Chapter 001 |
2020 -- S 2006 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 02/05/2020 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS |
Introduced By: Senators Ruggerio, McCaffrey, Goodwin, Lynch Prata, and Conley |
Date Introduced: January 08, 2020 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Section 21-28.6-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 21-28.6 entitled "The |
Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act" is hereby amended to read as |
follows: |
21-28.6-6. Administration of departments of health and business regulation |
regulations. |
(a) The department of health shall issue registry identification cards to qualifying patients |
who submit the following, in accordance with the department's regulations. Applications shall |
include but not be limited to: |
(1) Written certification as defined in § 21-28.6-3; |
(2) Application fee, as applicable; |
(3) Name, address, and date of birth of the qualifying patient; provided, however, that if |
the patient is homeless, no address is required; |
(4) Name, address, and telephone number of the qualifying patient's practitioner; |
(5) Whether the patient elects to grow medical marijuana plants for himself or herself; |
and |
(6) Name, address, and date of birth of one primary caregiver of the qualifying patient |
and any authorized purchasers for the qualifying patient, if any primary caregiver or authorized |
purchaser is chosen by the patient or allowed in accordance with regulations promulgated by the |
departments of health or business regulation. |
(b) The department of health shall not issue a registry identification card to a qualifying |
patient under the age of eighteen (18) unless: |
(1) The qualifying patient's practitioner has explained the potential risks and benefits of |
the medical use of marijuana to the qualifying patient and to a parent, guardian, or person having |
legal custody of the qualifying patient; and |
(2) A parent, guardian, or person having legal custody consents in writing to: |
(i) Allow the qualifying patient's medical use of marijuana; |
(ii) Serve as the qualifying patient's primary caregiver or authorized purchaser; and |
(iii) Control the acquisition of the marijuana, the dosage, and the frequency of the |
medical use of marijuana by the qualifying patient. |
(c) The department of health shall renew registry identification cards to qualifying |
patients in accordance with regulations promulgated by the department of health and subject to |
payment of any applicable renewal fee. |
(d) The department of health shall not issue a registry identification card to a qualifying |
patient seeking treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) under the age of eighteen |
(18). |
(e) The department of health shall verify the information contained in an application or |
renewal submitted pursuant to this section, and shall approve or deny an application or renewal |
within thirty-five (35) days of receiving it. The department may deny an application or renewal |
only if the applicant did not provide the information required pursuant to this section, or if the |
department determines that the information provided was falsified, or that the renewing applicant |
has violated this chapter under their previous registration. Rejection of an application or renewal |
is considered a final department action, subject to judicial review. Jurisdiction and venue for |
judicial review are vested in the superior court. |
(f) If the qualifying patient's practitioner notifies the department of health in a written |
statement that the qualifying patient is eligible for hospice care or chemotherapy, the department |
of health and department of business regulation, as applicable, shall give priority to these |
applications when verifying the information in accordance with subsection (e) and issue a registry |
identification card to these qualifying patients, primary caregivers and authorized purchasers |
within seventy-two (72) hours of receipt of the completed application. The departments shall not |
charge a registration fee to the patient, caregivers or authorized purchasers named in the |
application. The department of health may identify through regulation a list of other conditions |
qualifying a patient for expedited application processing. |
(g) Following the promulgation of regulations pursuant to § 21-28.6-5(c), the department |
of business regulation may issue or renew a registry identification card to the qualifying patient |
cardholder's primary caregiver, if any, who is named in the qualifying patient's approved |
application. The department of business regulation shall verify the information contained in |
applications and renewal forms submitted pursuant to this chapter prior to issuing any registry |
identification card. The department of business regulation may deny an application or renewal if |
the applicant or appointing patient did not provide the information required pursuant to this |
section, or if the department determines that the information provided was falsified, or if the |
applicant or appointing patient has violated this chapter under his or her previous registration or |
has otherwise failed to satisfy the application or renewal requirements. |
(1) A primary caregiver applicant or an authorized purchaser applicant shall apply to the |
bureau of criminal identification of the department of attorney general, department of public |
safety division of state police, or local police department for a national criminal records check |
that shall include fingerprints submitted to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Upon the |
discovery of any disqualifying information as defined in subsection (g)(5) of this section, and in |
accordance with the rules promulgated by the director, the bureau of criminal identification of the |
department of attorney general, department of public safety division of state police, or the local |
police department shall inform the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the disqualifying |
