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art.015/2/015/1 | ||
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1 | ARTICLE 15 AS AMENDED | |
2 | RELATING TO MARIJUANA | |
3 | SECTION 1. Sections 2-26-1, 2-26-3, 2-26-4, 2-26-5, 2-26-6 and 2-26-7 of the General | |
4 | Laws in Chapter 2-26 entitled "Hemp Growth Act" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
5 | 2-26-1. Short title. | |
6 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Industrial Hemp Growth Act." | |
7 | 2-26-3. Definitions. | |
8 | When used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: | |
9 | (1) "Applicant" means any person, firm, corporation, or other legal entity who or that, on | |
10 | his, her, or its own behalf, or on behalf of another, has applied for permission to engage in any act | |
11 | or activity that is regulated under the provisions of this chapter. | |
12 | (2) "Cannabis" means all parts of the plant of the genus marijuana, also known as marijuana | |
13 | sativa L. whether growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; | |
14 | and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds, | |
15 | or resin regardless of cannabinoid content or cannabinoid potency including "marijuana" and | |
16 | "industrial hemp" or "industrial hemp products" which satisfy the requirements of this chapter. | |
17 | (3) "Cannabidiol" or "CBD" means cannabidiol (CBD) derived from a hemp plant as | |
18 | defined in § 2-26-3, not including products derived from exempt cannabis plant material as defined | |
19 | in 21 C.F.R. § 1308.35. | |
20 | (2)(4)"Department" means the office of cannabis regulation within the department of | |
21 | business regulation. | |
22 | (3)(5) "Division" means the division of agriculture in the department of environmental | |
23 | management. | |
24 | (4)(6) "Grower" means a person or entity who or that produces hemp for commercial | |
25 | purposes. | |
26 | (5)(7) "Handler" means a person or entity who or that produces or processes hemp or | |
27 | agricultural hemp seed for processing into commodities or who manufactures hemp, products, or | |
28 | agricultural hemp seed. | |
29 | (6)(8) "Hemp" or "industrial hemp" means the plant of the genus cannabis and any part of | |
30 | such plant, whether growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration that does not | |
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1 | exceed three-tenths percent (0.3%) on a dry-weight basis of any part of the plant cannabis, or per | |
2 | volume or weight of marijuana product or the combined percent of delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol | |
3 | and tetrahydrocannabinolic acid in any part of the plant cannabis regardless of the moisture content. | |
4 | Hemp is also commonly referred to in this context as "industrial hemp." the plant Cannabis sativa | |
5 | L. and any part of that plant, including the seeds thereof and all derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids, | |
6 | isomers, acids, salts, and salts of isomers, whether growing or not, with a delta-9 | |
7 | tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of not more than three-tenths percent (0.3%) on a dry weight | |
8 | or per volume basis regardless of moisture content, and which satisfies the requirements of this | |
9 | chapter. | |
10 | (9) "Hemp-derived consumable CBD product" means any product meant for ingestion, | |
11 | including, but not limited to, concentrates, extracts, and cannabis-infused foods and products, | |
12 | which contains cannabidiol derived from a hemp plant as defined in § 2-26-3, which shall only be | |
13 | sold to persons age twenty-one (21) or older, and which shall not include products derived from | |
14 | exempt cannabis plant material as defined in 21 C.F.R. § 1308.35. | |
15 | (7)(10) "Hemp products" or "industrial hemp products" means all products made from the | |
16 | plants, including, but not limited to, concentrated oil, cloth, cordage, fiber, food, fuel, hemp-derived | |
17 | consumable CBD products, paint, paper, construction materials, plastics, seed, seed meal, seed oil, | |
18 | and seed certified for cultivation, which satisfy the requirements of this chapter. | |
19 | (11) "Licensed CBD distributor" means a person licensed to distribute hemp-derived | |
20 | consumable CBD products pursuant to this chapter. | |
21 | (12) "Licensed CBD retailer" means a person licensed to sell hemp-derived consumable | |
22 | CBD products pursuant to this chapter. | |
23 | (8)(13) "THC" means tetrahydrocannabinol, the principal psychoactive constituent of | |
24 | cannabis. | |
25 | (9)(14) "THCA" means tetrahydrocannabinol acid. | |
26 | 2-26-4. Hemp an agricultural product. | |
27 | Hemp is an agricultural product that may be grown as a crop, produced, possessed, | |
28 | distributed, sold at retail, and commercially traded pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. Hemp | |
29 | is subject to primary regulation by the department. The division may assist the department in the | |
30 | regulation of hemp growth and production. | |
31 | 2-26-5. Authority over licensing and sales. | |
32 | (a) The department shall promulgate prescribe rules and regulations for the licensing and | |
33 | regulation of hemp growers, and handlers, licensed CBD distributors, and licensed CBD retailers | |
34 | and or persons otherwise employed by the applicant not inconsistent with law, to carry into effect | |
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1 | the provision of this chapter and shall be responsible for the enforcement of such licensing and | |
2 | regulation. | |
3 | (b) All growers, and handlers, and licensed CBD distributors, and licensed CBD retailers | |
4 | must have a hemp license issued by the department. All production, distribution and retail sale of | |
5 | hemp-derived consumable CBD products must be consistent with any applicable state or local food | |
6 | processing and safety regulations, and the applicant shall be responsible to ensure its compliance | |
7 | with such regulations and any applicable food safety licensing requirements including but not | |
8 | limited to those promulgated by the department of health. | |
9 | (c) The application for a hemp license shall include, but not be limited to, the following: | |
10 | (1)(i) The name and address of the applicant who will supervise, manage, or direct the | |
11 | growing and handling of hemp and the names and addresses of any person or entity partnering or | |
12 | providing consulting services regarding the growing or handling of hemp.; and | |
13 | (ii) The name and address of the applicant who will supervise, manage, or direct the | |
14 | distribution or sale of hemp-derived consumable CBD products, and names and addresses of any | |
15 | person or entity partnering or providing consulting services regarding the distribution or sale of | |
16 | hemp-derived CBD products. | |
17 | (2) A certificate of analysis that the seeds or plants obtained for cultivation are of a type | |
18 | and variety that do not exceed the maximum concentration of delta-9 THC, as set forth in § 2-26- | |
19 | 3; any seeds that are obtained from a federal agency are presumed not to exceed the maximum | |
20 | concentration and do not require a certificate of analysis. | |
21 | (3)(i) The location of the facility, including the Global Positioning System location, and | |
22 | other field reference information as may be required by the department with a tracking program | |
23 | and security layout to ensure that all hemp grown is tracked and monitored from seed to distribution | |
24 | outlets.; and | |
25 | (ii) The location of the facility and other information as may be required by the department | |
26 | as to where the distribution or sale of hemp-derived consumable CBD products will occur. | |
27 | (4) An explanation of the seed to sale tracking, cultivation method, extraction method, and | |
28 | certificate of analysis or certificate of analysis for the standard hemp seeds or hemp product if | |
29 | required by the department. | |
30 | (5) Verification, prior to planting any seed, that the plant to be grown is of a type and | |
31 | variety of hemp that will produce a delta-9 THC concentration of no more than three-tenths of one | |
32 | percent (0.3%) on a dry-weight basis. | |
33 | (6) Documentation that the licensee and/or its agents have entered into a purchase | |
34 | agreement with a hemp handler, or processor, distributor or retailer. | |
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1 | (7) All applicants: | |
2 | (i) Shall apply to the state police, attorney general, or local law enforcement for a National | |
3 | Criminal Identification records check that shall include fingerprints submitted to the Federal | |
4 | Bureau of Investigation. Upon the discovery of a disqualifying conviction defined in paragraph (iv) | |
5 | and (v), and in accordance with the rules promulgated by the department, the state police shall | |
6 | inform the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the conviction, and the state police shall notify the | |
7 | department, in writing, without disclosing the nature of the conviction, that a conviction has been | |
8 | found; | |
9 | (ii) In those situations in which no conviction has been found, the state police shall inform | |
10 | the applicant and the department, in writing, of this fact; | |
11 | (iii) All applicants shall be responsible for any expense associated with the criminal | |
12 | background check with fingerprints. | |
13 | (iv) Any applicant who has been convicted of any felony offense under chapter 28 of title | |
14 | 21, or any person who has been convicted of murder, manslaughter, first-degree sexual assault, | |
15 | second-degree sexual assault, first-degree child molestation, second-degree child molestation, | |
16 | kidnapping, first-degree arson, second-degree arson, mayhem, robbery, burglary, breaking and | |
17 | entering, assault with a dangerous weapon, or any assault and battery punishable as a felony or | |
18 | assault with intent to commit any offense punishable as a felony, shall be disqualified from holding | |
19 | any license or permit under this chapter. The department shall notify any applicant, in writing, of | |
20 | for a denial of a license pursuant to this subsection. | |
21 | (v) For purposes of this section, "conviction" means, in addition to judgments of conviction | |
22 | entered by a court subsequent to a finding of guilty, or plea of guilty, those instances where the | |
23 | defendant has entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a jail sentence or a suspended jail | |
24 | sentence, or those instances wherein the defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement | |
25 | with the Rhode Island attorney general and the period of deferment has not been completed. | |
26 | (8) Any other information as set forth in rules and regulations as required by the | |
27 | department. | |
28 | (d) All employees of the applicant shall register with the Rhode Island state police. | |
29 | (e)(d) The department shall issue a hemp license to the grower or handler applicant if he, | |
30 | she, or it meets the requirements of this chapter, upon the applicant paying a licensure fee of two | |
31 | thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500). Said license shall be renewed every two (2) years upon | |
32 | payment of a two thousand five hundred dollar ($2,500) renewal fee. Any licensee convicted of | |
33 | any disqualifying offense described in subsection (c)(7)(iv) shall have his, her, or its license | |
34 | revoked. The department shall collect a nonrefundable application fee of two hundred fifty dollars | |
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1 | ($250) for each application to obtain a license. | |
2 | (e) Any grower or handler license applicant or license holder may also apply for, and be | |
3 | issued one (1) CBD distributor and/or one (1) CBD retailer license at no additional cost provided | |
4 | their grower or handler license is issued or renewed. CBD distributor and CBD retailer licenses | |
5 | shall be renewed each year at no additional fee provided the applicant also holds or renews a grower | |
6 | and/or handler license. | |
7 | (f) For applicants who do not hold, renew, or receive a grower or handler license, CBD | |
8 | distributor and CBD retailer licenses shall have a licensure fee of five hundred dollars ($500). Said | |
9 | licenses shall be renewed each year upon approval by the department and payment of a five hundred | |
10 | dollar ($500) renewal fee. | |
11 | 2-26-6. Rulemaking authority. | |
12 | (a) The department shall adopt rules to provide for the implementation of this chapter, | |
13 | which shall include rules to require hemp to be tested during growth for THC levels and to require | |
14 | inspection of hemp during sowing, growing season, harvest, storage, and processing. Included in | |
15 | these rules should be a system requiring the licensee to submit crop samples to an approved testing | |
16 | facility, as determined by the department, for testing and verification of compliance with the limits | |
17 | on delta-9 THC concentration. | |
18 | (b) The department shall prescribe rules and regulations for all operational requirements | |
19 | for licensed growers, handlers, CBD distributors and retailers, and to ensure consistency in | |
20 | manufactured products and appropriate packaging, labeling, and placement with respect to retail | |
21 | sales not inconsistent with law, to carry in effect the provisions of this chapter. | |
22 | (b)(c) The department shall not adopt under this or any other section, a rule that would | |
23 | prohibit a person or entity to grow, or distribute or sell hemp based solely on the legal status of | |
24 | hemp under federal law. | |
25 | (d) The department may adopt rules and regulations based on federal law provided those | |
26 | rules and regulations are designed to comply with federal guidance and mitigate federal | |
27 | enforcement against the licenses issued under this chapter. | |
28 | (e) All new and revised rules and regulations promulgated by the department of business | |
29 | regulation and/or the department of health pursuant to this chapter shall be subject to approval by | |
30 | the general assembly prior to enactment. | |
31 | 2-26-7. RegistrationLicensure. | |
32 | (a) Except as provided in this section, beginning sixty (60) days after the effective date of | |
33 | this chapter, the department shall accept the application for licensure to cultivate hemp submitted | |
34 | by the applicant. | |
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1 | (b) A person or entity registered with licensed by the department pursuant to this chapter | |
2 | shall allow hemp crops or hemp products, throughout sowing, year-long growing seasons, harvest | |
3 | storage, and processing, manufacturing, and retail facilities, to be inspected and tested by and at | |
4 | the discretion of the department and as required pursuant to any applicable state or local food | |
5 | processing and safety regulations including but not limited to those promulgated by the Rhode | |
6 | Island department of health. | |
7 | SECTION 2. Chapter 2-26 of the General Laws entitled "Hemp Growth Act" is hereby | |
8 | amended by adding thereto the following sections: | |
9 | 2-26-10. Enforcement of violations of chapter. | |
10 | (a)(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, if the director of the department | |
11 | or his or her designee has cause to believe that a violation of any provision of this chapter 26 of | |
12 | title 2 or any regulations promulgated hereunder has occurred by a licensee that is under the | |
13 | department's jurisdiction pursuant to this chapter, or that any person or entity is conducting any | |
14 | activities requiring licensure by the department under this chapter or the regulations promulgated | |
15 | hereunder without such licensure, the director or his or her designee may, in accordance with the | |
16 | requirements of the administrative procedures act, chapter 35 of title 42: | |
17 | (i) Revoke or suspend a license; | |
18 | (ii) Levy an administrative penalty in an amount established pursuant to regulations | |
19 | promulgated by the department; | |
20 | (iii) Order the violator to cease and desist such actions; | |
21 | (iv) Require a licensee or person or entity conducting any activities requiring licensure | |
22 | under chapter 26 of title 2 to take such actions as are necessary to comply with such chapter and | |
23 | the regulations promulgated thereunder; or | |
24 | (v) Any combination of the above penalties. | |
25 | (2) If the director of the department finds that public health, safety, or welfare requires | |
26 | emergency action, and incorporates a finding to that effect in his or her order, summary suspension | |
27 | of license and/or cease and desist may be ordered pending proceedings for revocation or other | |
28 | action. | |
29 | SECTION 3. Section 21-28-1.02 of Chapter 21-28 of the General Laws entitled "Uniform | |
30 | Controlled Substances Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
31 | 21-28-1.02. Definitions. [Effective until January 1, 2023.] | |
32 | Unless the context otherwise requires, the words and phrases as defined in this section are | |
33 | used in this chapter in the sense given them in the following definitions: | |
34 | (1) "Administer" refers to the direct application of controlled substances to the body of a | |
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1 | patient or research subject by: | |
2 | (i) A practitioner, or, in his or her presence by his or her authorized agent; or | |
3 | (ii) The patient or research subject at the direction and in the presence of the practitioner | |
4 | whether the application is by injection, inhalation, ingestion, or any other means. | |
5 | (2) "Agent" means an authorized person who acts on behalf of, or at the direction of, a | |
6 | manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor, or dispenser; except that these terms do not include a | |
7 | common or contract carrier or warehouse operator, when acting in the usual and lawful course of | |
8 | the carrier's or warehouse operator's business. | |
9 | (3) "Apothecary" means a registered pharmacist as defined by the laws of this state and, | |
10 | where the context requires, the owner of a licensed pharmacy or other place of business where | |
11 | controlled substances are compounded or dispensed by a registered pharmacist; and includes | |
12 | registered assistant pharmacists as defined by existing law, but nothing in this chapter shall be | |
13 | construed as conferring on a person who is not registered as a pharmacist any authority, right, or | |
14 | privilege that is not granted to him or her by the pharmacy laws of the state. | |
15 | (4) "Automated data processing system" means a system utilizing computer software and | |
16 | hardware for the purposes of record keeping. | |
17 | (5) "Certified law enforcement prescription drug diversion investigator" means a certified | |
18 | law enforcement officer assigned by his or her qualified law enforcement agency to investigate | |
19 | prescription drug diversion. | |
20 | (6) "Computer" means programmable electronic device capable of multi-functions, | |
21 | including, but not limited to: storage, retrieval, and processing of information. | |
22 | (7) "Control" means to add a drug or other substance or immediate precursor to a schedule | |
23 | under this chapter, whether by transfer from another schedule or otherwise. | |
24 | (8) "Controlled substance" means a drug, substance, immediate precursor, or synthetic drug | |
25 | in schedules I – V of this chapter. The term shall not include distilled spirits, wine, or malt | |
26 | beverages, as those terms are defined or used in chapter 1 of title 3, nor tobacco. | |
27 | (9) "Co-prescribing" means issuing a prescription for an opioid antagonist along with a | |
28 | prescription for an opioid analgesic. | |
29 | (10) "Counterfeit substance" means a controlled substance that, or the container or labeling | |
30 | of which, without authorization bears the trademark, trade name, or other identifying mark, imprint, | |
31 | number, or device, or any likeness of them, of a manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser, other than | |
32 | the person or persons who in fact manufactured, distributed, or dispensed the substance and that | |
33 | thereby falsely purports or is represented to be the product of, or to have been distributed by, the | |
34 | other manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser, or which substance is falsely purported to be or | |
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1 | represented to be one of the controlled substances by a manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser. | |
2 | (11) "CRT" means cathode ray tube used to impose visual information on a screen. | |
3 | (12) "Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive, or attempted transfer of a | |
4 | controlled substance or imitation controlled substance, whether or not there exists an agency | |
5 | relationship. | |
6 | (13) "Department" means the department of health of this state. | |
7 | (14) "Depressant or stimulant drug" means: | |
8 | (i) A drug that contains any quantity of: | |
9 | (A) Barbituric acid or derivatives, compounds, mixtures, or preparations of barbituric acid; | |
10 | and | |
11 | (B) "Barbiturate" or "barbiturates" includes all hypnotic and/or somnifacient drugs, | |
12 | whether or not derivatives of barbituric acid, except that this definition shall not include bromides | |
13 | and narcotics. | |
14 | (ii) A drug that contains any quantity of: | |
15 | (A) Amphetamine or any of its optical isomers; | |
16 | (B) Any salt of amphetamine and/or desoxyephedrine or any salt of an optical isomer of | |
17 | amphetamine and/or desoxyephedrine, or any compound, mixture, or preparation of them. | |
18 | (iii) A drug that contains any quantity of coca leaves. "Coca leaves" includes cocaine, or | |
19 | any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of coca leaves, except | |
20 | derivatives of coca leaves, that do not contain cocaine, ecgonine, or substance from which cocaine | |
21 | or ecgonine may be synthesized or made. | |
22 | (iv) Any other drug or substance that contains any quantity of a substance that the attorney | |
23 | general of the United States, or the director of health, after investigation, has found to have, or by | |
24 | regulation designates as having, a potential for abuse because of its depressant or stimulant effect | |
25 | on the central nervous system. | |
26 | (15) "Director" means the director of health. | |
27 | (16) "Dispense" means to deliver, distribute, leave with, give away, or dispose of a | |
28 | controlled substance to the ultimate user or human research subject by or pursuant to the lawful | |
29 | order of a practitioner, including the packaging, labeling, or compounding necessary to prepare the | |
30 | substance for that delivery. | |
31 | (17) "Dispenser" is a practitioner who delivers a controlled substance to the ultimate user | |
