2 medical-marijuana bills fall in Arkansas House, Senate

Rep. Douglas House speaks Monday afternoon against House Bill 1392, which would ban the use of medical marijuana in food and drink. Also on the House floor was Rep. Robin Lundstrum (top), who sponsored the bill.
Rep. Douglas House speaks Monday afternoon against House Bill 1392, which would ban the use of medical marijuana in food and drink. Also on the House floor was Rep. Robin Lundstrum (top), who sponsored the bill.

Bills intending to ban manufactured edible medical marijuana products and allow a commission to limit the number of plants grown by dispensaries failed to pass in separate votes Monday in the House and Senate.

The bill to ban manufactured edible products was supported by Gov. Asa Hutchinson. House Bill 1392 was sponsored Rep. Robin Lundstrum, R-Elm Springs, who said Monday that voters approved medical marijuana but authorized lawmakers to guide the program.

"We are the ones that establish the road," she said. "We're providing the highway, the lights. This provides the guardrails when it comes to edibles."

Lundstrum says she was concerned about products tempting to children, such as cookies, brownies, soda or candy. The bill would not prohibit patients or caregivers from making edible medical marijuana products at home.

[BILL TRACKER: See the status of all marijuana-related bills in Arkansas Legislature]

HB1392 failed to pass 52-40. A two-thirds vote is required in the House and Senate to amend the Medical Marijuana Amendment, now known as Amendment 98 to the Arkansas Constitution.

The bill was opposed by David Couch, the sponsor of the voter-approved Arkansas Medical Marijuana Amendment, and Rep. Douglas House, R-North Little Rock, who is organizing medical marijuana bills in the Legislature.

"This is wrong on so many levels," House said Monday.

The House already had passed a separate bill -- House Bill 1370 -- that would require the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division to develop rules prohibiting product designs -- including packaging, shapes and flavors -- that are appealing to children. That bill also would require childproof packaging.

House said HB1370 should take care of concerns regarding children. He said edible products are important because they result in a longer-lasting high, which some patients need to sleep. Homemade recipes are wasteful of product and an invitation for accidents involving children, he said.

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He added that older patients generally prefer edible products to smoking marijuana.

Rep. Tim Lemons, R-Cabot, spoke against the bill. He voted against the amendment but said going to the CARTI Cancer Center with his wife over the past several weeks had affected how he thought about marijuana.

"There's a real need for this," he said. Education is key to preventing youth from using the product, he added.

Rep. Deborah Ferguson, D-West Memphis, said she supported the bill. She said her niece receives marijuana oil through a dropper to control seizures.

"When you talk to doctors in California or Colorado, it's not smoking pot that people end up in the emergency room," she said. "It's from the edibles because there's such a delayed reaction."

Children keep popping chocolate or brownies until they overdose, she said.

In the Senate, legislation failed to pass that would allow the Medical Marijuana Commission to decide whether to allow dispensaries to grow up to 50 mature plants.

The Senate's 17-11 vote on Senate Bill 254 by Sen. Greg Standridge, R-Russellville, fell seven votes of the 24 required for approval in the 35-member Senate. The vote was later expunged to clear the way for another vote.

The Senate also sent the governor HB1051 by House to require the Medical Marijuana Commission to license transporters, distributors and processors of medical marijuana and HB1298 by House to allow the transfer of a license for dispensaries and cultivation facilities only to a "natural person."

The Senate also approved HB1370 -- which was referred to in the House floor debate and would allow the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division to regulate edibles and advertising -- in a 30-0 vote.

Information for this article was contributed by Michael R. Wickline of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

A Section on 03/21/2017

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