information; and, without disclosing the nature of the disqualifying information, shall notify the |
department of business regulation or department of health, as applicable, in writing, that |
disqualifying information has been discovered. |
(2) In those situations in which no disqualifying information has been found, the bureau |
of criminal identification of the department of attorney general, department of public safety |
division of state police, or the local police shall inform the applicant and the department of |
business regulation or department of health, as applicable, in writing, of this fact. |
(3) The department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, shall |
maintain on file evidence that a criminal records check has been initiated on all applicants |
seeking a primary caregiver registry identification card or an authorized purchaser registry |
identification card and the results of the checks. The primary caregiver cardholder shall not be |
required to apply for a national criminal records check for each patient he or she is connected to |
through the department's registration process, provided that he or she has applied for a national |
criminal records check within the previous two (2) years in accordance with this chapter. The |
department of health and department of business regulation, as applicable, shall not require a |
primary caregiver cardholder or an authorized purchaser cardholder to apply for a national |
criminal records check more than once every two (2) years. |
(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the department of business |
regulation or department of health may revoke or refuse to issue any class or type of registry |
identification card or license if it determines that failing to do so would conflict with any federal |
law or guidance pertaining to regulatory, enforcement, and other systems that states, businesses, |
or other institutions may implement to mitigate the potential for federal intervention or |
enforcement. This provision shall not be construed to prohibit the overall implementation and |
administration of this chapter on account of the federal classification of marijuana as a schedule I |
substance or any other federal prohibitions or restrictions. |
(5) Information produced by a national criminal records check pertaining to a conviction |
for any felony offense under chapter 28 of this title ("Rhode Island controlled substances act"); |
murder; manslaughter; rape; first-degree sexual assault; second-degree sexual assault; first-degree |
child molestation; second-degree child molestation; kidnapping; first-degree arson; second-degree |
arson; mayhem; robbery; burglary; breaking and entering; assault with a dangerous weapon; |
assault or battery involving grave bodily injury; and/or assault with intent to commit any offense |
punishable as a felony or a similar offense from any other jurisdiction shall result in a letter to the |
applicant and the department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, |
disqualifying the applicant. If disqualifying information has been found, the department of health |
or department of business regulation, as applicable, may use its discretion to issue a primary |
caregiver registry identification card or an authorized purchaser registry identification card if the |
applicant's connected patient is an immediate family member and the card is restricted to that |
patient only. |
(6) The primary caregiver or authorized purchaser applicant shall be responsible for any |
expense associated with the national criminal records check. |
(7) For purposes of this section, "conviction" means, in addition to judgments of |
conviction entered by a court subsequent to a finding of guilty or a plea of guilty, those instances |
where the defendant has entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a sentence of |
probation and those instances where a defendant has entered into a deferred sentence agreement |
with the attorney general. |
(8)(i) The office of cannabis regulation may adopt rules and regulations based on federal |
guidance provided those rules and regulations are designed to comply with federal guidance and |
mitigate federal enforcement against the registrations and licenses issued under this chapter. |
(ii) All new and revised rules and regulations promulgated by the department of business |
regulation and/or the department of health pursuant to this chapter shall be subject to approval by |
the general assembly prior to enactment. |
(h)(1) On or before December 31, 2016, the department of health shall issue registry |
identification cards within five (5) business days of approving an application or renewal that shall |
expire two (2) years after the date of issuance. |
(2) Effective January 1, 2017, and thereafter, the department of health or the department |
of business regulation, as applicable, shall issue registry identification cards within five (5) |
business days of approving an application or renewal that shall expire one year after the date of |
issuance. |
(3) Registry identification cards shall contain: |
(i) The date of issuance and expiration date of the registry identification card; |
(ii) A random registry identification number; |
(iii) A photograph; and |
(iv) Any additional information as required by regulation of the department of health or |
business regulation as applicable. |
(i) Persons issued registry identification cards by the department of health or department |
of business regulation shall be subject to the following: |
(1) A qualifying patient cardholder shall notify the department of health of any change in |
his or her name, address, primary caregiver, or authorized purchaser; or if he or she ceases to |
have his or her debilitating medical condition, within ten (10) days of the change. |
(2) A qualifying patient cardholder who fails to notify the department of health of any of |
these changes is responsible for a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of no more than one |
hundred fifty dollars ($150). If the patient cardholder has ceased to suffer from a debilitating |