32 | or human research subject. | |
33 | (18) "Distribute" means to deliver (other than by administering or dispensing) a controlled | |
34 | substance or an imitation controlled substance and includes actual constructive, or attempted | |
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1 | transfer. "Distributor" means a person who so delivers a controlled substance or an imitation | |
2 | controlled substance. | |
3 | (19) "Downtime" means that period of time when a computer is not operable. | |
4 | (20) "Drug addicted person" means a person who exhibits a maladaptive pattern of | |
5 | behavior resulting from drug use, including one or more of the following: impaired control over | |
6 | drug use; compulsive use; and/or continued use despite harm, and craving. | |
7 | (21) "Drug Enforcement Administration" means the Drug Enforcement Administration | |
8 | United States Department of Justice or its successor. | |
9 | (22) "Federal law" means the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of | |
10 | 1970, (84 stat. 1236) (see generally 21 U.S.C. § 801 et seq.), and all regulations pertaining to that | |
11 | federal act. | |
12 | (23) "Hardware" means the fixed component parts of a computer. | |
13 | (24) "Hospital" means an institution as defined in chapter 17 of title 23. | |
14 | (25) "Imitation controlled substance" means a substance that is not a controlled substance, | |
15 | that by dosage unit, appearance (including color, shape, size, and markings), or by representations | |
16 | made, would lead a reasonable person to believe that the substance is a controlled substance and, | |
17 | which imitation controlled substances contain substances that if ingested, could be injurious to the | |
18 | health of a person. In those cases when the appearance of the dosage unit is not reasonably sufficient | |
19 | to establish that the substance is an "imitation controlled substance" (for example in the case of | |
20 | powder or liquid), the court or authority concerned should consider, in addition to all other logically | |
21 | relevant factors, the following factors as related to "representations made" in determining whether | |
22 | the substance is an "imitation controlled substance": | |
23 | (i) Statement made by an owner, possessor, transferor, recipient, or by anyone else in | |
24 | control of the substance concerning the nature of the substance, or its use or effect. | |
25 | (ii) Statements made by the owner, possessor, or transferor, to the recipient that the | |
26 | substance may be resold for substantial profit. | |
27 | (iii) Whether the substance is packaged in a manner reasonably similar to packaging of | |
28 | illicit controlled substances. | |
29 | (iv) Whether the distribution or attempted distribution included an exchange of or demand | |
30 | for money or other property as consideration, and whether the amount of the consideration was | |
31 | substantially greater than the reasonable value of the non-controlled substance. | |
32 | (26) "Immediate precursor" means a substance: | |
33 | (i) That the director of health has found to be and by regulation designated as being the | |
34 | principal compound used, or produced primarily for use, in the manufacture of a controlled | |
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1 | substance; | |
2 | (ii) That is an immediate chemical intermediary used or likely to be used in the manufacture | |
3 | of those controlled substances; and | |
4 | (iii) The control of which is necessary to prevent, curtail, or limit the manufacture of that | |
5 | controlled substance. | |
6 | (27) "Laboratory" means a laboratory approved by the department of health as proper to be | |
7 | entrusted with controlled substances and the use of controlled substances for scientific and medical | |
8 | purposes and for the purposes of instruction. | |
9 | (28) "Manufacture" means the production, preparation, propagation, cultivation, | |
10 | compounding, or processing of a drug or other substance, including an imitation controlled | |
11 | substance, either directly or indirectly or by extraction from substances of natural origin, or | |
12 | independently by means of chemical synthesis or by a combination of extraction and chemical | |
13 | synthesis and includes any packaging or repackaging of the substance or labeling or relabeling of | |
14 | its container in conformity with the general laws of this state except by a practitioner as an incident | |
15 | to his or her administration or dispensing of the drug or substance in the course of his or her | |
16 | professional practice. | |
17 | (29) "Manufacturer" means a person who manufactures but does not include an apothecary | |
18 | who compounds controlled substances to be sold or dispensed on prescriptions. | |
19 | (30) "Marijuana" means all parts of the plant cannabis sativa L., whether growing or not; | |
20 | the seeds of the plant; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every compound, | |
21 | manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds or resin, but shall not | |
22 | include the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil or cake made from the | |
23 | seeds of the plant, any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of | |
24 | mature stalks, (except the resin extracted from it), fiber, oil or cake, or the sterilized seed from the | |
25 | plant which is incapable of germination. Marijuana shall not include "industrial hemp" or | |
26 | "industrial hemp products" which satisfy the requirements of chapter 26 of title 2. | |
27 | (31) "Narcotic drug" means any of the following, whether produced directly or indirectly | |
28 | by extraction from substances of vegetable origin, or independently by means of chemical synthesis | |
29 | or by a combination of extraction and chemical synthesis: | |
30 | (i) Opium and opiates. | |
31 | (ii) A compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, or preparation of opium or opiates. | |
32 | (iii) A substance (and any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, or preparation of it) | |
33 | that is chemically identical with any of the substances referred to in paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this | |
34 | subdivision. | |
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1 | (iv) Any other substance that the attorney general of the United States, or his or her | |
2 | successor, or the director of health, after investigation, has found to have, and by regulation | |
3 | designates as having, a potential for abuse similar to opium and opiates. | |
4 | (32) "Official written order" means an order written on a form provided for that purpose | |
5 | by the Drug Enforcement Administration under any laws of the United States making provision for | |
6 | an official form, if order forms are authorized and required by federal law, and if no order form is | |
7 | provided then on an official form provided for that purpose by the director of health. | |
8 | (33) "Opiate" means any substance having an addiction-forming or addiction-sustaining | |
9 | liability similar to morphine or being capable of conversion into a drug having addiction-forming | |
10 | or addiction-sustaining liability. | |
11 | (34) "Opioid analgesics" means and includes, but is not limited to, the medicines | |
12 | buprenophine, butorphanol, codeine, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, levorphanol, meperidine, | |
13 | methadone, morphine, nalbuphine, oxycodone, oxymorphone, pentazocine, propoxyphene as well | |
14 | as their brand names, isomers, and combinations, or other medications approved by the department. | |
15 | (35) "Opioid antagonist" means naloxone hydrochloride and any other drug approved by | |
16 | the United States Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of opioid overdose. | |
17 | (36) "Opium poppy" means the plant of the species papaver somniferum L., except the | |
18 | seeds of the plant. | |
19 | (37) "Ounce" means an avoirdupois ounce as applied to solids and semi-solids, and a fluid | |
20 | ounce as applied to liquids. | |
21 | (38) "Person" means any corporation, association, partnership, or one or more individuals. | |
22 | (39) "Physical dependence" means a state of adaptation that is manifested by a drug class | |
23 | specific withdrawal syndrome that can be produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose reduction, | |
24 | decreasing blood level of the drug, and/or administration of an antagonist. | |
25 | (40) "Poppy straw" means all parts, except the seeds, of the opium poppy, after mowing. | |
26 | (41) "Practitioner" means: | |
27 | (i) A physician, osteopath, dentist, chiropodist, veterinarian, scientific investigator, or other | |
28 | person licensed, registered or permitted to distribute, dispense, conduct research with respect to or | |
29 | to administer a controlled substance in the course of professional practice or research in this state. | |
30 | (ii) A pharmacy, hospital, or other institution licensed, registered or permitted to distribute, | |
31 | dispense, conduct research with respect to, or to administer a controlled substance in the course of | |
32 | professional practice or research in this state. | |
33 | (42) "Printout" means a hard copy produced by computer that is readable without the aid | |
34 | of any special device. | |
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1 | (43) "Production" includes the manufacture, planting, cultivation, growing, or harvesting | |
2 | of a controlled substance. | |
3 | (44) "Qualified law enforcement agency" means the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, | |
4 | Drug Enforcement Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Office of Inspector General of | |
5 | the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, or the Medicaid Fraud and Patient Abuse Unit | |
6 | in the Office of the Attorney General. | |
7 | (45) "Researcher" means a person authorized by the director of health to conduct a | |
8 | laboratory as defined in this chapter. | |
9 | (46) "Sell" includes sale, barter, gift, transfer, or delivery in any manner to another, or to | |
10 | offer or agree to do the same. | |
11 | (47) "Software" means programs, procedures and storage of required information data. | |
12 | (48) "Synthetic drugs" means any synthetic cannabinoids or piperazines or any synthetic | |
13 | cathinones as provided for in schedule I. | |
14 | (49) "Ultimate user" means a person who lawfully possesses a controlled substance for his | |
15 | or her own use or for the use of a member of his or her household, or for administering to an animal | |
16 | owned by him or her or by a member of his or her household. | |
17 | (50) "Wholesaler" means a person who sells, vends, or distributes at wholesale, or as a | |
18 | jobber, broker agent, or distributor, or for resale in any manner in this state any controlled | |
19 | substance. | |
20 | 21-28-1.02. Definitions. [Effective January 1, 2023.] | |
21 | Unless the context otherwise requires, the words and phrases as defined in this section are | |
22 | used in this chapter in the sense given them in the following definitions: | |
23 | (1) "Administer" refers to the direct application of controlled substances to the body of a | |
24 | patient or research subject by: | |
25 | (i) A practitioner, or, in his or her presence by his or her authorized agent; or | |
26 | (ii) The patient or research subject at the direction and in the presence of the practitioner | |
27 | whether the application is by injection, inhalation, ingestion, or any other means. | |
28 | (2) "Agent" means an authorized person who acts on behalf of, or at the direction of, a | |
29 | manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor, or dispenser; except that these terms do not include a | |
30 | common or contract carrier or warehouse operator, when acting in the usual and lawful course of | |
31 | the carrier's or warehouse operator's business. | |
32 | (3) "Apothecary" means a registered pharmacist as defined by the laws of this state and, | |
33 | where the context requires, the owner of a licensed pharmacy or other place of business where | |
34 | controlled substances are compounded or dispensed by a registered pharmacist; and includes | |
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1 | registered assistant pharmacists as defined by existing law, but nothing in this chapter shall be | |
2 | construed as conferring on a person who is not registered as a pharmacist any authority, right, or | |
3 | privilege that is not granted to him or her by the pharmacy laws of the state. | |
4 | (4) "Automated data processing system" means a system utilizing computer software and | |
5 | hardware for the purposes of record keeping. | |
6 | (5) "Computer" means programmable electronic device capable of multi-functions, | |
7 | including, but not limited to: storage, retrieval, and processing of information. | |
8 | (6) "Control" means to add a drug or other substance or immediate precursor to a schedule | |
9 | under this chapter, whether by transfer from another schedule or otherwise. | |
10 | (7) "Controlled substance" means a drug, substance, immediate precursor, or synthetic drug | |
11 | in schedules I – V of this chapter. The term shall not include distilled spirits, wine, or malt | |
12 | beverages, as those terms are defined or used in chapter 1 of title 3, nor tobacco. | |
13 | (8) "Co-prescribing" means issuing a prescription for an opioid antagonist along with a | |
14 | prescription for an opioid analgesic. | |
15 | (9) "Counterfeit substance" means a controlled substance that, or the container or labeling | |
16 | of which, without authorization bears the trademark, trade name, or other identifying mark, imprint, | |
17 | number, or device, or any likeness of them, of a manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser, other than | |
18 | the person or persons who in fact manufactured, distributed, or dispensed the substance and that | |
19 | thereby falsely purports or is represented to be the product of, or to have been distributed by, the | |
20 | other manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser, or which substance is falsely purported to be or | |
21 | represented to be one of the controlled substances by a manufacturer, distributor, or dispenser. | |
22 | (10) "CRT" means cathode ray tube used to impose visual information on a screen. | |
23 | (11) "Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive, or attempted transfer of a | |
24 | controlled substance or imitation controlled substance, whether or not there exists an agency | |
25 | relationship. | |
26 | (12) "Department" means the department of health of this state. | |
27 | (13) "Depressant or stimulant drug" means: | |
28 | (i) A drug that contains any quantity of: | |
29 | (A) Barbituric acid or derivatives, compounds, mixtures, or preparations of barbituric acid; | |
30 | and | |
31 | (B) "Barbiturate" or "barbiturates" includes all hypnotic and/or somnifacient drugs, | |
32 | whether or not derivatives of barbituric acid, except that this definition shall not include bromides | |
33 | and narcotics. | |
34 | (ii) A drug that contains any quantity of: | |
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1 | (A) Amphetamine or any of its optical isomers; | |
2 | (B) Any salt of amphetamine and/or desoxyephedrine or any salt of an optical isomer of | |
3 | amphetamine and/or desoxyephedrine, or any compound, mixture, or preparation of them. | |
4 | (iii) A drug that contains any quantity of coca leaves. "Coca leaves" includes cocaine, or | |
5 | any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of coca leaves, except | |
6 | derivatives of coca leaves, that do not contain cocaine, ecgonine, or substance from which cocaine | |
7 | or ecgonine may be synthesized or made. | |
8 | (iv) Any other drug or substance that contains any quantity of a substance that the attorney | |
9 | general of the United States, or the director of health, after investigation, has found to have, or by | |
10 | regulation designates as having, a potential for abuse because of its depressant or stimulant effect | |
11 | on the central nervous system. | |
12 | (14) "Director" means the director of health. | |
13 | (15) "Dispense" means to deliver, distribute, leave with, give away, or dispose of a | |
14 | controlled substance to the ultimate user or human research subject by or pursuant to the lawful | |
15 | order of a practitioner, including the packaging, labeling, or compounding necessary to prepare the | |
16 | substance for that delivery. | |
17 | (16) "Dispenser" is a practitioner who delivers a controlled substance to the ultimate user | |
18 | or human research subject. | |
19 | (17) "Distribute" means to deliver (other than by administering or dispensing) a controlled | |
20 | substance or an imitation controlled substance and includes actual constructive, or attempted | |
21 | transfer. "Distributor" means a person who so delivers a controlled substance or an imitation | |
22 | controlled substance. | |
23 | (18) "Downtime" means that period of time when a computer is not operable. | |
24 | (19) "Drug addicted person" means a person who exhibits a maladaptive pattern of | |
25 | behavior resulting from drug use, including one or more of the following: impaired control over | |
26 | drug use; compulsive use; and/or continued use despite harm, and craving. | |
27 | (20) "Drug Enforcement Administration" means the Drug Enforcement Administration | |
28 | United States Department of Justice or its successor. | |
29 | (21) "Federal law" means the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of | |
30 | 1970, (84 stat. 1236) (see generally 21 U.S.C. § 801 et seq.), and all regulations pertaining to that | |
31 | federal act. | |
32 | (22) "Hardware" means the fixed component parts of a computer. | |
33 | (23) "Hospital" means an institution as defined in chapter 17 of title 23. | |
34 | (24) "Imitation controlled substance" means a substance that is not a controlled substance, | |
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1 | that by dosage unit, appearance (including color, shape, size, and markings), or by representations | |
2 | made, would lead a reasonable person to believe that the substance is a controlled substance and, | |
3 | which imitation controlled substances contain substances that if ingested, could be injurious to the | |
4 | health of a person. In those cases when the appearance of the dosage unit is not reasonably sufficient | |
5 | to establish that the substance is an "imitation controlled substance" (for example in the case of | |
6 | powder or liquid), the court or authority concerned should consider, in addition to all other logically | |
7 | relevant factors, the following factors as related to "representations made" in determining whether | |
8 | the substance is an "imitation controlled substance": | |
9 | (i) Statement made by an owner, possessor, transferor, recipient, or by anyone else in | |
10 | control of the substance concerning the nature of the substance, or its use or effect. | |
11 | (ii) Statements made by the owner, possessor, or transferor, to the recipient that the | |
12 | substance may be resold for substantial profit. | |
13 | (iii) Whether the substance is packaged in a manner reasonably similar to packaging of | |
14 | illicit controlled substances. | |
15 | (iv) Whether the distribution or attempted distribution included an exchange of or demand | |
16 | for money or other property as consideration, and whether the amount of the consideration was | |
17 | substantially greater than the reasonable value of the non-controlled substance. | |
18 | (25) "Immediate precursor" means a substance: | |
19 | (i) That the director of health has found to be and by regulation designated as being the | |
20 | principal compound used, or produced primarily for use, in the manufacture of a controlled | |
21 | substance; | |
22 | (ii) That is an immediate chemical intermediary used or likely to be used in the manufacture | |
23 | of those controlled substances; and | |
24 | (iii) The control of which is necessary to prevent, curtail, or limit the manufacture of that | |
25 | controlled substance. | |
26 | (26) "Laboratory" means a laboratory approved by the department of health as proper to be | |
27 | entrusted with controlled substances and the use of controlled substances for scientific and medical | |
28 | purposes and for the purposes of instruction. | |
29 | (27) "Manufacture" means the production, preparation, propagation, cultivation, | |
30 | compounding, or processing of a drug or other substance, including an imitation controlled | |
31 | substance, either directly or indirectly or by extraction from substances of natural origin, or | |
32 | independently by means of chemical synthesis or by a combination of extraction and chemical | |
33 | synthesis and includes any packaging or repackaging of the substance or labeling or relabeling of | |
34 | its container in conformity with the general laws of this state except by a practitioner as an incident | |
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1 | to his or her administration or dispensing of the drug or substance in the course of his or her | |
2 | professional practice. | |
3 | (28) "Manufacturer" means a person who manufactures but does not include an apothecary | |
4 | who compounds controlled substances to be sold or dispensed on prescriptions. | |
5 | (29) "Marijuana" means all parts of the plant cannabis sativa L., whether growing or not; | |
6 | the seeds of the plant; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every compound, | |
7 | manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds or resin, but shall not | |
8 | include the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil or cake made from the | |
9 | seeds of the plant, any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of | |
10 | mature stalks, (except the resin extracted from it), fiber, oil or cake, or the sterilized seed from the | |
11 | plant which is incapable of germination. Marijuana shall not include "industrial hemp" or | |
12 | "industrial hemp products" which satisfy the requirements of chapter 26 of title 2. | |
13 | (30) "Narcotic drug" means any of the following, whether produced directly or indirectly | |
14 | by extraction from substances of vegetable origin, or independently by means of chemical synthesis | |
15 | or by a combination of extraction and chemical synthesis: | |
16 | (i) Opium and opiates. | |
17 | (ii) A compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, or preparation of opium or opiates. | |
18 | (iii) A substance (and any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, or preparation of it) | |
19 | that is chemically identical with any of the substances referred to in paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this | |
20 | subdivision. | |
21 | (iv) Any other substance that the attorney general of the United States, or his or her | |
22 | successor, or the director of health, after investigation, has found to have, and by regulation | |
23 | designates as having, a potential for abuse similar to opium and opiates. | |
