has owned a home in
Vienna for years.
Before moving back east earlier this year to seek a dispensary
license, Tim Smale was general manager of CannBe, an Oakland,
Calif.-based start-up consultant to medical marijuana dispensaries.
Jennifer Smale helped run the company.
CannBe is a business arm of Harborside Treatment Center, an upscale
and fast-growing dispensary in Oakland that is serving as Smale's
primary business model for the Maine venture.
Smale, who has not hired CannBe to help him, said Maine is off to a
good start because it is being careful to choose good, experienced
dispensary operators.
"(Maine's) application process was, I think very stringent, and
brought the professional level very high," he said.
Maine has so far licensed six medical marijuana dispensaries.
Five of them have direct connections to California's cannabis
industry.
Some state officials are welcoming the experience and resources from
the West Coast. The new arrivals should help Maine's experiment with
dispensaries get off to a smooth start, they say.
Others, however, fear the California connections are a troubling way
to begin.
Most of the concerns focus on Northeast Patients Group, which was
granted the licenses to open dispensaries in or near Portland,
Augusta, Thomaston and Bangor. Northeast is an offshoot of Berkeley
Patients Group in Berkeley, Calif., one of the oldest and most
successful dispensaries in that state.
Rebecca DeKeuster, former general manager at Berkeley, and Tim Schick,
a Berkeley director and Maine native, first came east last winter to
provide advice to Maine officials writing the guidelines for the new
dispensary system.
The group did not play a role in organizing or financing last fall's
referendum campaign that opened the door to dispensaries in Maine,
according to state records and the leaders of that campaign.
DeKeuster moved to Augusta earlier this year and is leading the
start-up venture in Maine with the help of a new Maine-based board of
directors. Schick has helped launch the Maine operation but is
remaining at Berkeley.
DeKeuster moved to Augusta earlier this year and is leading the
start-up venture in Maine with the help of a new Maine-based board of
directors. Schick has helped launch the Maine operation but is
remaining at Berkeley.
The financial ties between Northeast and Berkeley are still taking
shape, representatives said.
Berkeley Patients Group provided a $300,000 line of credit to
Northeast, along with a promise to help secure additional loans,
according to filings with the state.
Northeast, meanwhile, will pay Berkeley a licensing fee for use of its
business model and operating policies and will pay Berkeley for
consulting services. Representatives of Berkeley and Northeast say the
dollar amount of those contracts has not been settled. The arrival of
operators from California, and the potential for medical marijuana
revenues to leave the state, is exactly what some Maine lawmakers
hoped to avoid, said state Sen. Stanley Gerzofsky,
D-Brunswick.
He and others pushed for a requirement that Maine dispensaries be run
by Maine residents, but the rule may now need to be tightened further
so that people can't simply move here to qualify, Gerzofsky said.
The law now says officers and board members have to live in Maine at
least 183 days a year, but there is no rule -- at least not yet --
about how long they have to be a Maine resident before they are
awarded a license.
"I think a Mainer can grow a tomato as good as a Californian,"
Gerzofsky said.
Wendy Chapkis, a University of Southern Maine sociology professor who
co-authored a book about California's medical marijuana movement, said
Berkeley Patients Group is one of the most professional dispensary
operators in California.
"On the other hand, I think it's a missed opportunity for Maine to
figure it out for Maine," she said.
Catherine Cobb, head of licensing for the Maine Department of Health
and Human Services, said the West Coast experience, and resources,
will help Maine.
"Regardless of where the investment is coming from, it's bringing
capital into the state to create jobs and revenues," she said.
DeKeuster, the chief executive of Northeast, said Maine will
ultimately be pleased with the care provided to patients and the
benefits provided to the state economy. She said Northeast needs some
help from Berkeley but will hire local contractors, too.
For instance, Northeast plans to use Berkeley's human resource
policies and employee handbooks, DeKeuster said. Berkeley also has
helped with some initial marketing and the Northeast group's website.
"A year from now, many of those concerns will have been alleviated,"
she said. "This is a Maine program for Maine patients."
Another licensed dispensary, Remedy Compassion Center, also has
California roots, but has not generated the same kind of
controversy.
Tim and Jennifer Smale plan to open their dispensary in the Lewiston
and Auburn region. The couple also hopes to win a license for a York
County dispensary. The state reopened the application process there
after rejecting all six proposals filed in the first application round.
Jennifer Smale is a Yarmouth native and the couple has owned a home in
Vienna for years.
Before moving back east earlier this year to seek a dispensary
license, Tim Smale was general manager of CannBe, an Oakland,
Calif.-based start-up consultant to medical marijuana dispensaries.
Jennifer Smale helped run the company.
CannBe is a business arm of Harborside Treatment Center, an upscale
and fast-growing dispensary in Oakland that is serving as Smale's
primary business model for the Maine venture.
Smale, who has not hired CannBe to help him, said Maine is off to a
good start because it is being careful to choose good, experienced
dispensary operators.
"(Maine's) application process was, I think very stringent, and
brought the professional level very high," he said.
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