medical condition, the card shall be deemed null and void and the person shall be liable for any |
other penalties that may apply to the person's nonmedical use of marijuana. |
(3) A primary caregiver cardholder or authorized purchaser shall notify the issuing |
department of any change in his or her name or address within ten (10) days of the change. A |
primary caregiver cardholder or authorized purchaser who fails to notify the department of any of |
these changes is responsible for a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of no more than one |
hundred fifty dollars ($150). |
(4) When a qualifying patient cardholder or primary caregiver cardholder notifies the |
department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, of any changes listed in |
this subsection, the department of health or department of business regulation, as applicable, shall |
issue the qualifying patient cardholder and each primary caregiver cardholder a new registry |
identification card within ten (10) days of receiving the updated information and a ten-dollar |
($10.00) fee. |
(5) When a qualifying patient cardholder changes his or her primary caregiver or |
authorized purchaser, the department of health or department of business regulation, as |
applicable, shall notify the primary caregiver cardholder or authorized purchaser within ten (10) |
days. The primary caregiver cardholder's protections as provided in this chapter as to that patient |
shall expire ten (10) days after notification by the issuing department. If the primary caregiver |
cardholder or authorized purchaser is connected to no other qualifying patient cardholders in the |
program, he or she must return his or her registry identification card to the issuing department. |
(6) If a cardholder or authorized purchaser loses his or her registry identification card, he |
or she shall notify the department that issued the card and submit a ten-dollar ($10.00) fee within |
ten (10) days of losing the card. Within five (5) days, the department of health or department of |
business regulation shall issue a new registry identification card with a new random identification |
number. |
(7) Effective January 1, 2019, if a patient cardholder chooses to alter his or her |
registration with regard to the growing of medical marijuana for himself or herself, he or she shall |
notify the department prior to the purchase of medical marijuana tags or the growing of medical |
marijuana plants. |
(8) If a cardholder or authorized purchaser willfully violates any provision of this chapter |
as determined by the department of health or the department of business regulation, his or her |
registry identification card may be revoked. |
(j) Possession of, or application for, a registry identification card shall not constitute |
probable cause or reasonable suspicion, nor shall it be used to support the search of the person or |
property of the person possessing or applying for the registry identification card, or otherwise |
subject the person or property of the person to inspection by any governmental agency. |
(k)(1) Applications and supporting information submitted by qualifying patients, |
including information regarding their primary caregivers, authorized purchaser, and practitioners, |
are confidential and protected in accordance with the federal Health Insurance Portability and |
Accountability Act of 1996, as amended, and shall be exempt from the provisions of chapter 2 of |
title 38 et seq. (Rhode Island access to public records act) and not subject to disclosure, except to |
authorized employees of the department departments of health and business regulation as |
necessary to perform official duties of the departments, and pursuant to subsections (l) and (m). |
(2) The application for a qualifying patient's registry identification card shall include a |
question asking whether the patient would like the department of health to notify him or her of |
any clinical studies about marijuana's risk or efficacy. The department of health shall inform |
those patients who answer in the affirmative of any such studies it is notified of, that will be |
conducted in Rhode Island. The department of health may also notify those patients of medical |
studies conducted outside of Rhode Island. |
(3) The department of health and the department of business regulation, as applicable, |
shall maintain a confidential list of the persons to whom the department of health or department |
of business regulation has issued authorized patient, primary caregiver, and authorized purchaser |
registry identification cards. Individual names and other identifying information on the list shall |
be confidential, exempt from the provisions of Rhode Island access to public information |
records, chapter 2 of title 38, and not subject to disclosure, except to authorized employees of the |
departments of health and business regulation as necessary to perform official duties of the |
departments and pursuant to subsections (l) and (m) of this section. |
(l) Notwithstanding subsections (k) and (m) of this section, the departments of health and |
business regulation, as applicable, shall verify to law enforcement personnel whether a registry |
identification card is valid and may provide additional information to confirm whether a |
cardholder is compliant with the provisions of this chapter and the regulations promulgated |
hereunder. The department of business regulation shall verify to law enforcement personnel |
whether a registry identification card is valid and may confirm whether the cardholder is |
compliant with the provisions of this chapter and the regulations promulgated hereunder. This |
verification may occur through the use of a shared database, provided that any medical records or |
confidential information in this database related to a cardholder's specific medical condition is |
protected in accordance with subdivision subsection (k)(1). |
(m) It shall be a crime, punishable by up to one hundred eighty (180) days in jail and a |