24 | (31) "Official written order" means an order written on a form provided for that purpose | |
25 | by the Drug Enforcement Administration under any laws of the United States making provision for | |
26 | an official form, if order forms are authorized and required by federal law, and if no order form is | |
27 | provided then on an official form provided for that purpose by the director of health. | |
28 | (32) "Opiate" means any substance having an addiction-forming or addiction-sustaining | |
29 | liability similar to morphine or being capable of conversion into a drug having addiction-forming | |
30 | or addiction-sustaining liability. | |
31 | (33) "Opioid analgesics" means and includes, but is not limited to, the medicines | |
32 | buprenophine, butorphanol, codeine, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, levorphanol, meperidine, | |
33 | methadone, morphine, nalbuphine, oxycodone, oxymorphone, pentazocine, propoxyphene as well | |
34 | as their brand names, isomers, and combinations, or other medications approved by the department. | |
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1 | (34) "Opioid antagonist" means naloxone hydrochloride and any other drug approved by | |
2 | the United States Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of opioid overdose. | |
3 | (35) "Opium poppy" means the plant of the species papaver somniferum L., except the | |
4 | seeds of the plant. | |
5 | (36) "Ounce" means an avoirdupois ounce as applied to solids and semi-solids, and a fluid | |
6 | ounce as applied to liquids. | |
7 | (37) "Person" means any corporation, association, partnership, or one or more individuals. | |
8 | (38) "Physical dependence" means a state of adaptation that is manifested by a drug class | |
9 | specific withdrawal syndrome that can be produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose reduction, | |
10 | decreasing blood level of the drug, and/or administration of an antagonist. | |
11 | (39) "Poppy straw" means all parts, except the seeds, of the opium poppy, after mowing. | |
12 | (40) "Practitioner" means: | |
13 | (i)(ii) A physician, osteopath, dentist, chiropodist, veterinarian, scientific investigator, or | |
14 | other person licensed, registered or permitted to distribute, dispense, conduct research with respect | |
15 | to or to administer a controlled substance in the course of professional practice or research in this | |
16 | state. | |
17 | (41) "Printout" means a hard copy produced by computer that is readable without the aid | |
18 | of any special device. | |
19 | (42) "Production" includes the manufacture, planting, cultivation, growing, or harvesting | |
20 | of a controlled substance. | |
21 | (43) "Researcher" means a person authorized by the director of health to conduct a | |
22 | laboratory as defined in this chapter. | |
23 | (44) "Sell" includes sale, barter, gift, transfer, or delivery in any manner to another, or to | |
24 | offer or agree to do the same. | |
25 | (45) "Software" means programs, procedures and storage of required information data. | |
26 | (46) "Synthetic drugs" means any synthetic cannabinoids or piperazines or any synthetic | |
27 | cathinones as provided for in schedule I. | |
28 | (47) "Ultimate user" means a person who lawfully possesses a controlled substance for his | |
29 | or her own use or for the use of a member of his or her household, or for administering to an animal | |
30 | owned by him or her or by a member of his or her household. | |
31 | (48) "Wholesaler" means a person who sells, vends, or distributes at wholesale, or as a | |
32 | jobber, broker agent, or distributor, or for resale in any manner in this state any controlled | |
33 | substance. | |
34 | SECTION 4. Section 21-28.5-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 21-28.5 entitled "Sale of | |
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1 | Drug Paraphernalia" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
2 | 21-28.5-2. Manufacture or delivery of drug paraphernalia – Penalty. | |
3 | It is unlawful for any person to deliver, sell, possess with intent to deliver, or sell, or | |
4 | manufacture with intent to deliver, or sell drug paraphernalia, knowing that it will be used to plant, | |
5 | propagate, cultivate, grow, harvest, manufacture, compound, convert, produce, process, prepare, | |
6 | test, analyze, pack, repack, store, contain, conceal, inject, ingest, inhale, or introduce into the human | |
7 | body a controlled substance in violation of chapter 28 of this title. A violation of this section shall | |
8 | be punishable by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000) or imprisonment not exceeding | |
9 | two (2) years, or both. | |
10 | Notwithstanding any other provision of the general laws, the sale, manufacture, or delivery | |
11 | of drug paraphernalia to a person acting in accordance with chapter 28.6 of title 21 shall not be | |
12 | considered a violation of this chapter. | |
13 | SECTION 5. Sections 21-28.6-3, 21-28.6-4, 21-28.6-5, 21-28.6-6, 21-28.6-7, 21-28.6-8, | |
14 | 21-28.6-9, 21-28.6-12, 21-28.6-14, 21-28.6-15, 21-28.6-16, 21-28.6-16.2 and 21-28.6-17 of the | |
15 | General Laws in Chapter 21-28.6 entitled "The Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical | |
16 | Marijuana Act" are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
17 | 21-28.6-3. Definitions. | |
18 | For the purposes of this chapter: | |
19 | (1) "Authorized purchaser" means a natural person who is at least twenty-one (21) years | |
20 | old and who is registered with the department of health for the purposes of assisting a qualifying | |
21 | patient in purchasing marijuana from a compassion center. An authorized purchaser may assist no | |
22 | more than one patient, and is prohibited from consuming marijuana obtained for the use of the | |
23 | qualifying patient. An authorized purchaser shall be registered with the department of health and | |
24 | shall possesses a valid registry identification card. | |
25 | (2) "Cannabis" means all parts of the plant of the genus marijuana, also known as marijuana | |
26 | sativa L. whether growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; | |
27 | and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds, | |
28 | or resin regardless of cannabinoid content or cannabinoid potency including "marijuana", and | |
29 | "industrial hemp" or "industrial hemp products" which satisfy the requirements of chapter 26 of | |
30 | title 2. | |
31 | (3) "Cannabis testing laboratory" means a third-party analytical testing laboratory licensed | |
32 | by the department of health, in coordination with the department of business regulation, to collect | |
33 | and test samples of cannabis. | |
34 | (2)(4) "Cardholder" means a person who has been registered or licensed with the | |
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1 | department of health or the department of business regulation pursuant to this chapter and possesses | |
2 | a valid registry identification card or license. | |
3 | (3)(5) "Commercial unit" means a building, office, suite, or room other space within a | |
4 | commercial or industrial building, for use by one business or person and is rented or owned by that | |
5 | business or person. | |
6 | (4)(6)(i) "Compassion center" means a not-for-profit corporation, subject to the provisions | |
7 | of chapter 6 of title 7, and registered is licensed under § 21-28.6-12, that acquires, possesses, | |
8 | cultivates, manufactures, delivers, transfers, transports, supplies, or dispenses medical marijuana, | |
9 | and/or related supplies and educational materials, to patient cardholders and/or their registered | |
10 | caregiver, cardholder or authorized purchaser. | |
11 | (ii) "Compassion center cardholder" means a principal officer, board member, employee, | |
12 | volunteer, or agent of a compassion center who has registered with the department of health or the | |
13 | department of business regulation and has been issued and possesses a valid, registry identification | |
14 | card. | |
15 | (5)(7) "Debilitating medical condition" means: | |
16 | (i) Cancer, glaucoma, positive status for human immunodeficiency virus, acquired immune | |
17 | deficiency syndrome, Hepatitis C, post-traumatic stress disorder, or the treatment of these | |
18 | conditions; | |
19 | (ii) A chronic or debilitating disease or medical condition, or its treatment, that produces | |
20 | one or more of the following: cachexia or wasting syndrome; severe, debilitating, chronic pain; | |
21 | severe nausea; seizures, including but not limited to, those characteristic of epilepsy; or severe and | |
22 | persistent muscle spasms, including but not limited to, those characteristic of multiple sclerosis or | |
23 | Crohn's disease; or agitation of Alzheimer's Disease; or | |
24 | (iii) Any other medical condition or its treatment approved by the department of health, as | |
25 | provided for in § 21-28.6-5. | |
26 | (6)(8) "Department of business regulation" means the office of cannabis regulation within | |
27 | the Rhode Island department of business regulation or its successor agency. | |
28 | (7)(9) "Department of health" means the Rhode Island department of health or its successor | |
29 | agency. | |
30 | (8)(10) "Department of public safety" means the Rhode Island department of public safety | |
31 | or its successor agency. | |
32 | (9)(11) "Dried, useable marijuana" means the dried leaves and flowers of the marijuana | |
33 | plant as defined by regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation health. | |
34 | (10)(12) "Dwelling unit" means the room, or group of rooms, within a residential dwelling | |
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1 | used or intended for use by one family or household, or by no more than three (3) unrelated | |
2 | individuals, with facilities for living, sleeping, sanitation, cooking, and eating. | |
3 | (11)(13) "Equivalent amount" means the portion of usable marijuana, be it in extracted, | |
4 | edible, concentrated, or any other form, found to be equal to a portion of dried, usable marijuana, | |
5 | as defined by regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation health. | |
6 | (12)"Licensed cultivator" means a person, as identified in § 43-3-6, who has been licensed | |
7 | by the department of business regulation to cultivate marijuana pursuant to § 21-28.6-16. | |
8 | (13) "Marijuana" has the meaning given that term in § 21-28-1.02(30). | |
9 | (14) "Mature marijuana plant" means a marijuana plant that has flowers or buds that are | |
10 | readily observable by an unaided visual examination. | |
11 | (15)(14) "Medical marijuana testing laboratory" means a third-party analytical testing | |
12 | laboratory licensed by the department of health to collect and test samples of medical marijuana | |
13 | pursuant to regulations promulgated by the department. "Immature marijuana plant" means a | |
14 | marijuana plant, rooted or unrooted, with no observable flower or buds. | |
15 | (15) "Licensed medical marijuana cultivator" means a person or entity, as identified in § | |
16 | 43-3-6, who has been licensed by the department of business regulation to cultivate medical | |
17 | marijuana pursuant to § 21-28.6-16. | |
18 | (16) "Marijuana" has the meaning given that term in § 21-28-1.02. | |
19 | (17) "Marijuana establishment licensee" means any person or entity licensed by the | |
20 | department of business regulation under chapter 28.6 of title 21 whose license permits it to engage | |
21 | in or conduct activities in connection with the medical marijuana program. "Marijuana | |
22 | establishment licensees" shall include compassion centers, medical marijuana cultivators, and | |
23 | cannabis testing laboratories. | |
24 | (18) "Mature marijuana plant" means a marijuana plant that has flowers or buds that are | |
25 | readily observable by an unaided visual examination. | |
26 | (19) "Medical marijuana emporium" means any establishment, facility or club, whether | |
27 | operated for-profit or nonprofit, or any commercial unit, at which the sale, distribution, transfer or | |
28 | use of medical marijuana or medical marijuana products is proposed and/or occurs to, by or among | |
29 | registered patients, registered caregivers, authorized purchaser cardholders or any other person. | |
30 | This shall not include a compassion center regulated and licensed by the department of business | |
31 | regulation pursuant to the terms of this chapter. | |
32 | (20) "Medical marijuana" means marijuana and marijuana products which satisfy the | |
33 | requirements of this chapter and have been given the designation of "medical marijuana" due to | |
34 | dose, potency, form. Medical marijuana products are only available for use by patient cardholders, | |
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1 | and may only be sold to or possessed by patient cardholders, or their registered caregiver, or | |
2 | authorized purchaser in accordance with this chapter. Medical marijuana may not be sold to, | |
3 | possessed by, manufactured by, or used except as permitted under this chapter. | |
4 | (21) "Medical marijuana plant tag set" or "plant tag" means any tag, identifier, registration, | |
5 | certificate, or inventory tracking system authorized or issued by the department or which the | |
6 | department requires be used for the lawful possession and cultivation of medical marijuana plants | |
7 | in accordance with this chapter. | |
8 | (16)(22) "Medical use" means the acquisition, possession, cultivation, manufacture, use, | |
9 | delivery, transfer, or transportation of medical marijuana or paraphernalia relating to the | |
10 | consumption of marijuana to alleviate a patient cardholder's debilitating medical condition or | |
11 | symptoms associated with the medical condition in accordance with the provisions of this chapter. | |
12 | (17)(23) "Practitioner" means a person who is licensed with authority to prescribe drugs | |
13 | pursuant to chapters 34, 37, and 54 of title 5, who may provide a qualifying patient with a written | |
14 | certification in accordance with regulations promulgated by the department of health or a physician | |
15 | licensed with authority to prescribe drugs in Massachusetts or Connecticut. | |
16 | (18)(24) "Primary caregiver" means a natural person who is at least twenty-one (21) years | |
17 | old. A primary caregiver who is registered under this chapter in order to, and who may, assist one | |
18 | qualifying patient, but no more than five (5) qualifying patients with their medical use of marijuana, | |
19 | provided that a qualified patient may also serve as his or her own primary caregiver subject to the | |
20 | registration and requirements set forth in § 21-28.6-4. | |
21 | (19)(25) "Qualifying patient" means a person who has been diagnosed certified by a | |
22 | practitioner as having a debilitating medical condition and is a resident of Rhode Island. | |
23 | (20)(26) "Registry identification card" means a document issued by the department of | |
24 | health or the department of business regulation, as applicable, that identifies a person as a registered | |
25 | qualifying patient, a registered primary caregiver, or authorized purchaser, or a document issued | |
26 | by the department of business regulation or department of health that identifies a person as a | |
27 | registered principal officer, board member, employee, volunteer, or agent of a compassion center, | |
28 | licensed medical marijuana cultivator, cannabis testing lab, or any other medical marijuana | |
29 | licensee. | |
30 | (21) "Seedling" means a marijuana plant with no observable flowers or buds. | |
31 | (22)(27) "Unusable marijuana" means marijuana seeds, stalks, seedlings and unusable | |
32 | roots and shall not count towards any weight-based possession limits established in the chapter. | |
33 | (23)(28) "Usable marijuana" means the dried leaves and flowers of the marijuana plant, | |
34 | and any mixture or preparation thereof, but does not include the seeds, stalks, and roots of the plant. | |
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1 | (24)(29) "Wet marijuana" means the harvested leaves and flowers of the marijuana plant | |
2 | before they have reached a dry useable state, as defined by regulations promulgated by the | |
3 | departments department of health and department of business regulation. | |
4 | (25)(30) "Written certification" means the qualifying patient's medical records, and a | |
5 | statement signed by a practitioner, stating that, in the practitioner's professional opinion, the | |
6 | potential benefits of the medical use of marijuana would likely outweigh the health risks for the | |
7 | qualifying patient. A written certification shall be made only in the course of a bona fide, | |
8 | practitioner-patient relationship after the practitioner has completed a full assessment of the | |
9 | qualifying patient's medical history. The written certification shall specify the qualifying patient's | |
10 | debilitating medical condition or conditions which may include the qualifying patient's relevant | |
11 | medical records. | |
12 | 21-28.6-4. Protections for the medical use of marijuana. | |
13 | (a) A qualifying patient cardholder who has in his or her possession a registry identification | |
14 | card shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied any right or | |
15 | privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business or | |
16 | occupational or professional licensing board or bureau, solely for the medical use of medical | |
17 | marijuana; provided; | |
18 | (1) Before July 1, 2019, that the The qualifying patient cardholder possesses an amount of | |
19 | medical marijuana that does not exceed twelve (12) mature marijuana plants and twelve (12) | |
20 | immature marijuana plants that are accompanied by valid medical marijuana plant tags, two and | |
21 | one-half (2.5) ounces (2.5 oz.) of dried usable medical marijuana, or its equivalent amount which | |
22 | satisfies the requirements of this chapter, and an amount of wet medical marijuana to be set by | |
23 | regulations promulgated by the departments department of health and business regulation. Said | |
24 | plants shall be stored in an indoor facility. Marijuana plants and the marijuana they produce shall | |
25 | only be grown, stored, manufactured, and processed in accordance with regulations promulgated | |
26 | by the department of business regulation; and | |
27 | (b) An authorized purchaser who has in his or her possession a registry identification card | |
28 | shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied any right or privilege, | |
29 | including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business or occupational or | |
30 | professional licensing board or bureau, for the possession of medical marijuana; provided that the | |
31 | authorized purchaser possesses an amount of medical marijuana that does not exceed two and one- | |
32 | half (2.5) ounces of usable medical marijuana, or its equivalent amount, and this medical marijuana | |
33 | was purchased legally from a compassion center for the use of their designated qualifying patient. | |
34 | (c) A qualifying patient cardholder, who has in his or her possession a registry | |
|
| |
1 | identification card, shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied | |
2 | any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business | |
3 | or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau, for selling, giving, or distributing, on or | |
4 | before December 31, 2016 to a compassion center cardholder, medical marijuana of the type, and | |
5 | in an amount not to exceed, that set forth in subsection (a), that he or she has cultivated or | |
6 | manufactured pursuant to this chapter. | |
7 | (d) No school, employer, or landlord may refuse to enroll, employ, or lease to, or otherwise | |
8 | penalize, a person solely for his or her status as a cardholder. Provided, however, due to the safety | |
9 | and welfare concern for other tenants, the property, and the public, as a whole, a landlord may have | |
10 | the discretion not to lease, or continue to lease, to a cardholder who cultivates, manufactures, | |
11 | processes, smokes, or vaporizes medical marijuana in the leased premises. | |
12 | (e) No employer may refuse to employ, or otherwise penalize, a person solely for his or | |
13 | her status as a cardholder, except: | |
14 | (1) To the extent employer action is taken with respect to such person's: | |
15 | (i) Use or possession of marijuana or being under the influence of marijuana in any | |
16 | workplace; | |
17 | (ii) Undertaking a task under the influence of marijuana when doing so would constitute | |
18 | negligence or professional malpractice or jeopardize workplace safety; | |
19 | (iii) Operation, navigation or actual physical control of any motor vehicle or other transport | |
20 | vehicle, aircraft, motorboat, machinery or equipment, or firearms while under the influence of | |
21 | marijuana; or | |
22 | (iv) Violation of employment conditions pursuant to the terms of a collective bargaining | |
23 | agreement; or | |
24 | (2) Where the employer is a federal contractor or otherwise subject to federal law such that | |
25 | failure of the employer to take such action against the employee would cause the employer to lose | |
26 | a monetary or licensing related benefit. | |
27 | (e)(f) A primary caregiver cardholder, who has in his or her possession a registry | |
28 | identification card, shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied | |
29 | any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business | |
30 | or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau, for assisting a patient cardholder, to | |
31 | whom he or she is connected through the department of health or department of business | |
32 | regulation's registration process, with the medical use of medical marijuana; provided, that; the | |
33 | primary caregiver cardholder possesses an amount of marijuana that does not exceed twelve (12) | |
34 | mature marijuana plants that are accompanied by valid medical marijuana tags, two and one-half | |
|
| |
1 | (2.5) ounces of usable marijuana, or its equivalent amount, and an amount of wet marijuana set in | |
2 | regulations promulgated by the departments of health and business regulation for each qualified | |
3 | patient cardholder to whom he or she is connected through the department of health registration | |
4 | process. | |
5 | (f)(g) A qualifying patient cardholder shall be allowed to possess a reasonable amount of | |
6 | unusable marijuana, including up to twelve (12) seedlings immature marijuana plants that are | |
7 | accompanied by valid medical marijuana tags. A primary caregiver cardholder shall be allowed to | |
8 | possess a reasonable amount of unusable marijuana, including up to twenty-four (24) seedlings | |
9 | immature marijuana plants that are accompanied by valid medical marijuana tags and an amount | |
10 | of wet marijuana set in regulations promulgated by the departments of health and business | |
11 | regulation. | |
12 | (g)(h) There shall exist a presumption that a cardholder is engaged in the medical use of | |
13 | marijuana if the cardholder: | |
14 | (1) Is in possession of a registry identification card; and | |
15 | (2) Is in possession of an amount of marijuana that does not exceed the amount permitted | |
16 | under this chapter. Such presumption may be rebutted by evidence that conduct related to marijuana | |
17 | was not for the purpose of alleviating the qualifying patient's debilitating medical condition or | |
18 | symptoms associated with the medical condition. | |
19 | (h)(i) A primary caregiver cardholder may receive reimbursement for costs associated with | |
20 | assisting a qualifying patient cardholder's medical use of marijuana. A primary caregiver | |
21 | cardholder may only receive reimbursement for the actual costs of goods, materials, services or | |
22 | utilities for which they have incurred expenses. A primary caregiver may not receive | |
23 | reimbursement or compensation for his or her time, knowledge, or expertise. Compensation shall | |
24 | not constitute sale of controlled substances under state law. The department of business regulation | |
25 | may promulgate regulations for the documentation and tracking of reimbursements and the transfer | |
26 | of medical marijuana between primary caregivers and their registered patients. | |
27 | (i)(j) A primary caregiver cardholder, who has in his or her possession a registry | |
28 | identification card, shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied | |
29 | any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business | |
30 | or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau, for selling, giving, or distributing, on or | |
31 | before December 31, 2016 to a compassion center cardholder, marijuana, of the type, and in an | |
32 | amount not to exceed that set forth in subsection (e)(f), if: | |
33 | (1) The primary caregiver cardholder cultivated the marijuana pursuant to this chapter, not | |
34 | to exceed the limits of subsection (e)(f); and | |
|
| |
1 | (2) Each qualifying patient cardholder the primary caregiver cardholder is connected with | |
2 | through the department of health's registration process has been provided an adequate amount of | |
3 | the marijuana to meet his or her medical needs, not to exceed the limits of subsection (a). | |
4 | (j)(k) A practitioner shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or | |
5 | denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by | |
6 | the Rhode Island board of medical licensure and discipline, or by any other business an employer | |
7 | or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau solely for providing written certifications | |
8 | in accordance with this chapter and regulations promulgated by the department of health, or for | |
9 | otherwise stating that, in the practitioner's professional opinion, the potential benefits of the medical | |
10 | marijuana would likely outweigh the health risks for a patient. | |
11 | (k)(l) Any interest in, or right to, property that is possessed, owned, or used in connection | |
12 | with the lawful medical use of marijuana, or acts incidental to such use, shall not be forfeited. | |
13 | (l)(m) No person shall be subject to arrest or prosecution for constructive possession, | |
14 | conspiracy, aiding and abetting, being an accessory, or any other offense, for simply being in the | |
15 | presence or vicinity of the medical use of marijuana as permitted under this chapter, or for assisting | |
16 | a qualifying patient cardholder with using or administering marijuana. | |
17 | (m)(n) A practitioner licensed with authority to prescribed drugs pursuant to chapters 34, | |
18 | 37 and 54 of title 5, or pharmacist licensed under chapter 19.1 of title 5, or certified school nurse | |
19 | teacher, shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied any right | |
20 | or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by an employer a | |
21 | business or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau solely for Discussing discussing | |
22 | the benefits or health risks of medical marijuana or its interaction with other substances with a | |
23 | patient. | |
24 | (2) Administering a non-smokable and non-vaporized form of medical marijuana in a | |
25 | school setting to a qualified patient registered in accordance with chapter 28.6 of title 21. | |
26 | (n)(o) A qualifying patient or primary caregiver registry identification card, or its | |
27 | equivalent, issued under the laws of another state, U.S. territory, or the District of Columbia, to | |
28 | permit the medical use of marijuana by a patient with a debilitating medical condition, or to permit | |
29 | a person to assist with the medical use of marijuana by a patient with a debilitating medical | |
30 | condition, shall have the same force and effect as a registry identification card. | |
31 | (o)(p) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (e)(f), no primary caregiver cardholder | |
32 | shall Possess possess an amount of marijuana in excess of twenty-four (24) mature marijuana plants | |
33 | that are accompanied by valid medical marijuana tags and five (5) ounces of usable marijuana, or | |
34 | its equivalent, and an amount of wet medical marijuana set in regulations promulgated by the | |
|
| |
1 | departments of health and business regulation for patient cardholders to whom he or she is | |
2 | connected through the department of health and/or department of business regulation registration | |
3 | process. | |
4 | (p)(q) A qualifying patient or primary caregiver cardholder may give marijuana to another | |
5 | qualifying patient or primary caregiver cardholder to whom they are not connected by the | |
6 | department's registration process, provided that no consideration is paid for the marijuana, and that | |
7 | the recipient does not exceed the limits specified in this section. | |
8 | (q)(r) Qualifying patient cardholders and primary caregiver cardholders who are authorized | |
9 | to grow marijuana shall only grow at one premises, and this premises shall be registered with the | |
10 | department of health business regulation. Except for licensed compassion centers, and licensed | |
11 | cooperative cultivations., and licensed cultivators, no more than twenty four (24) mature marijuana | |
12 | plants that are accompanied by valid medical marijuana tags shall be grown or otherwise located | |
13 | at any one dwelling unit or commercial unit The number of qualifying patients or primary | |
14 | caregivers residing, owning, renting, growing, or otherwise operating at a dwelling or commercial | |
15 | unit does not affect this limit. The department of health business regulation shall promulgate | |
16 | regulations to enforce this provision. | |
17 | (r)(s) For the purposes of medical care, including organ transplants, a patient cardholder's | |
18 | authorized use of marijuana shall be considered the equivalent of the authorized use of any other | |
19 | medication used at the direction of a physician, and shall not constitute the use of an illicit | |
20 | substance. | |
21 | (s)(t) Notwithstanding any other provisions of the general laws, the manufacture of | |
22 | marijuana using a solvent extraction process that includes the use of a compressed, flammable gas | |
23 | as a solvent by a patient cardholder or primary caregiver cardholder shall not be subject to the | |
24 | protections of this chapter. | |
25 | (t)(u) Notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary, nothing in this chapter or the general | |
26 | laws shall restrict or otherwise affect the manufacturing, distribution, transportation, sale, | |
27 | prescribing and dispensing of a product that has been approved for marketing as a prescription | |
28 | medication by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and legally prescribed, nor shall hemp, as | |
29 | defined in in accordance with chapter 26 of title 2 § 2-26-3, be defined as marijuana or marihuana | |
30 | pursuant to this chapter, chapter 28 of this title or elsewhere in the general laws. | |
31 | 21-28.6-5. Departments of health to issue regulations Departments of health and | |
32 | business regulation to issue regulations. | |
33 | (a) Not later than ninety (90) days after the effective date of this chapter, the department of | |
34 | health shall promulgate regulations governing the manner in which it shall consider petitions from | |
|
| |
1 | the public to add debilitating medical conditions to those included in this chapter. In considering | |
2 | such petitions, the department of health shall include public notice of, and an opportunity to | |
3 | comment in a public hearing, upon such petitions. The department of health shall, after hearing, | |
4 | approve or deny such petitions within one hundred eighty (180) days of submission. The approval | |
5 | or denial of such a petition shall be considered a final department of health action, subject to judicial | |
6 | review. Jurisdiction and venue for judicial review are vested in the superior court. The denial of a | |
7 | petition shall not disqualify qualifying patients with that condition, if they have a debilitating | |
8 | medical condition as defined in § 21-28.6-3(5). The denial of a petition shall not prevent a person | |
9 | with the denied condition from raising an affirmative defense. | |
10 | (b) Not later than ninety (90) days after the effective date of this chapter, the department | |
11 | of health shall promulgate regulations governing the manner in which it shall consider applications | |
12 | for, and renewals of, registry identification cards for qualifying patients, primary caregivers, and | |
13 | authorized purchasers. The department of health's regulations shall establish application and | |
14 | renewal fees that generate revenues sufficient to offset all expenses of implementing and | |
15 | administering this chapter. The department of health may vary the application and renewal fees | |
16 | along a sliding scale that accounts for a qualifying patient's or caregiver's income. The department | |
17 | of health may accept donations from private sources in order to reduce the application and renewal | |
18 | fees. | |
19 | (c) Not later than October 1, 2019, the department of business regulation shall promulgate | |
20 | regulations not inconsistent with law, to carry into effect the provisions of this section, governing | |
21 | the manner in which it shall consider applications for, and renewals of, registry identification cards | |
22 | for primary caregivers. The department of business regulation's regulations shall establish | |
23 | application and renewal fees. The department of business regulation may vary the application and | |
24 | renewal fees along a sliding scale that accounts for a qualifying patient's or caregiver's income. The | |
25 | department of business regulation may accept donations from private sources in order to reduce the | |
26 | application and renewal fees. | |
27 | 21-28.6-6. Administration of departments of health and business regulation | |
28 | regulations. | |
29 | (a) The department of health shall issue registry identification cards to qualifying patients | |
30 | who submit the following, in accordance with the department's regulations. Applications shall | |
31 | include but not be limited to: | |
32 | (1) Written certification as defined in § 21-28.6-3(25) of this chapter; | |
33 | (2) Application fee, as applicable; | |
34 | (3) Name, address, and date of birth of the qualifying patient; provided, however, that if | |
|
| |
1 | the patient is homeless, no address is required; | |
2 | (4) Name, address, and telephone number of the qualifying patient's practitioner; | |
3 | (5) Whether the patient elects to grow medical marijuana plants for himself or herself; and | |
4 | (6) Name, address, and date of birth of one primary caregiver of the qualifying patient and | |
5 | any authorized purchaser for the qualifying patient, if any primary caregiver or authorized | |
6 | purchaser is chosen by the patient or allowed in accordance with regulations promulgated by the | |
7 | department departments of health or business regulation. | |
8 | (b) The department of health shall not issue a registry identification card to a qualifying | |
9 | patient under the age of eighteen (18) unless: | |
10 | (1) The qualifying patient's practitioner has explained the potential risks and benefits of the | |
11 | medical use of marijuana to the qualifying patient and to a parent, guardian, or person having legal | |
12 | custody of the qualifying patient; and | |
13 | (2) A parent, guardian, or person having legal custody consents in writing to: | |
14 | (i) Allow the qualifying patient's medical use of marijuana; | |
15 | (ii) Serve as the qualifying patient's primary caregiver or authorized purchaser; and | |
16 | (iii) Control the acquisition of the marijuana, the dosage, and the frequency of the medical | |
17 | use of marijuana by the qualifying patient. | |
18 | (c) The department of health shall renew registry identification cards to qualifying patients | |
19 | in accordance with regulations promulgated by the department of health and subject to payment of | |
20 | any applicable renewal fee. | |
21 | (d) The department of health shall not issue a registry identification card to a qualifying | |
22 | patient seeking treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) under the age of eighteen (18). | |
23 | (e) The department of health shall verify the information contained in an application or | |
24 | renewal submitted pursuant to this section, and shall approve or deny an application or renewal | |
25 | within thirty-five (35) days of receiving it. The department may deny an application or renewal | |
26 | only if the applicant did not provide the information required pursuant to this section, or if the | |
27 | department determines that the information provided was falsified, or that the renewing applicant | |
28 | has violated this chapter under their previous registration. Rejection of an application or renewal is | |
29 | considered a final department action, subject to judicial review. Jurisdiction and venue for judicial | |
30 | review are vested in the superior court. | |
31 | (f) If the qualifying patient's practitioner notifies the department of health in a written | |
32 | statement that the qualifying patient is eligible for hospice care or chemotherapy, the department | |
33 | of health and department of business regulation, as applicable, shall give priority to these | |
34 | applications when verifying the information in accordance with subsection (e) and issue a registry | |
|
| |
1 | identification card to these qualifying patients, primary caregivers and authorized purchasers within | |
2 | seventy-two (72) hours of receipt of the completed application. The departments shall not charge a | |
3 | registration fee to the patient, caregivers or authorized purchasers named in the application. The | |
4 | department of health may identify through regulation a list of other conditions qualifying a patient | |
5 | for expedited application processing. | |
6 | (g) Following the promulgation of regulations pursuant to § 21-28.6-5(c), the The | |
7 | department of health shall department of business regulation may issue or renew a registry | |
8 | identification card to the qualifying patient cardholder's primary caregiver, if any, who is named in | |
9 | the qualifying patient's approved application The department of business regulation shall verify the | |
10 | information contained in applications and renewal forms submitted pursuant to this chapter prior | |
11 | to issuing any registry identification card. The department of business regulation may deny an | |
12 | application or renewal if the applicant or appointing patient did not provide the information | |
13 | required pursuant to this section, or if the department determines that the information provided was | |
14 | falsified, or if the applicant or appointing patient has violated this chapter under his or her previous | |
15 | registration or has otherwise failed to satisfy the application or renewal requirements. | |
16 | (1) A primary caregiver applicant or an authorized purchaser applicant shall apply to the | |
17 | bureau of criminal identification of the department of attorney general, department of public safety | |
18 | division of state police, or local police department for a national criminal records check that shall | |
19 | include fingerprints submitted to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Upon the discovery of any | |
20 | disqualifying information as defined in subdivision (g)(4)(5), and in accordance with the rules | |
21 | promulgated by the director, the bureau of criminal identification of the department of attorney | |
22 | general, department of public safety division of state police, or the local police department shall | |
23 | inform the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the disqualifying information; and, without | |
24 | disclosing the nature of the disqualifying information, shall notify the department of business | |
25 | regulation or department of health, as applicable, in writing, that disqualifying information has been | |
26 | discovered. | |
27 | (2) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau of | |
28 | criminal identification of the department of attorney general, department of public safety division | |
29 | of state police, or the local police shall inform the applicant and the department of business | |
30 | regulation or department of health, as applicable, in writing, of this fact. | |
31 | (3) The department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, shall | |
32 | maintain on file evidence that a criminal records check has been initiated on all applicants seeking | |
33 | a primary caregiver registry identification card or an authorized purchaser registry identification | |
34 | card and the results of the checks. The primary caregiver cardholder shall not be required to apply | |
|
| |
1 | for a national criminal records check for each patient he or she is connected to through the | |
2 | department's registration process, provided that he or she has applied for a national criminal records | |
3 | check within the previous two (2) years in accordance with this chapter. The department of health | |
4 | and department of business regulation, as applicable, shall not require a primary caregiver | |
5 | cardholder or an authorized purchaser cardholder to apply for a national criminal records check | |
6 | more than once every two (2) years. | |
7 | (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the department of business | |
8 | regulation or department of health may revoke or refuse to issue any class or type of registry | |
9 | identification card or license if it determines that failing to do so would conflict with any federal | |
10 | law or guidance pertaining to regulatory, enforcement and other systems that states, businesses, or | |
11 | other institutions may implement to mitigate the potential for federal intervention or enforcement. | |
12 | This provision shall not be construed to prohibit the overall implementation and administration of | |
13 | this chapter on account of the federal classification of marijuana as a schedule I substance or any | |
14 | other federal prohibitions or restrictions. | |
15 | (4)(5) Information produced by a national criminal records check pertaining to a conviction | |
16 | for any felony offense under chapter 28 of title 21 ("Rhode Island Controlled Substances Act"), | |
17 | murder, manslaughter, rape, first-degree sexual assault, second-degree sexual assault, first-degree | |
18 | child molestation, second-degree child molestation, kidnapping, first-degree arson, second-degree | |
19 | arson, mayhem, robbery, burglary, breaking and entering, assault with a dangerous weapon, assault | |
20 | or battery involving grave bodily injury, and/or assault with intent to commit any offense | |
21 | punishable as a felony or a similar offense from any other jurisdiction shall result in a letter to the | |
22 | applicant and the department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, | |
23 | disqualifying the applicant. If disqualifying information has been found, the department of health | |
24 | or department of business regulation, as applicable may use its discretion to issue a primary | |
25 | caregiver registry identification card or an authorized purchaser registry identification card if the | |
26 | applicant's connected patient is an immediate family member and the card is restricted to that | |
27 | patient only. | |
28 | (5)(6) The primary caregiver or authorized purchaser applicant shall be responsible for any | |
29 | expense associated with the national criminal records check. | |
30 | (6)(7) For purposes of this section, "conviction" means, in addition to judgments of | |
31 | conviction entered by a court subsequent to a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, those instances | |
32 | where the defendant has entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a sentence of probation | |
33 | and those instances where a defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement with the | |
34 | attorney general. | |
|
| |
1 | (8) (i) The office of cannabis regulation may adopt rules and regulations based on federal | |
2 | guidance provided those rules and regulations are designed to comply with federal guidance and | |
3 | mitigate federal enforcement against the registrations and licenses issued under this chapter. | |
4 | (ii) All new and revised rules and regulations promulgated by the department of business | |
5 | regulation and/or the department of health pursuant to this chapter shall be subject to approval by | |
6 | the general assembly prior to enactment. | |
7 | (h)(1) On or before December 31, 2016, the department of health shall issue registry | |
8 | identification cards within five (5) business days of approving an application or renewal that shall | |
9 | expire two (2) years after the date of issuance. | |
10 | (ii)(2) Effective January 1, 2017, and thereafter, the department of health or the department | |
11 | of business regulation, as applicable, shall issue registry identification cards within five (5) business | |
12 | days of approving an application or renewal that shall expire one year after the date of issuance. | |
13 | (iii)(3) Registry identification cards shall contain: | |
14 | (1)(i) The date of issuance and expiration date of the registry identification card; | |
15 | (2)(ii) A random registry identification number; | |
16 | (3)(iii) A photograph; and | |
17 | (4)(iv) Any additional information as required by regulation or the department of health or | |
18 | business regulation as applicable. | |
19 | (i) Persons issued registry identification cards by the department of health or department | |
20 | of business regulation shall be subject to the following: | |
21 | (1) A qualifying patient cardholder shall notify the department of health of any change in | |
22 | his or her name, address, primary caregiver, or authorized purchaser; or if he or she ceases to have | |
23 | his or her debilitating medical condition, within ten (10) days of such change. | |