one thousand dollar ($1,000) fine, for any person, including an employee or official of the |
departments of health, business regulation, public safety, or another state agency or local |
government, to breach the confidentiality of information obtained pursuant to this chapter. |
Notwithstanding this provision, the department of health and department of business regulation |
employees may notify law enforcement about falsified or fraudulent information submitted to the |
department or violations of this chapter. Nothing in this act shall be construed as to prohibit law |
enforcement, public safety, fire, or building officials from investigating violations of, or enforcing |
state law. |
(n) On or before the fifteenth day of the month following the end of each quarter of the |
fiscal year, the department of health and the department of business regulation shall report to the |
governor, the speaker of the house of representatives, and the president of the senate on |
applications for the use of marijuana for symptom relief. The report shall provide: |
(1) The number of applications for registration as a qualifying patient, primary caregiver, |
or authorized purchaser that have been made to the department of health and the department of |
business regulation during the preceding quarter, the number of qualifying patients, primary |
caregivers, and authorized purchasers approved, the nature of the debilitating medical conditions |
of the qualifying patients, the number of registrations revoked, and the number and |
specializations, if any, of practitioners providing written certification for qualifying patients. |
(o) On or before September 30 of each year, the department of health and the department |
of business regulation, as applicable, shall report to the governor, the speaker of the house of |
representatives, and the president of the senate on the use of marijuana for symptom relief. The |
report shall provide: |
(1) The total number of applications for registration as a qualifying patient, primary |
caregiver, or authorized purchaser that have been made to the department of health and the |
department of business regulation, the number of qualifying patients, primary caregivers, and |
authorized purchasers approved, the nature of the debilitating medical conditions of the |
qualifying patients, the number of registrations revoked, and the number and specializations, if |
any, of practitioners providing written certification for qualifying patients; |
(2) The number of active qualifying patient, primary caregiver, and authorized purchaser |
registrations as of June 30 of the preceding fiscal year; |
(3) An evaluation of the costs permitting the use of marijuana for symptom relief, |
including any costs to law enforcement agencies and costs of any litigation; |
(4) Statistics regarding the number of marijuana-related prosecutions against registered |
patients and caregivers, and an analysis of the facts underlying those prosecutions; |
(5) Statistics regarding the number of prosecutions against physicians for violations of |
this chapter; and |
(6) Whether the United States Food and Drug Administration has altered its position |
regarding the use of marijuana for medical purposes or has approved alternative delivery systems |
for marijuana. |
(p) After June 30, 2018, the department of business regulation shall report to the speaker |
of the house, senate president, the respective fiscal committee chairpersons, and fiscal advisors |
within 60 days of the close of the prior fiscal year. The report shall provide: |
(1) The number of applications for registry identification cards to compassion center |
staff, the number approved, denied and the number of registry identification cards revoked, and |
the number of replacement cards issued; |
(2) The number of applications for compassion centers and licensed cultivators; |
(3) The number of marijuana plant tag sets ordered, delivered, and currently held within |
the state; |
(4) The total revenue collections of any monies related to its regulator activities for the |
prior fiscal year, by the relevant category of collection, including enumerating specifically the |
total amount of revenues foregone or fees paid at reduced rates pursuant to this chapter. |
SECTION 2. Section 2-26-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 2-26 entitled "Hemp Growth |
Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
2-26-6. Rulemaking authority. |
(a) The department shall adopt rules to provide for the implementation of this chapter, |
which shall include rules to require hemp to be tested during growth for THC levels and to |
require inspection of hemp during sowing, growing season, harvest, storage, and processing. |
Included in these rules should be a system requiring the licensee to submit crop samples to an |
approved testing facility, as determined by the department for testing and verification of |
compliance with the limits on delta-9 THC concentration. |
(b) The department shall prescribe rules and regulations for all operational requirements |
for licensed growers, handlers, CBD distributors, and retailers, and to ensure consistency in |
manufactured products and appropriate packaging, labeling, and placement with respect to retail |
sales not inconsistent with law, to carry in effect the provisions of this chapter. |
(c) The department shall not adopt, under this or any other section, a rule that would |
prohibit a person or entity to grow, distribute, or sell hemp based solely on the legal status of |
hemp under federal law. |
(d) The department may adopt rules and regulations based on federal law provided those |
rules and regulations are designed to comply with federal guidance and mitigate federal |
enforcement against the licenses issued under this chapter. |
(e) All new and revised rules and regulations promulgated by the department of business |
regulation and/or the department of health pursuant to this chapter shall be subject to approval by |
the general assembly prior to enactment. |
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
======== |
LC003469/SUB A |
======== |