24 | (2) A qualifying patient cardholder who fails to notify the department of health of any of | |
25 | these changes is responsible for a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of no more than one hundred | |
26 | fifty dollars ($150). If the patient cardholder has ceased to suffer from a debilitating medical | |
27 | condition, the card shall be deemed null and void and the person shall be liable for any other | |
28 | penalties that may apply to the person's nonmedical use of marijuana. | |
29 | (3) A primary caregiver cardholder or authorized purchaser shall notify the issuing | |
30 | department of health of any change in his or her name or address within ten (10) days of such | |
31 | change. A primary caregiver cardholder or authorized purchaser who fails to notify the issuing | |
32 | department of any of these changes is responsible for a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of no | |
33 | more than one hundred fifty dollars ($150). | |
34 | (4) When a qualifying patient cardholder or primary caregiver cardholder notifies the | |
|
| |
1 | department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, of any changes listed in | |
2 | this subsection, the department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, shall | |
3 | issue the qualifying patient cardholder and each primary caregiver cardholder a new registry | |
4 | identification card within ten (10) days of receiving the updated information and a ten-dollar | |
5 | ($10.00) fee. | |
6 | (5) When a qualifying patient cardholder changes his or her primary caregiver or authorized | |
7 | purchaser, the department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable shall notify | |
8 | the primary caregiver cardholder or authorized purchaser within ten (10) days. The primary | |
9 | caregiver cardholder's protections as provided in this chapter as to that patient shall expire ten (10) | |
10 | days after notification by the issuing department. If the primary caregiver cardholder or authorized | |
11 | purchaser is connected to no other qualifying patient cardholders in the program, he or she must | |
12 | return his or her registry identification card to the issuing department. | |
13 | (6) If a cardholder or authorized purchaser loses his or her registry identification card, he | |
14 | or she shall notify the department that issued the card and submit a ten-dollar ($10.00) fee within | |
15 | ten (10) days of losing the card. Within five (5) days, the department of health or department of | |
16 | business regulation shall issue a new registry identification card with new random identification | |
17 | number. | |
18 | (7) Effective January 1, 2019, if a patient cardholder chooses to alter his or her registration | |
19 | with regard to the growing of medical marijuana for himself or herself, he or she shall notify the | |
20 | department prior to the purchase of medical marijuana tags or the growing of medical marijuana | |
21 | plants. | |
22 | (8) If a cardholder or authorized purchaser willfully violates any provision of this chapter | |
23 | as determined by the department of health or the department of business regulation, his or her | |
24 | registry identification card may be revoked. | |
25 | (j) Possession of, or application for, a registry identification card shall not constitute | |
26 | probable cause or reasonable suspicion, nor shall it be used to support the search of the person or | |
27 | property of the person possessing or applying for the registry identification card, or otherwise | |
28 | subject the person or property of the person to inspection by any governmental agency. | |
29 | (k)(1) Applications and supporting information submitted by qualifying patients, including | |
30 | information regarding their primary caregivers, authorized purchaser, and practitioners, are | |
31 | confidential and protected under in accordance with the federal Health Insurance Portability and | |
32 | Accountability Act of 1996, as amended, and shall be exempt from the provisions of chapter 2 of | |
33 | title 38 et seq. (Rhode Island access to public records act) and not subject to disclosure, except to | |
34 | authorized employees of the departments of health and business regulation as necessary to perform | |
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| |
1 | official duties of the department departments, and pursuant to subsection (l) and (m). | |
2 | (2) The application for qualifying patient's registry identification card shall include a | |
3 | question asking whether the patient would like the department of health to notify him or her of any | |
4 | clinical studies about marijuana's risk or efficacy. The department of health shall inform those | |
5 | patients who answer in the affirmative of any such studies it is notified of, that will be conducted | |
6 | in Rhode Island. The department of health may also notify those patients of medical studies | |
7 | conducted outside of Rhode Island. | |
8 | (3) The department of health and the department of business regulation, as applicable, shall | |
9 | maintain a confidential list of the persons to whom the department of health or department of | |
10 | business regulation has issued authorized patient, primary caregiver, and authorized purchaser | |
11 | registry identification cards. Individual names and other identifying information on the list shall be | |
12 | confidential, exempt from the provisions of Rhode Island access to public information, chapter 2 | |
13 | of title 38, and not subject to disclosure, except to authorized employees of the department | |
14 | departments of health and business regulation as necessary to perform official duties of the | |
15 | department departments and pursuant to subsections (l) and (m) of this section. | |
16 | (l) Notwithstanding subsection subsections (k) and (m) of this section, the departments of | |
17 | health and business regulation, as applicable, shall verify to law enforcement personnel whether a | |
18 | registry identification card is valid and may provide additional information to confirm whether a | |
19 | cardholder is compliant with the provisions of this chapter and the regulations promulgated | |
20 | hereunder. solely by confirming the random registry identification number or name. The | |
21 | department of business regulation shall verify to law enforcement personnel whether a registry | |
22 | identification card is valid and may confirm whether the cardholder is compliant with the provisions | |
23 | of this chapter and the regulations promulgated hereunder. This verification may occur through the | |
24 | use of a shared database, provided that any medical records or confidential information in this | |
25 | database related to a cardholder's specific medical condition is protected in accordance with | |
26 | subdivision (k)(1). | |
27 | (m) It shall be a crime, punishable by up to one hundred eighty (180) days in jail and a one | |
28 | thousand dollar ($1,000) fine, for any person, including an employee or official of the departments | |
29 | of health, business regulation, public safety, or another state agency or local government, to breach | |
30 | the confidentiality of information obtained pursuant to this chapter. Notwithstanding this provision, | |
31 | the department of health and department of business regulation employees may notify law | |
32 | enforcement about falsified or fraudulent information submitted to the department or violations of | |
33 | this chapter. Nothing in this act shall be construed as to prohibit law enforcement, public safety, | |
34 | fire, or building officials from investigating violations of, or enforcing state law. | |
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| |
1 | (n) On or before the fifteenth day of the month following the end of each quarter of the | |
2 | fiscal year, the department of health and the department of business regulation shall report to the | |
3 | governor, the speaker of the House of Representatives, and the president of the senate on | |
4 | applications for the use of marijuana for symptom relief. The report shall provide: | |
5 | (1) The number of applications for registration as a qualifying patient, primary caregiver, | |
6 | or authorized purchaser that have been made to the department of health and the department of | |
7 | business regulation during the preceding quarter, the number of qualifying patients, primary | |
8 | caregivers, and authorized purchasers approved, the nature of the debilitating medical conditions | |
9 | of the qualifying patients, the number of registrations revoked, and the number and specializations, | |
10 | if any, of practitioners providing written certification for qualifying patients. | |
11 | (o) On or before September 30 of each year, the department of health and the department | |
12 | of business regulation, as applicable, shall report to the governor, the speaker of the House of | |
13 | Representatives, and the president of the senate on the use of marijuana for symptom relief. The | |
14 | report shall provide: | |
15 | (1) The total number of applications for registration as a qualifying patient, primary | |
16 | caregiver, or authorized purchaser that have been made to the department of health and the | |
17 | department of business regulation, the number of qualifying patients, primary caregivers, and | |
18 | authorized purchasers approved, the nature of the debilitating medical conditions of the qualifying | |
19 | patients, the number of registrations revoked, and the number and specializations, if any, of | |
20 | practitioners providing written certification for qualifying patients; | |
21 | (2) The number of active qualifying patient, primary caregiver, and authorized purchaser | |
22 | registrations as of June 30 of the preceding fiscal year; | |
23 | (3) An evaluation of the costs permitting the use of marijuana for symptom relief, including | |
24 | any costs to law enforcement agencies and costs of any litigation; | |
25 | (4) Statistics regarding the number of marijuana-related prosecutions against registered | |
26 | patients and caregivers, and an analysis of the facts underlying those prosecutions; | |
27 | (5) Statistics regarding the number of prosecutions against physicians for violations of this | |
28 | chapter; and | |
29 | (6) Whether the United States Food and Drug Administration has altered its position | |
30 | regarding the use of marijuana for medical purposes or has approved alternative delivery systems | |
31 | for marijuana. | |
32 | (p) After June 30, 2018, the department of business regulation shall report to the speaker | |
33 | of the house, senate president, the respective fiscal committee chairpersons, and fiscal advisors | |
34 | within 60 days of the close of the prior fiscal year. The report shall provide: | |
|
| |
1 | (1) The number of applications for registry identification cards to compassion center staff, | |
2 | the number approved, denied and the number of registry identification cards revoked, and the | |
3 | number of replacement cards issued; | |
4 | (2) The number of applications for compassion centers and licensed cultivators; | |
5 | (3) The number of marijuana plant tag sets ordered, delivered, and currently held within | |
6 | the state; | |
7 | (4) The total revenue collections of any monies related to its regulator activities for the | |
8 | prior fiscal year, by the relevant category of collection, including enumerating specifically the total | |
9 | amount of revenues foregone or fees paid at reduced rates pursuant to this chapter. | |
10 | 21-28.6-7. Scope of chapter. | |
11 | (a) This chapter shall not permit: | |
12 | (1) Any person to undertake any task under the influence of marijuana, when doing so | |
13 | would constitute negligence or professional malpractice; | |
14 | (2) The smoking of marijuana: | |
15 | (i) In a school bus or other form of public transportation; | |
16 | (ii) On any school grounds; | |
17 | (iii) In any correctional facility; | |
18 | (iv) In any public place; | |
19 | (v) In any licensed drug treatment facility in this state; or | |
20 | (vi) Where exposure to the marijuana smoke significantly adversely affects the health, | |
21 | safety, or welfare of children. | |
22 | (3) Any person to operate, navigate, or be in actual physical control of any motor vehicle, | |
23 | aircraft, or motorboat while under the influence of marijuana. However, a registered qualifying | |
24 | patient shall not be considered to be under the influence solely for having marijuana metabolites in | |
25 | his or her system. | |
26 | (4) The operation of a medical marijuana emporium, which is expressly prohibited. | |
27 | (b) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to require: | |
28 | (1) A government medical assistance program or private health insurer or workers' | |
29 | compensation insurer, workers' compensation group self-insurer or employer self-insured for | |
30 | workers' compensation under § 28-36-1 to reimburse a person for costs associated with the medical | |
31 | use of marijuana; or | |
32 | (2) An employer to accommodate the medical use of marijuana in any workplace. | |
33 | (c) Fraudulent representation to a law enforcement official of any fact or circumstance | |
34 | relating to the medical use of marijuana to avoid arrest or prosecution shall be punishable by a fine | |
|
| |
1 | of five hundred dollars ($500) which shall be in addition to any other penalties that may apply for | |
2 | making a false statement for the nonmedical use of marijuana. | |
3 | 21-28.6-8. Affirmative defense and dismissal. | |
4 | (a) Except as provided in § 21-28.6-7, a qualifying patient may assert the medical purpose | |
5 | for using marijuana as a defense to any prosecution involving marijuana, and such defense shall be | |
6 | presumed valid where the evidence shows that: | |
7 | (1) The qualifying patient's practitioner has stated that, in the practitioner's professional | |
8 | opinion, after having completed a full assessment of the person's medical history and current | |
9 | medical condition made in the course of a bona fide practitioner-patient relationship, the potential | |
10 | benefits of using marijuana for medical purposes would likely outweigh the health risks for the | |
11 | qualifying patient; and | |
12 | (2) The qualifying patient was compliant with this chapter and all regulations promulgated | |
13 | hereunder and in possession of a quantity of marijuana that was not more than what is permitted | |
14 | under this chapter to ensure the uninterrupted availability of marijuana for the purpose of alleviating | |
15 | the person's medical condition or symptoms associated with the medical condition. | |
16 | (b) A person may assert the medical purpose for using marijuana in a motion to dismiss, | |
17 | and the charges shall be dismissed following an evidentiary hearing where the defendant shows the | |
18 | elements listed in subsection (a) of this section. | |
19 | (c) Any interest in, or right to, property that was possessed, owned, or used in connection | |
20 | with a qualifying patient's use of marijuana for medical purposes shall not be forfeited if the | |
21 | qualifying patient demonstrates the qualifying patient's medical purpose for using marijuana | |
22 | pursuant to this section. | |
23 | 21-28.6-9. Enforcement. | |
24 | (a) If the department of health fails to adopt regulations to implement this chapter within | |
25 | one hundred twenty (120) days of the effective date of this act, a qualifying patient may commence | |
26 | an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to compel the department to perform the actions | |
27 | mandated pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. | |
28 | (b) If the department of health or the department of business regulation fails to issue a valid | |
29 | registry identification card in response to a valid application submitted pursuant to this chapter | |
30 | within thirty-five (35) days of its submission, the registry identification card shall be deemed | |
31 | granted and a copy of the registry identification application shall be deemed a valid registry | |
32 | identification card. | |
33 | (c) The department of health and the department of business regulation shall revoke and | |
34 | shall not reissue, the registry identification card of any cardholder or licensee who is convicted of; | |
|
| |
1 | placed on probation; whose case is filed pursuant to § 12-10-12 where the defendant pleads nolo | |
2 | contendere; or whose case is deferred pursuant to § 12-19-19 where the defendant pleads nolo | |
3 | contendere for any felony offense under chapter 28 of title 21 ("Rhode Island Controlled Substances | |
4 | Act") or a similar offense from any other jurisdiction. | |
5 | (d) If a cardholder exceeds the possession limits set forth in §§ 21-28.6-4 or 21-28.6-14, or | |
6 | is in violation of any other section of this chapter or the regulations promulgated hereunder, he or | |
7 | she shall may be subject to arrest and prosecution under chapter 28 of title 21 ("Rhode Island | |
8 | Controlled Substances Act"). | |
9 | (e)(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, if the director of the department | |
10 | of business regulation or his or her designee has cause to believe that a violation of any provision | |
11 | of chapter 28.6 of title 21 or the regulations promulgated thereunder has occurred by a licensee or | |
12 | registrant under the department's jurisdiction, or that any person or entity is conducting any | |
13 | activities requiring licensure or registration by the department of business regulation under chapter | |
14 | 28.6 of title 21 or the regulations promulgated thereunder without such licensure or registration, or | |
15 | is otherwise violating any provisions of said chapter, the director or his or her designee may, in | |
16 | accordance with the requirements of the administrative procedures act, chapter 35 of title 42: | |
17 | (i) With the exception of patient and authorized purchaser registrations, revoke or suspend | |
18 | any license or registration issued under chapters 26 of title 2 or 28.6 of title 21; | |
19 | (ii) Levy an administrative penalty in an amount established pursuant to regulations | |
20 | promulgated by the department of business regulation; | |
21 | (iii) Order the violator to cease and desist such actions; | |
22 | (iv) Require a licensee or registrant or person or entity conducting any activities requiring | |
23 | licensure or registration under chapter 28.6 of title 21 to take such actions as are necessary to | |
24 | comply with such chapter and the regulations promulgated thereunder; or | |
25 | (v) Any combination of the above penalties. | |
26 | (2) If the director of the department of business regulation finds that public health, safety, | |
27 | or welfare imperatively requires emergency action, and incorporates a finding to that effect in his | |
28 | or her order, summary suspension of license or registration and/or cease and desist may be ordered | |
29 | pending proceedings for revocation or other action. These proceedings shall be promptly instituted | |
30 | and determined. | |
31 | (f) All cannabis products that are held for sale or distribution within the borders of this state | |
32 | in violation of the requirements of this chapter are declared to be contraband goods and may be | |
33 | seized by the department of business regulation, the tax administrator or his or her agents, or | |
34 | employees, or by any sheriff, or his or her deputy, or any police officer when requested by the tax | |
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| |
1 | administrator or the department of business regulation to do so, without a warrant. All contraband | |
2 | goods seized by the state under this chapter may be destroyed. | |
3 | 21-28.6-12. Compassion centers. | |
4 | (a) A compassion center registered licensed under this section may acquire, possess, | |
5 | cultivate, manufacture, deliver, transfer, transport, supply, or dispense medical marijuana, or | |
6 | related supplies and educational materials, to registered qualifying patients and their registered | |
7 | primary caregivers or authorized purchasers, or out of state patient cardholders or other marijuana | |
8 | establishment licensees. Except as specifically provided to the contrary, all provisions of chapter | |
9 | 28.6 of title 21 (the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act), apply to a | |
10 | compassion center unless they the provision(s) conflict with a provision contained in § 21-28.6-12. | |
11 | (b) Registration License of compassion centers–authority of the departments of health and | |
12 | business regulation: | |
13 | (1) Not later than ninety (90) days after the effective date of this chapter, the department | |
14 | of health shall promulgate regulations governing the manner in which it shall consider applications | |
15 | for registration certificates licenses for compassion centers, including regulations governing: | |
16 | (i) The form and content of registration license and renewal applications; | |
17 | (ii) Minimum oversight requirements for compassion centers; | |
18 | (iii) Minimum record-keeping requirements for compassion centers; | |
19 | (iv) Minimum security requirements for compassion centers; and | |
20 | (v) Procedures for suspending, revoking, or terminating the registration license of | |
21 | compassion centers that violate the provisions of this section or the regulations promulgated | |
22 | pursuant to this subsection. | |
23 | (2) Within ninety (90) days of the effective date of this chapter, the department of health | |
24 | shall begin accepting applications for the operation of a single compassion center. | |
25 | (3) Within one hundred fifty (150) days of the effective date of this chapter, the department | |
26 | of health shall provide for at least one public hearing on the granting of an application to a single | |
27 | compassion center. | |
28 | (4) Within one hundred ninety (190) days of the effective date of this chapter, the | |
29 | department of health shall grant a single registration certificate license to a single compassion | |
30 | center, providing at least one applicant has applied who meets the requirements of this chapter. | |
31 | (5) If at any time after fifteen (15) months after the effective date of this chapter, there is | |
32 | no operational compassion center in Rhode Island, the department of health shall accept | |
33 | applications, provide for input from the public, and issue a registration certificate license for a | |
34 | compassion center if a qualified applicant exists. | |
|
| |
1 | (6) Within two (2) years of the effective date of this chapter, the department of health shall | |
2 | begin accepting applications to provide registration certificates license for two (2) additional | |
3 | compassion centers. The department shall solicit input from the public, and issue registration | |
4 | certificates licenses if qualified applicants exist. | |
5 | (7) (i) Any time a compassion center registration certificate license is revoked, is | |
6 | relinquished, or expires on or before December 31, 2016, the department of health shall accept | |
7 | applications for a new compassion center. | |
8 | (ii) Any time a compassion center registration certificate license is revoked, is relinquished, | |
9 | or expires on or after January 1, 2017, the department of business regulation shall accept | |
10 | applications for a new compassion center. | |
11 | (8)(i) If at any time after three (3) years after the effective date of this chapter and on or | |
12 | before December 31, 2016, fewer than three (3) compassion centers are holding valid registration | |
13 | certificates licenses in Rhode Island, the department of health shall accept applications for a new | |
14 | compassion center. If at any time on or after January 1, 2017, fewer than three (3) compassion | |
15 | centers are holding valid registration certificates licenses in Rhode Island, the department of | |
16 | business regulation shall accept applications for a new compassion center. No more than three (3) | |
17 | There shall be nine (9) compassion centers that may hold valid registration certificates licenses at | |
18 | one time. If at any time on or after July 1, 2019, fewer than nine (9) compassion centers are holding | |
19 | valid licenses in Rhode Island, the department of business regulation shall accept applications for | |
20 | new compassion centers and shall continue the process until nine (9) licenses have been issued by | |
21 | the department of business regulation. | |
22 | (9) Any compassion center application selected for approval by the department of health | |
23 | on or before December 31, 2016, or selected for approval by the department of business regulation | |
24 | on or after January 1, 2017, shall remain in full force and effect, notwithstanding any provisions of | |
25 | this chapter to the contrary, and shall be subject to state law adopted herein and rules and regulations | |
26 | adopted by the departments of health and business regulation subsequent to passage of this | |
27 | legislation. | |
28 | (10) A licensed cultivator may apply for, and be issued, an available compassion center | |
29 | license provided that the licensed cultivation premises is disclosed on the compassion center | |
30 | application as the permitted second location for growing medical marijuana in accordance with § | |
31 | 21-28.6-12(c)(1). If a licensed cultivator is issued an available compassion center license, their | |
32 | cultivation facility license will merge with and into their compassion center license in accordance | |
33 | with regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation. Once merged, the | |
34 | cultivation of medical marijuana may then be conducted under the compassion center license in | |
|
| |
1 | accordance with § 21-28.6-12 and the cultivation license will be considered null and void and of | |
2 | no further force or effect. | |
3 | (c) Compassion center and agent applications and registration license: | |
4 | (1) Each application for a compassion center shall include be submitted in accordance with | |
5 | regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation and shall include, but not be | |
6 | limited to: | |
7 | (i) A non-refundable application fee paid to the department in the amount of two hundred | |
8 | fifty dollars ($250) ten thousand dollars ($10,000); | |
9 | (ii) The proposed legal name and proposed articles of incorporation of the compassion | |
10 | center; | |
11 | (iii) The proposed physical address of the compassion center, if a precise address has been | |
12 | determined, or, if not, the general location where it would be located. this may include a second | |
13 | location for the cultivation of medical marijuana; | |
14 | (iv) A description of the enclosed, locked facility that would be used in the cultivation of | |
15 | medical marijuana; | |
16 | (v) The name, address, and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of the | |
17 | compassion center; | |
18 | (vi) Proposed security and safety measures that shall include at least one security alarm | |
19 | system for each location, planned measures to deter and prevent the unauthorized entrance into | |
20 | areas containing marijuana and the theft of marijuana, as well as a draft, employee-instruction | |
21 | manual including security policies, safety and security procedures, personal safety, and crime- | |
22 | prevention techniques; and | |
23 | (vii) Proposed procedures to ensure accurate record keeping; | |
24 | (2)(i) For applications submitted on or before December 31, 2016, any time one or more | |
25 | compassion center registration license applications are being considered, the department of health | |
26 | shall also allow for comment by the public and shall solicit input from registered qualifying | |
27 | patients, registered primary caregivers; and the towns or cities where the applicants would be | |
28 | located; | |
29 | (ii) For applications submitted on or after January 1, 2017, any time one or more | |
30 | compassion center registration license applications are being considered, the department of | |
31 | business regulation shall also allow for comment by the public and shall solicit input from | |
32 | registered qualifying patients, registered primary caregivers; and the towns or cities where the | |
33 | applicants would be located. | |
34 | (3) Each time a new compassion center certificate license is granted issued, the decision | |
|
| |
1 | shall be based upon the overall health needs of qualified patients and the safety of the public, | |
2 | including, but not limited to, the following factors: | |
3 | (i) Convenience to patients from areas throughout the state of Rhode Island. to the | |
4 | compassion centers if the applicant were approved; | |
5 | (ii) The applicant's ability to provide a steady supply to the registered qualifying patients | |
6 | in the state; | |
7 | (iii) The applicant's experience running a non-profit or business; | |
8 | (iv) The interests of qualifying patients regarding which applicant be granted a registration | |
9 | certificate license; | |
10 | (v) The interests of the city or town where the dispensary would be located taking into | |
11 | consideration need and population; | |
12 | (vi) Nothing herein shall prohibit more than one compassion center being geographically | |
13 | located in any city or town. | |
14 | (vi)(vii) The sufficiency of the applicant's plans for record keeping and security, which | |
15 | records shall be considered confidential health-care information under Rhode Island law and are | |
16 | intended to be deemed protected health-care information for purposes of the Federal Health | |
17 | Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, as amended; and | |
18 | (vii)(viii) The sufficiency of the applicant's plans for safety and security, including | |
19 | proposed location, security devices employed, and staffing; | |
20 | (4) A compassion center approved by the department of health on or before December 31, | |
21 | 2016, shall submit the following to the department before it may begin operations: | |
22 | (i) A fee paid to the department in the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000); | |
23 | (ii) The legal name and articles of incorporation of the compassion center; | |
24 | (iii) The physical address of the compassion center; this may include a second address for | |
25 | the secure cultivation of marijuana; | |
26 | (iv) The name, address, and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of the | |
27 | compassion center; and | |
28 | (v) The name, address, and date of birth of any person who will be an agent of, employee, | |
29 | or volunteer of the compassion center at its inception. | |
30 | (5)(i) A compassion center approved or renewed by the department of business regulation | |
31 | on or after January 1, 2017 but before July 1, 2019, shall submit materials pursuant to regulations | |
32 | promulgated by the department of business regulation the following to the department before it | |
33 | may begin operations: | |
34 | (i)(A) A fee paid to the department in the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000); | |
|
| |
1 | (ii)(B) The legal name and articles of incorporation of the compassion center; | |
2 | (iii)(C) The physical address of the compassion center; this may include a second address | |
3 | for the secure cultivation of medical marijuana | |
4 | (iv)(D) The name, address, and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of | |
5 | the compassion center; | |
6 | (v)(E) The name, address, and date of birth of any person who will be an agent of, | |
7 | employee, or volunteer of the compassion center at its inception. | |
8 | (ii) A compassion center approved or renewed by the department of business regulation on | |
9 | or after July 1, 2019, shall submit materials pursuant to regulations promulgated by the department | |
10 | of business regulation before it may begin operations which shall include but not be limited to: | |
11 | (A) A fee paid to the department in the amount of five hundred thousand dollars | |
12 | ($500,000); | |
13 | (B) The legal name and articles of incorporation of the compassion center; | |
14 | (C) The physical address of the compassion center; this may include a second address for | |
15 | the secure cultivation of medical marijuana; | |
16 | (D) The name, address, and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of the | |
17 | compassion center, and any person who has a direct or indirect ownership interest in any marijuana | |
18 | establishment licensee, which ownership interest shall include, but not be limited to, any interests | |
19 | arising pursuant to the use of shared management companies, management agreements or other | |
20 | agreements that afford third party management or operational control, or other familial or business | |
21 | relationships between compassion center or cultivator owners, members, officers, directors, | |
22 | managers, investors, agents, or key persons which effect dual license interests as determined by the | |
23 | department of business regulation; | |
24 | (E) The name, address, and date of birth of any person who will be an agent of, employee, | |
25 | or volunteer of the compassion center at its inception; and | |
26 | (6) Except as provided in subdivision (7), the department of health or the department of | |
27 | business regulation shall issue each principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, and | |
28 | employee of a compassion center a registry identification card or renewal card after receipt of the | |
29 | person's name, address, date of birth; a fee in an amount established by the department of health or | |
30 | the department of business regulation; and, except in the case of an employee, notification to the | |
31 | department of health or the department of business regulation by the department of public safety | |
32 | division of state police, attorney general's office, or local law enforcement that the registry | |
33 | identification card applicant has not been convicted of a felony drug offense or has not entered a | |
34 | plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense and received a sentence of probation. Each card | |
|
| |
1 | shall specify that the cardholder is a principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee | |
2 | of a compassion center and shall contain the following: | |
3 | (i) The name, address, and date of birth of the principal officer, board member, agent, | |
4 | volunteer, or employee; | |
5 | (ii) The legal name of the compassion center to which the principal officer, board member, | |
6 | agent, volunteer, or employee is affiliated; | |
7 | (iii) A random identification number that is unique to the cardholder; | |
8 | (iv) The date of issuance and expiration date of the registry identification card; and | |
9 | (v) A photograph, if the department of health or the department of business regulation | |
10 | decides to require one; and | |
11 | (7) Except as provided in this subsection, neither the department of health nor the | |
12 | department of business regulation shall issue a registry identification card to any principal officer, | |
13 | board member, or agent, volunteer, or employee of a compassion center who has been convicted | |
14 | of a felony drug offense or has entered a plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense and | |
15 | received a sentence of probation. If a registry identification card is denied, the compassion center | |
16 | will be notified in writing of the purpose for denying the registry identification card. A registry | |
17 | identification card may be granted if the offense was for conduct that occurred prior to the | |
18 | enactment of the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act or that was | |
19 | prosecuted by an authority other than the state of Rhode Island and for which the Edward O. | |
20 | Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act would otherwise have prevented a | |
21 | conviction. | |
22 | (i) All registry identification card applicants shall apply to the department of public safety | |
23 | division of state police, the attorney general's office, or local law enforcement for a national | |
24 | criminal identification records check that shall include fingerprints submitted to the federal bureau | |
25 | of investigation. Upon the discovery of a felony drug offense conviction or a plea of nolo | |
26 | contendere for a felony drug offense with a sentence of probation, and in accordance with the rules | |
27 | promulgated by the department of health and the department of business regulation, the department | |
28 | of public safety division of state police, the attorney general's office, or local law enforcement shall | |
29 | inform the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the felony and the department of public safety | |
30 | division of state police shall notify the department of health or the department of business | |
31 | regulation, in writing, without disclosing the nature of the felony, that a felony drug offense | |
32 | conviction or a plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense with probation has been found. | |
33 | (ii) In those situations in which no felony drug offense conviction or plea of nolo | |
34 | contendere for a felony drug offense with probation has been found, the department of public safety | |
|
| |
1 | division of state police, the attorney general's office, or local law enforcement shall inform the | |
2 | applicant and the department of health or the department of business regulation, in writing, of this | |
3 | fact. | |
4 | (iii) All registry identification card applicants except for employees with no ownership, | |
5 | equity, financial interest, or managing control of a marijuana establishment license shall be | |
6 | responsible for any expense associated with the criminal background check with fingerprints. | |
7 | (8) A registry identification card of a principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or | |
8 | employee, or any other designation required by the department of business regulation shall expire | |
9 | one year after its issuance, or upon the expiration of the registered licensed organization's | |
10 | registration certificate license, or upon the termination of the principal officer, board member, | |
11 | agent, volunteer or employee's relationship with the compassion center, whichever occurs first. | |
12 | (9) A compassion center cardholder shall notify and request approval from the department | |
13 | of business regulation of any change in his or her name or address within ten (10) days of such | |
14 | change. A compassion center cardholder who fails to notify the department of business regulation | |
15 | of any of these changes is responsible for a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of no more than | |
16 | one hundred fifty dollars ($150). | |
17 | (10) When a compassion center cardholder notifies the department of health or the | |
18 | department of business regulation of any changes listed in this subsection, the department shall | |
19 | issue the cardholder a new registry identification card within ten (10) days of receiving the updated | |
20 | information and a ten-dollar ($10.00) fee. | |
21 | (11) If a compassion center cardholder loses his or her registry identification card, he or | |
22 | she shall notify the department of health or the department of business regulation and submit a ten | |
23 | dollar ($10.00) fee within ten (10) days of losing the card. Within five (5) days, the department | |
24 | shall issue a new registry identification card with new random identification number. | |
25 | (12) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center cardholder shall notify the | |
26 | department of health of any disqualifying criminal convictions as defined in subdivision (c)(7). The | |
27 | department of health may choose to suspend and/or revoke his or her registry identification card | |
28 | after such notification. | |
29 | (13) On or after January 1, 2017, a compassion center cardholder shall notify the | |
30 | department of business regulation of any disqualifying criminal convictions as defined in | |
31 | subdivision (c)(7). The department of business regulation may choose to suspend and/or revoke his | |
32 | or her registry identification card after such notification. | |
33 | (14) If a compassion center cardholder violates any provision of this chapter or regulations | |
34 | promulgated hereunder as determined by the departments of health and business regulation, his or | |
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| |
1 | her registry identification card may be suspended and/or revoked. | |
2 | (d) Expiration or termination of compassion center: | |
3 | (1) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center's registration license shall expire | |
4 | two (2) years after its registration certificate license is issued. On or after January 1, 2017, a | |
5 | compassion center's registration license shall expire one year after its registration certificate license | |
6 | is issued. The compassion center may submit a renewal application beginning sixty (60) days prior | |
7 | to the expiration of its registration certificate license; | |
8 | (2) The department of health or the department of business regulation shall grant a | |
9 | compassion center's renewal application within thirty (30) days of its submission if the following | |
10 | conditions are all satisfied: | |
11 | (i) The compassion center submits the materials required under subdivisions (c)(4) and | |
12 | (c)(5), including a two hundred fifty thousand dollar ($250,000) fee a five hundred thousand dollar | |
13 | ($500,000) fee; | |
14 | (ii) The compassion center's registration license has never been suspended for violations | |
15 | of this chapter or regulations issued pursuant to this chapter; and | |
16 | (iii) The department of health and the department of business regulation find that the | |
17 | compassion center is adequately providing patients with access to medical marijuana at reasonable | |
18 | rates; | |
19 | (3) If the department of health or the department of business regulation determines that any | |
20 | of the conditions listed in paragraphs (d)(2)(i) – (iii) have not been met, the department shall may | |
21 | begin an open application process for the operation of a compassion center. In granting a new | |
22 | registration certificate license, the department of health or the department of business regulation | |
23 | shall consider factors listed in subdivision (c)(3); | |
24 | (4) The department of health or the department of business regulation shall issue a | |
25 | compassion center one or more thirty-day (30) temporary registration certificates licenses after that | |
26 | compassion center's registration license would otherwise expire if the following conditions are all | |
27 | satisfied: | |
28 | (i) The compassion center previously applied for a renewal, but the department had not yet | |
29 | come to a decision; | |
30 | (ii) The compassion center requested a temporary registration certificate license; and | |
31 | (iii) The compassion center has not had its registration certificate license suspended or | |
32 | revoked due to violations of this chapter or regulations issued pursuant to this chapter. | |
33 | (5) A compassion center's registry identification card license shall be denied, suspended, | |
34 | or subject to revocation if the compassion center: | |
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| |
1 | (i) Possesses an amount of marijuana exceeding the limits established by this chapter; | |
2 | (ii) Is in violation of the laws of this state; | |
3 | (iii) Is in violation of other departmental regulations; or | |
4 | (iv) Employs or enters into a business relationship with a medical practitioner who provides | |
5 | written certification of a qualifying patient's medical condition. | |
6 | (v) If any compassion center owner, member, officer, director, manager, investor, agent, | |
7 | or key person as defined in regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation, has | |
8 | any interest, direct or indirect, in another compassion center or another licensed cultivator, except | |
9 | as permitted in § 21-28.6-12(b)(10). Prohibited interests shall also include interests arising pursuant | |
10 | to the use of shared management companies, management agreements or other agreements that | |
11 | afford third party management or operational control, or other familial or business relationships | |
12 | between compassion center or cultivator owners, members, officers, directors, managers, investors, | |
13 | agents, or key persons which effect dual license interests as determined by the department of | |
14 | business regulation. | |
15 | (e) Inspection. Compassion centers are subject to reasonable inspection by the department | |
16 | of health, division of facilities regulation and the department of business regulation. During an | |
17 | inspection, the departments may review the compassion center's confidential records, including its | |
18 | dispensing records, which shall track transactions according to qualifying patients' registry | |
19 | identification numbers to protect their confidentiality. | |
20 | (f) Compassion center requirements: | |
21 | (1) A compassion center shall be operated on a not-for-profit basis for the mutual benefit | |
22 | of its patients. A compassion center need not be recognized as a tax-exempt organization by the | |
23 | Internal Revenue Service;. A compassion center shall be subject to regulations promulgated by the | |
24 | department of business regulation for general operations and record keeping which shall include, | |
25 | but not be limited to: | |
26 | (i) Minimum security and surveillance requirements; | |
27 | (ii) Minimum requirements for workplace safety and sanitation; | |
28 | (iii) Minimum requirements for product safety and testing; | |
29 | (iv) Minimum requirements for inventory tracking and monitoring; | |
30 | (v) Minimum requirements for the secure transport and transfer of medical marijuana; | |
31 | (vi) Minimum requirements to address odor mitigation; | |
32 | (vii) Minimum requirements for product packaging and labeling; | |
33 | (viii) Minimum requirements and prohibitions for advertising; | |
34 | (ix) Minimum requirements for the testing and destruction of marijuana. Wherever | |
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1 | destruction of medical marijuana and medical marijuana product is required to bring a person or | |
2 | entity into compliance with any provision of chapter 28.6 of title 21, any rule or regulation | |
3 | promulgated thereunder, or any administrative order issued in accordance therewith, the director of | |
4 | the department of business regulation may designate his or her employees or agents to facilitate | |
5 | said destruction; | |
6 | (x) A requirement that if a compassion center violates this chapter, or any regulation | |
7 | thereunder, and the department of business regulation determines that violation does not pose an | |
8 | immediate threat to public health or public safety, the compassion center shall pay to the department | |
9 | of business regulation a fine of no less than five-hundred dollars ($500); and | |
10 | (xi) A requirement that if a compassion center violates this chapter, or any regulation | |
11 | promulgated hereunder, and the department of business regulation determines that the violation | |
12 | poses an immediate threat to public health or public safety, the compassion center shall pay to the | |
13 | department of business regulation a fine of no less than two-thousand dollars ($2,000) and the | |
14 | department shall be entitled to pursue any other enforcement action provided for under this chapter | |
15 | and the regulations. | |
16 | (2) A compassion center may not be located within one thousand feet (1000') of the | |
17 | property line of a preexisting public or private school; | |
18 | (3) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center shall notify the department of | |
19 | health within ten (10) days of when a principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or | |
20 | employee ceases to work at the compassion center. On or after January 1, 2017, a compassion | |
21 | center shall notify the department of business regulation within ten (10) days of when a principal | |
22 | officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee ceases to work at the compassion center. His | |
23 | or her card shall be deemed null and void and the person shall be liable for any penalties that may | |
24 | apply to any nonmedical possession or use of marijuana by the person; | |
25 | (4)(i) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center shall notify the department of | |
26 | health in writing of the name, address, and date of birth of any new principal officer, board member, | |
27 | agent, volunteer or employee and shall submit a fee in an amount established by the department for | |
28 | a new registry identification card before that person begins his or her relationship with the | |
29 | compassion center; | |
30 | (ii) On or after January 1, 2017, a compassion center shall notify the department of business | |
31 | regulation, in writing, of the name, address, and date of birth of any new principal officer, board | |
32 | member, agent, volunteer, or employee and shall submit a fee in an amount established by the | |
33 | department of business regulation for a new registry identification card before that person begins | |
34 | his or her relationship with the compassion center; | |
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1 | (5) A compassion center shall implement appropriate security measures to deter and | |
2 | prevent the unauthorized entrance into areas containing marijuana and the theft of marijuana and | |
3 | shall insure that each location has an operational security alarm system. Each compassion center | |
4 | shall request that the department of public safety division of state police visit the compassion center | |
5 | to inspect the security of the facility and make any recommendations regarding the security of the | |
6 | facility and its personnel within ten (10) days prior to the initial opening of each compassion center. | |
7 | Said recommendations shall not be binding upon any compassion center, nor shall the lack of | |
8 | implementation of said recommendations delay or prevent the opening or operation of any center. | |
9 | If the department of public safety division of state police does not inspect the compassion center | |
10 | within the ten-day (10) period, there shall be no delay in the compassion center's opening. | |
11 | (6) The operating documents of a compassion center shall include procedures for the | |
12 | oversight of the compassion center and procedures to ensure accurate record keeping. | |
13 | (7) A compassion center is prohibited from acquiring, possessing, cultivating, | |
14 | manufacturing, delivering, transferring, transporting, supplying, or dispensing marijuana for any | |
15 | purpose except to assist registered qualifying patients patient cardholders with the medical use of | |
16 | marijuana directly or through the qualifying patient's primary caregiver or authorized purchaser. | |
17 | (8) All principal officers and board members of a compassion center must be residents of | |
18 | the state of Rhode Island. | |
19 | (9) Each time a new, registered, qualifying patient visits a compassion center, it shall | |
20 | provide the patient with a frequently asked questions sheet, designed by the department, that | |
21 | explains the limitations on the right to use medical marijuana under state law. | |
22 | (10) Effective July 1, 2016 2017, each compassion center shall be subject to any regulations | |
23 | promulgated by the departments department of health and business regulation that specify how | |
24 | usable marijuana must be tested for items included but not limited to cannabinoid profile and | |
25 | contaminants. | |
26 | (11) Effective January 1, 2017, each compassion center shall be subject to any product | |
27 | labeling requirements promulgated by the department of business regulation. | |
28 | (12) Each compassion center shall develop, implement, and maintain on the premises | |
29 | employee, volunteer, and agent policies and procedures to address the following requirements: | |
30 | (i) A job description or employment contract developed for all employees and agents, and | |
31 | a volunteer agreement for all volunteers, that includes duties, authority, responsibilities, | |
32 | qualifications, and supervision; and | |
33 | (ii) Training in, and adherence to, state confidentiality laws. | |
34 | (13) Each compassion center shall maintain a personnel record for each employee, agent, | |
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| |
1 | and volunteer that includes an application and a record of any disciplinary action taken. | |
2 | (14) Each compassion center shall develop, implement, and maintain on the premises an | |
3 | on-site training curriculum, or enter into contractual relationships with outside resources capable | |
4 | of meeting employee training needs, that includes, but is not limited to, the following topics: | |
5 | (i) Professional conduct, ethics, and patient confidentiality; and | |
6 | (ii) Informational developments in the field of medical use of marijuana. | |
7 | (15) Each compassion center entity shall provide each employee, agent, and volunteer, at | |
8 | the time of his or her initial appointment, training in the following: | |
9 | (i) The proper use of security measures and controls that have been adopted; and | |
10 | (ii) Specific procedural instructions on how to respond to an emergency, including robbery | |
11 | or violent accident. | |
12 | (16) All compassion centers shall prepare training documentation for each employee and | |
13 | volunteer and have employees and volunteers sign a statement indicating the date, time, and place | |
14 | the employee and volunteer received said training and topics discussed, to include name and title | |
15 | of presenters. The compassion center shall maintain documentation of an employee's and a | |
16 | volunteer's training for a period of at least six (6) months after termination of an employee's | |
17 | employment or the volunteer's volunteering. | |
18 | (g) Maximum amount of usable marijuana to be dispensed: | |
19 | (1) A compassion center or principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee | |
20 | of a compassion center may not dispense more than two and one-half (2.5) ounces (2.5 oz.) of | |
21 | usable marijuana, or its equivalent, to a qualifying patient directly or through a qualifying patient's | |
22 | primary caregiver or authorized purchaser during a fifteen-day (15) period; | |
23 | (2) A compassion center or principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee | |
24 | of a compassion center may not dispense an amount of usable marijuana, or its equivalent, | |
25 | seedlings, or mature marijuana plants, to a patient cardholder, qualifying patient, a qualifying | |
26 | patient's primary caregiver, or a qualifying patient's authorized purchaser that the compassion | |
27 | center, principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee knows would cause the | |
28 | recipient to possess more marijuana than is permitted under the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas | |
29 | C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act. | |
30 | (3) Compassion centers shall utilize a database administered by the departments of health | |
31 | and business regulation. The database shall contains contain all compassion centers' transactions | |
32 | according to qualifying patients, authorized purchasers', and primary caregivers', registry | |
33 | identification numbers to protect the confidentiality of patient personal and medical information. | |
34 | Compassion centers will not have access to any applications or supporting information submitted | |
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| |
1 | by qualifying patients, authorized purchasers or primary caregivers. Before dispensing marijuana | |
2 | to any patient, or authorized purchaser, the compassion center must utilize the database to ensure | |
3 | that a qualifying patient is not dispensed more than two and one-half (2.5) ounces (2.5 oz.) of usable | |
4 | marijuana or its equivalent directly or through the qualifying patient's primary caregiver or | |
5 | authorized purchaser during a fifteen-day (15) period. | |
6 | (h) Immunity: | |
7 | (1) No registered licensed compassion center shall be subject to prosecution; search, except | |
8 | by the departments pursuant to subsection (e); seizure; or penalty in any manner, or denied any | |
9 | right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business, | |
10 | occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely for acting in accordance with this | |
11 | section to assist registered qualifying patients. | |
12 | (2) No registered licensed compassion center shall be subject to prosecution, seizure, or | |
13 | penalty in any manner, or denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty | |
14 | or disciplinary action, by a business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, for | |
15 | selling, giving, or distributing marijuana in whatever form, and within the limits established by, the | |
16 | department of health or the department of business regulation to another registered compassion | |
17 | center. | |
18 | (3) No principal officers, board members, agents, volunteers, or employees of a registered | |
19 | compassion center shall be subject to arrest, prosecution, search, seizure, or penalty in any manner, | |
20 | or denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by | |
21 | a business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely for working for or with a | |
22 | compassion center to engage in acts permitted by this section. | |
23 | (4) No state employee shall be subject to arrest, prosecution or penalty in any manner, or | |
24 | denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty, disciplinary action, | |
25 | termination, or loss of employee or pension benefits, for any and all conduct that occurs within the | |
26 | scope of his or her employment regarding the administration, execution and/or enforcement of this | |
27 | act, and the provisions of §§ 9-31-8 and 9-31-9 shall be applicable to this section. | |
28 | (i) Prohibitions: | |
29 | (1) A compassion center must limit its inventory of seedlings, plants, and usable marijuana | |
30 | to reflect the projected needs of qualifying patients; | |
31 | (2) A compassion center may not dispense, deliver, or otherwise transfer marijuana to a | |
32 | person other than a patient cardholder or to such a qualified patient's primary caregiver or | |
33 | authorized purchaser; | |
34 | (3) A compassion center may not procure, purchase, transfer or sell marijuana to or from | |
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| |
1 | any entity other than a marijuana establishment licensee in accordance with the provisions of this | |
2 | chapter; | |
3 | (4) A person found to have violated paragraph (2) or (3) of this subsection may not be an | |
4 | employee, agent, volunteer, principal officer, or board member of any compassion center; | |
5 | (5) An employee, agent, volunteer, principal officer or board member of any compassion | |
6 | center found in violation of paragraph (2) or (3) shall have his or her registry identification revoked | |
7 | immediately; and | |
8 | (6) No person who has been convicted of a felony drug offense or has entered a plea of | |
9 | nolo contendere for a felony drug offense with a sentence or probation may be the principal officer, | |
10 | board member, or agent, volunteer, or employee of a compassion center unless the department has | |
11 | determined that the person's conviction was for the medical use of marijuana or assisting with the | |
12 | medical use of marijuana in accordance with the terms and conditions of this chapter. A person | |
13 | who is employed by or is an agent, volunteer, principal officer, or board member of a compassion | |
14 | center in violation of this section is guilty of a civil violation punishable by a fine of up to one | |
15 | thousand dollars ($1,000). A subsequent violation of this section is a misdemeanor. | |
16 | (j) Legislative oversight committee: | |
17 | (1) The general assembly shall appoint a nine-member (9) oversight committee comprised | |
18 | of: one member of the house of representatives; one member of the senate; one physician to be | |
19 | selected from a list provided by the Rhode Island medical society; one nurse to be selected from a | |
20 | list provided by the Rhode Island state nurses association; two (2) registered qualifying patients; | |
21 | one registered primary caregiver; one patient advocate to be selected from a list provided by the | |
22 | Rhode Island patient advocacy coalition; and the superintendent of the department of public safety, | |
23 | or his/her designee. | |
24 | (2) The oversight committee shall meet at least six (6) times per year for the purpose of | |
25 | evaluating and making recommendations to the general assembly regarding: | |
26 | (i) Patients' access to medical marijuana; | |
27 | (ii) Efficacy of compassion centers; | |
28 | (iii) Physician participation in the Medical Marijuana Program; | |
29 | (iv) The definition of qualifying medical condition; and | |
30 | (v) Research studies regarding health effects of medical marijuana for patients. | |
31 | (3) On or before January 1 of every even numbered year, the oversight committee shall | |
32 | report to the general assembly on its findings. | |
33 | (k) License required. No person or entity shall engage in activities described in § 21-28.6- | |
34 | 12 without a compassion center license issued by the department of business regulation. | |
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| |
1 | 21-28.6-14. Cooperative cultivations. | |
2 | (a) Two (2) or more qualifying cardholders may cooperatively cultivate marijuana in | |
3 | residential or non-residential locations subject to the following restrictions: | |
4 | (1) Effective January 1, 2017, cooperative cultivations shall apply to the department of | |
5 | business regulation for a license to operate; | |
6 | (2) A registered patient or primary caregiver cardholder can only cultivate in one location, | |
7 | including participation in a cooperative cultivation; | |
8 | (3) No single location may have more than one cooperative cultivation. For the purposes | |
9 | of this section, location means one structural building, not units within a structural building; | |
10 | (4) The cooperative cultivation shall not be visible from the street or other public areas; | |
11 | (5) A written acknowledgement of the limitations of the right to use and possess marijuana | |
12 | for medical purposes in Rhode Island that is signed by each cardholder and is displayed prominently | |
13 | in the premises cooperative cultivation; | |
14 | (6) Cooperative cultivations are restricted to the following possession limits: | |
15 | (i) A non-residential, cooperative cultivation may have no more than ten (10) ounces of | |
16 | dried usable marijuana, or its equivalent which satisfies the requirements of this chapter, and an | |
17 | amount of wet marijuana set in regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation, | |
18 | forty-eight (48) mature marijuana plants, and forty-eight (48) seedlings; | |
19 | (ii) A residential, cooperative cultivation may have no more than ten (10) ounces of dried | |
20 | useable marijuana, or its equivalent which satisfies the requirements of this chapter, and an amount | |
21 | of wet marijuana set in regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation, twenty- | |
22 | four (24) mature marijuana plants, and twenty-four (24) seedlings; | |
23 | (iii) A non-residential or residential, cooperative cultivation must have displayed | |
24 | prominently on the premises its license issued by the department of business regulation; | |
25 | (iv) Every marijuana plant possessed by a cooperative cultivation must be accompanied by | |
26 | a valid medical marijuana tag issued by the department of business regulation pursuant to § 21- | |
27 | 28.6-15. Each cooperative cultivation must purchase at least one medical marijuana tag in order to | |
28 | remain a licensed cooperative cultivation; and | |
29 | (v) Cooperative cultivations are subject to reasonable inspection by the department of | |
30 | business regulation for the purposes of enforcing regulations promulgated pursuant to this chapter | |
31 | and all applicable Rhode Island general laws. | |
32 | (7) Cooperative cultivations must be inspected as follows: | |
33 | (i) A non-residential, cooperative cultivation must have displayed prominently on the | |
34 | premises documentation from the municipality where the single location is located that the location | |
|
| |
1 | and the cultivation has been inspected by the municipal building and/or zoning official and the | |
2 | municipal fire department and is in compliance with any applicable state or municipal housing and | |
3 | zoning codes; and | |
4 | (ii) A residential, cooperative cultivation must have displayed prominently on the premises | |
5 | an affidavit by a licensed electrician that the cultivation has been inspected and is in compliance | |
6 | with any applicable state or municipal housing and zoning codes for the municipality where the | |
7 | cooperative cultivation is located. | |
8 | (8) Cooperative cultivations must report the location of the cooperative cultivation to the | |
9 | department of public safety. | |
10 | (9) The reports provided to the department of public safety in subsection (8) of this section | |
11 | shall be confidential, but locations may be confirmed for law enforcement purposes. The report of | |
12 | the location of the cooperative cultivation alone shall not constitute probable cause for a search of | |
13 | the cooperative cultivation. | |
14 | (10) The department of business regulation shall promulgate regulations governing the | |
15 | licensing and operation of cooperative cultivations, and may promulgate regulations that set a fee | |
16 | for a cooperative cultivation license. | |
17 | (b) Any violation of any provision of this chapter or regulations promulgated hereunder as | |
18 | determined by the department of business regulation may result in the revocation/suspension of the | |
19 | cooperative cultivation license. | |
20 | (c) License required. No person or entity shall engage in activities described in § 21-28.6- | |
21 | 14 without a cooperative cultivation license issued by the department of business regulation. | |
22 | (d) Effective July 1, 2019, except as to cooperative cultivator licenses issued by the | |
23 | department of business regulation before July 1, 2019, the department of business regulation shall | |
24 | no longer accept applications or renewals for licensed cooperative cultivations and cooperative | |
25 | cultivations shall no longer be permitted. | |
26 | (e) Effective July 1, 2019, not more than one registered cardholder shall be permitted to | |
27 | grow marijuana in a dwelling unit or commercial unit, except for two (2) or more qualifying patient | |
28 | or primary caregiver cardholder(s) who are primary residents of the same dwelling unit where the | |
29 | medical marijuana plants are grown and in all instances subject to the plant limits provided in § 21- | |
30 | 28.6-4(r). | |
31 | 21-28.6-15. Medical Marijuana Plant Tags. | |
32 | (a) Effective January 1, 2017, the department of business regulation shall make medical | |
33 | marijuana tag sets available for purchase. Effective April 1, 2017, every marijuana plant, either | |
34 | mature or seedling immature, grown by a registered patient or primary caregiver must be | |
|
| |
1 | accompanied by a physical medical marijuana tag purchased through the department of business | |
2 | regulation and issued by the department of health department of business regulation to qualifying | |
3 | patients and primary caregivers or by the department of business regulation to licensed cultivators. | |
4 | (1) The department of business regulation shall charge an annual fee for each medical | |
5 | marijuana tag set which shall include one tag for a mature medical marijuana plant and one tag for | |
6 | a seedling an immature plant. If the required fee has not been paid, those medical marijuana tags | |
7 | shall be considered expired and invalid. The fee established by the department of business | |
8 | regulation shall be in accordance with the following requirements: | |
9 | (i) For patient cardholders authorized to grow medical marijuana by the department of | |
10 | health department of business regulation, the fee per tag set shall not exceed twenty-five dollars | |
11 | ($25); | |
12 | (ii) For primary caregivers, the fee per tag set shall not exceed twenty-five dollars ($25); | |
13 | (iii) For patients that qualify for reduced-registration due to income or disability status, | |
14 | there shall be no fee per tag set; | |
15 | (iv) For caregivers who provide care for a patient cardholder who qualifies for reduced- | |
16 | registration due to income or disability status, there shall be no fee per tag set for such qualifying | |
17 | patient; and | |
18 | (v) For licensed medical marijuana cultivators, the fee per tag set shall be established in | |
19 | regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation. | |
20 | (2) Effective January 1, 2017, the department of business regulation shall verify with the | |
21 | department of health that all medical marijuana tag purchases are made by qualifying patient | |
22 | cardholders or primary caregiver cardholders. The department of health shall provide this | |
23 | verification according to qualifying patients' and primary caregivers' registry identification | |
24 | numbers and without providing access to any applications or supporting information submitted by | |
25 | qualifying patients to protect patient confidentiality; | |
26 | (3) Effective January 1, 2017 and thereafter, the department of business regulation shall | |
27 | verify with the department of health that all medical marijuana tag purchases are made by registered | |
28 | patient cardholders who have notified the department of health of their election to grow medical | |
29 | marijuana or primary caregiver cardholders. The department of health shall provide this verification | |
30 | according to qualifying patients' and primary caregivers' registry identification numbers and | |
31 | without providing access to any applications or supporting information submitted by qualifying | |
32 | patients to protect patient confidentiality; | |
33 | (4) The department of business regulation shall maintain information pertaining to medical | |
34 | marijuana tags and shall share that information with the department of health. | |
|
| |
1 | (5) All primary caregivers shall purchase at least one medical marijuana tag set for each | |
2 | patient under their care and all patients growing medical marijuana for themselves shall purchase | |
3 | at least one medical marijuana tag set. | |
4 | (6) All licensed medical marijuana cultivators shall purchase at least one medical marijuana | |
5 | tag set or utilize a seed to sale tracking system. | |
6 | (7) The departments department of business regulation and health shall jointly promulgate | |
7 | regulations to establish a process by which medical marijuana tags may be returned to either | |
8 | department. The department of business regulation may choose to reimburse a portion or the entire | |
9 | amount of any fees paid for medical marijuana tags that are subsequently returned. | |
10 | (b) Enforcement: | |
11 | (1) If a patient cardholder, primary caregiver cardholder, licensed compassion center, or | |
12 | licensed medical marijuana cultivator violates any provision of this chapter or the regulations | |
13 | promulgated hereunder as determined by the departments of business regulation and or health, his | |
14 | or her medical marijuana tags may be revoked. In addition, the department that issued the | |
15 | cardholder's registration or the license may revoke the cardholder's registration or license pursuant | |
16 | to §21-28.6-9. | |
17 | (2) The department of business regulation may revoke and not reissue, pursuant to | |
18 | regulations, medical marijuana tags to any cardholder or licensee who is convicted of; placed on | |
19 | probation; whose case is filed pursuant to §12-10-12 where the defendant pleads nolo contendere; | |
20 | or whose case is deferred pursuant to §12-19-19 where the defendant pleads nolo contendere for | |
21 | any felony offense under chapter 28 of title 21 ("Rhode Island Controlled Substances Act") or a | |
22 | similar offense from any other jurisdiction. | |
23 | (3) If a patient cardholder, primary caregiver cardholder, licensed cooperative cultivation, | |
24 | compassion center, licensed medical marijuana cultivator or any other person or entity is found to | |
25 | have mature marijuana plants, or marijuana material without valid medical marijuana tags sets or | |
26 | which are not tracked in accordance with regulation, the department or health or department of | |
27 | business regulation shall impose an administrative penalty in accordance with regulations | |
28 | promulgated by the department on such patient cardholder, primary caregiver cardholder, licensed | |
29 | cooperative cultivation, compassion center, licensed medical marijuana cultivator or other person | |
30 | or entity for each untagged mature marijuana plant or unit of untracked marijuana material not in | |
31 | excess of the limits set forth in §21-28.6-4, §21-28.6-14 and §21-28.6-16 of no more than the total | |
32 | fee that would be paid by a cardholder or licensee who purchased medical marijuana tags for such | |
33 | plants in compliance with this chapter. | |
34 | (4) If a patient cardholder, primary caregiver cardholder, or licensed cooperative | |
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1 | cultivation is found to have mature marijuana plants exceeding the limits set forth in §21-28.6-4, | |
2 | §21-28.6-14, and §21-28.6-16 in addition to any penalties that may be imposed pursuant to §21 | |
3 | 28.6-9, the department of health or department of business regulation may impose an administrative | |
4 | penalty on that cardholder or license holder for each mature marijuana plant in excess of the | |
5 | applicable statutory limit of no less than the total fee that would be paid by a cardholder who | |
6 | purchased medical marijuana tags for such plants in compliance with this chapter. | |
7 | 21-28.6-16. Licensed medical marijuana cultivators. | |
8 | (a) A licensed medical marijuana cultivator licensed under this section may acquire, | |
9 | possess, manufacture, cultivate, deliver, or transfer medical marijuana to licensed compassion | |
10 | centers, to another licensed medical marijuana cultivator. A licensed medical marijuana cultivator | |
11 | shall not be a primary caregiver cardholder registered with any qualifying patient(s) and shall not | |
12 | hold a cooperative cultivation license. Except as specifically provided to the contrary, all provisions | |
13 | of chapter 28.6 of title 21 (the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act), | |
14 | apply to a licensed medical marijuana cultivator unless they conflict with a provision contained in | |
15 | § 21-28.6-16. | |
16 | (b) Licensing of medical marijuana cultivators – Department of business regulation | |
17 | authority. The department of business regulation shall promulgate regulations governing the | |
18 | manner in which it shall consider applications for the licensing of medical marijuana cultivators, | |
19 | including regulations governing: | |
20 | (1) The form and content of licensing and renewal applications; | |
21 | (2) Minimum oversight requirements for licensed medical marijuana cultivators; | |
22 | (3) Minimum record-keeping requirements for cultivators; | |
23 | (4) Minimum security requirements for cultivators; and | |
24 | (5) Procedures for suspending, revoking, or terminating the license of cultivators that | |
25 | violate the provisions of this section or the regulations promulgated pursuant to this subsection. | |
26 | (c) A licensed medical marijuana cultivator license issued by the department of business | |
27 | regulation shall expire one year after it was issued and the licensed medical marijuana cultivator | |
28 | may apply for renewal with the department in accordance with its regulations pertaining to licensed | |
29 | medical marijuana cultivators. | |
30 | (d) The department of business regulation shall promulgate regulations that govern how | |
31 | many marijuana plants, how many marijuana seedlings mature and immature, how much wet | |
32 | marijuana, and how much usable marijuana a licensed medical marijuana cultivator may possess. | |
33 | Every marijuana plant possessed by a licensed medical marijuana cultivator must be accompanied | |
34 | by valid medical marijuana tag issued by the department of business regulation pursuant to § 21- | |
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1 | 28.6-15 or catalogued in a seed to sale inventory tracking system in accordance with regulations | |
2 | promulgated by the department of business regulation. Each cultivator must purchase at least one | |
3 | medical marijuana tag or in order to remain a licensed cultivator. | |
4 | (e) Medical marijuana cultivators shall only sell marijuana to compassion centers, another | |
5 | licensed medical marijuana cultivator. All marijuana possessed by a cultivator in excess of the | |
6 | possession limit established pursuant to subsection (d) shall be under formal agreement to be | |
7 | purchased by a marijuana establishment compassion center. If such excess marijuana is not under | |
8 | formal agreement to be purchased, the cultivator will have a period of time, specified in regulations | |
9 | promulgated by the department of business regulation, to sell or destroy that excess marijuana. The | |
10 | department may suspend and/or revoke the cultivator's license and the license of any officer, | |
11 | director, employee, or agent of such cultivator and/or impose an administrative penalty in | |
12 | accordance with such regulations promulgated by the department for any violation of this section | |
13 | or the regulations. In addition, any violation of this section or the regulations promulgated pursuant | |
14 | to this subsection and subsection (d) shall cause a licensed medical marijuana cultivator to lose the | |
15 | protections described in subsection (m) and may subject the licensed medical marijuana cultivator | |
16 | to arrest and prosecution under Chapter 28 of title 21 (the Rhode Island Controlled Substances Act). | |
17 | (f) Medical marijuana cultivators shall be subject to any regulations promulgated by the | |
18 | department of health or department of business regulation that specify how marijuana must be | |
19 | tested for items, including, but not limited to, potency, cannabinoid profile, and contaminants; | |
20 | (g) Medical marijuana cultivators shall be subject to any product labeling requirements | |
21 | promulgated by the department of business regulation and the department of health; | |
22 | (h) Notwithstanding any other provisions of the general laws, the manufacture or | |
23 | processing of marijuana using a solvent extraction process that includes the use of a compressed, | |
24 | flammable gas as a solvent by a licensed medical marijuana cultivator shall not be subject to the | |
25 | protections of this chapter. | |
26 | (i) Medical marijuana cultivators shall only be licensed to grow, medical marijuana at a | |
27 | single location, registered with the department of business regulation and the department of public | |
28 | safety. The department of business regulation may promulgate regulations governing where | |
29 | cultivators are allowed to grow. Medical marijuana cultivators must abide by all local ordinances, | |
30 | including zoning ordinances. | |
31 | (j) Inspection. Medical marijuana cultivators shall be subject to reasonable inspection by | |
32 | the department of business regulation or the department of health for the purposes of enforcing | |
33 | regulations promulgated pursuant to this chapter and all applicable Rhode Island general laws. | |
34 | (k) The cultivator applicant, unless he or she are an employee with no equity, ownership, | |
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1 | financial interest, or managing control, shall apply to the bureau of criminal identification of the | |
2 | department of attorney general, department of public safety division of state police, or local police | |
3 | department for a national criminal records check that shall include fingerprints submitted to the | |
4 | Federal Bureau of Investigation. Upon the discovery of any disqualifying information as defined | |
5 | in subdivision (k)(2), and in accordance with the rules promulgated by the director of the | |
6 | department of business regulation, the bureau of criminal identification of the department of | |
7 | attorney general, department of public safety division of state police, or the local police department | |
8 | shall inform the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the disqualifying information; and, without | |
9 | disclosing the nature of the disqualifying information, shall notify the department of business | |
10 | regulation, in writing, that disqualifying information has been discovered. | |
11 | (1) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau of | |
12 | criminal identification of the department of attorney general, department of public safety division | |
13 | of state police, or the local police department shall inform the applicant and the department of | |
14 | business regulation, in writing, of this fact. | |
15 | (2) Information produced by a national criminal records check pertaining to a conviction | |
16 | for a felony drug offense or a plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense and received a | |
17 | sentence of probation shall result in a letter to the applicant and the department of business | |
18 | regulation disqualifying the applicant. | |
19 | (3) The Except for employees with no ownership, equity, financial interest, or managing | |
20 | control of a marijuana establishment license, the cultivator applicant shall be responsible for any | |
21 | expense associated with the national criminal records check. | |
22 | (l) Persons issued medical marijuana cultivator licenses shall be subject to the following: | |
23 | (1) A licensed medical marijuana cultivator cardholder shall notify and request approval | |
24 | from the department of business regulation of any change in his or her name or address within ten | |
25 | (10) days of such change. A cultivator cardholder who fails to notify the department of business | |
26 | regulation of any of these changes is responsible for a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of no | |
27 | more than one hundred fifty dollars ($150). | |
28 | (2) When a licensed medical marijuana cultivator cardholder notifies the department of | |
29 | business regulation of any changes listed in this subsection, the department of business regulation | |
30 | shall issue the cultivator cardholder a new license registry identification card after the department | |
31 | approves the changes and receives from the licensee payment of a fee specified in regulation. | |
32 | (3) If a licensed medical marijuana cultivator cardholder loses his or her license card, he or | |
33 | she shall notify the department of business regulation and submit a fee specified in regulation within | |
34 | ten (10) days of losing the license card. The department of business regulation shall issue a new | |
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1 | license card with a new random identification number. | |
2 | (4) A licensed medical marijuana cultivator cardholder shall notify the department of | |
3 | business regulation of any disqualifying criminal convictions as defined in subdivision (k)(2). The | |
4 | department of business regulation may choose to suspend and/or revoke his or her license card after | |
5 | such notification. | |
6 | (5) If a licensed medical marijuana cultivator or cultivator cardholder violates any | |
7 | provision of this chapter or regulations promulgated hereunder as determined by the department of | |
8 | business regulation, his or her card and the issued license may be suspended and/or revoked. | |
9 | (m) Immunity: | |
10 | (1) No licensed medical marijuana cultivator shall be subject to prosecution; search, except | |
11 | by the departments pursuant to subsection (j); seizure; or penalty in any manner, or denied any right | |
12 | or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business, | |
13 | occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely for acting in accordance with this | |
14 | section to assist registered qualifying; | |
15 | (2) No licensed medical marijuana cultivator shall be subject to prosecution, seizure, or | |
16 | penalty in any manner, or denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty | |
17 | or disciplinary action by a business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, for | |
18 | selling, giving, or distributing marijuana in whatever form and within the limits established by the | |
19 | department of business regulation to a licensed compassion center; | |
20 | (3) No principal officers, board members, agents, volunteers, or employees of a licensed | |
21 | medical marijuana cultivator shall be subject to arrest, prosecution, search, seizure, or penalty in | |
22 | any manner, or denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or | |
23 | disciplinary action by a business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely for | |
24 | working for or with a licensed medical marijuana cultivator to engage in acts permitted by this | |
25 | section. | |
26 | (4) No state employee shall be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or | |
27 | denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty, disciplinary action, | |
28 | termination, or loss of employee or pension benefits, for any and all conduct that occurs within the | |
29 | scope of his or her employment regarding the administration, execution, and/or enforcement of this | |
30 | act, and the provisions of §§ 9-31-8 and 9-31-9 shall be applicable to this section. | |
31 | (n) License required. No person or entity shall engage in activities described in § 21-28.6- | |
32 | 16 without a medical marijuana cultivator license issued by the department of business regulation. | |
33 | (o) Effective July 1, 2019, the department of business regulation will not reopen the | |
34 | application period for new medical marijuana cultivator licenses. | |
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1 | 21-28.6-16.2. Medical marijuana testing laboratories – Immunity. Cannabis testing | |
2 | laboratories -- Immunity. | |
3 | (a) No medical marijuana cannabis testing laboratory shall be subject to prosecution; search | |
4 | (except by the departments pursuant to regulations); seizure; or penalty in any manner, or denied | |
5 | any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business, | |
6 | occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely for acting in accordance with the act | |
7 | and regulations promulgated hereunder to assist licensees. | |
8 | (b) No medical marijuana cannabis testing laboratory shall be subject to prosecution, search | |
9 | (except by the departments pursuant to regulations), seizure, or penalty in any manner, or denied | |
10 | any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action, by a | |
11 | business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, for selling, giving, or distributing | |
12 | marijuana in whatever form, and within the limits established by, the department of health to | |
13 | another medical marijuana cannabis testing laboratory. | |
14 | (c) No principal officers, board members, agents, volunteers, or employees of a medical | |
15 | marijuana cannabis testing laboratory shall be subject to arrest, prosecution, search, seizure, or | |
16 | penalty in any manner, or denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty | |
17 | or disciplinary action by a business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely | |
18 | for working for or with a medical marijuana cannabis testing laboratory to engage in acts permitted | |
19 | by the act and the regulations promulgated hereunder. | |
20 | (d) No state employee shall be subject to arrest, prosecution or penalty in any manner, or | |
21 | denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty, disciplinary action, | |
22 | termination, or loss of employee or pension benefits, for any and all conduct that occurs within the | |
23 | scope of his or her employment regarding the administration, execution and/or enforcement of this | |
24 | act, and the provisions of §§ 9-31-8 and 9-31-9 shall be applicable to this section. | |
25 | 21-28.6-17. Revenue. | |
26 | (a) Effective July 1, 2016, all fees collected by the departments of health and business | |
27 | regulation from applicants, registered patients, primary caregivers, authorized purchasers, licensed | |
28 | medical marijuana cultivators, cooperative cultivations, compassion centers, other licensees | |
29 | licensed pursuant to this chapter, and compassion-center and other registry identification | |
30 | cardholders shall be placed in restricted-receipt accounts to support the state's medical marijuana | |
31 | program, including but not limited to, payment of expenses incurred by the departments of health | |
32 | and business regulation for the administration of the program. The restricted receipt account will | |
33 | be known as the "medical marijuana licensing account" and will be housed within the budgets of | |
34 | the department of business regulation, and health. | |
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1 | (b) All revenues remaining in the restricted-receipt accounts after payments specified in | |
2 | subsection (a) of this section shall first be paid to cover any existing deficit in the department of | |
3 | health's restricted-receipt account or the department of business regulation's restricted-receipt | |
4 | account. These transfers shall be made annually on the last business day of the fiscal year. | |
5 | (c) All revenues remaining in the restricted-receipt accounts after payments specified in | |
6 | subsections (a) and (b) shall be paid into the state's general fund. These payments shall be made | |
7 | annually on the last business day of the fiscal year. | |
8 | SECTION 6. Chapter 21-28.6 of the General Laws entitled "The Edward O. Hawkins and | |
9 | Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following | |
10 | section: | |
11 | 21-28.6-18. Activities not exempt. | |
12 | The provisions of this chapter do not exempt any person from arrest, civil or criminal | |
13 | penalty, seizure or forfeiture of assets, discipline by any state or local licensing board or authority, | |
14 | and state prosecution for, nor may they establish an affirmative defense based on this chapter to | |
15 | charges arising from, any of the following acts: | |
16 | (1) Driving, operating, or being in actual physical control of a vehicle or a vessel under | |
17 | power or sail while impaired by marijuana or marijuana products; | |
18 | (2) Possessing or using marijuana or marijuana products if the person is a prisoner; | |
19 | (3) Possessing or using marijuana or marijuana products in any local detention facility, | |
20 | county jail, state prison, reformatory, or other correctional facility, including, without limitation, | |
21 | any facility for the detention of juvenile offenders; or | |
22 | (4) Manufacturing or processing of marijuana products with the use of prohibited solvents, | |
23 | in violation of chapter 28.6 of title 21; or. | |
24 | (5) Possessing, using, distributing, cultivating, processing or manufacturing marijuana or | |
25 | marijuana products which do not satisfy the requirements of this chapter. | |
26 | SECTION 7. This act shall take effect upon passage. | |
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