cannabisnews.com: New Mexico: Green Light To Grow function share_this(num) { tit=encodeURIComponent('New Mexico: Green Light To Grow'); url=encodeURIComponent('http://www.cannabisnews.com/news/29/thread29506.shtml'); site = new Array(5); site[0]='http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u='+url+'&title='+tit; site[1]='http://www.stumbleupon.com/submit.php?url='+url+'&title='+tit; site[2]='http://digg.com/submit?topic=political_opinion&media=video&url='+url+'&title='+tit; site[3]='http://reddit.com/submit?url='+url+'&title='+tit; site[4]='http://del.icio.us/post?v=4&noui&jump=close&url='+url+'&title='+tit; window.open(site[num],'sharer','toolbar=0,status=0,width=620,height=500'); return false; } New Mexico: Green Light To Grow Posted by CN Staff on June 27, 2021 at 10:39:26 PT By Robert Nott, General Assignment Reporter Source: New Mexican New Mexico -- Daniel Gonzales has been a medical cannabis patient in New Mexico for about five years, and he’s been smoking marijuana “since God knows when.” The 35-year-old San Juan County resident thinks it’s high time New Mexico legalized the drug.He’s looking forward to Tuesday — the day New Mexico residents 21 and over can legally possess, use and grow recreational cannabis. Under the state’s Medical Cannabis Program, he is limited to growing four mature plants, while the law that takes effect Tuesday will allow each adult to grow six plants — or up to 12 in a household with more than one adult. “To me, this is an awesome thing — both for the economy and for letting an adult make choices they want to make,” said Gonzales, who is transitioning out of the oil and gas industry he has worked in for 15 years. He plans to take classes and consider a future move into the cannabis business.Legalization of personal use of cannabis comes months ahead of a legal industry in the state for production and sales of recreational cannabis and other products containing THC, the plant’s psychoactive component. It also will remain illegal to purchase products in neighboring states Colorado and Arizona, where recreational sales are legal, and carry them across the border.The gap between illicit sales and legal use is one of many unresolved issues in the state’s still-developing recreational cannabis industry.Some advocates of cannabis legalization say many people who are eager for legal marijuana will turn to black markets in the meantime.“We know that people are currently obtaining and using illegal cannabis, and that will continue for 10 months,” said Emily Kaltenbach, a state director of the national Drug Policy Alliance, an organization that helped draft the recreational cannabis legislation.Other advocates, as well as Linda Trujillo, superintendent of the state Regulation and Licensing Department, which will oversee the new cannabis industry, say they don’t necessarily expect to see an uptick in black market deals.Gonzales recommends cannabis seekers who aren’t growing their own wait until licensed stores open. He said the black market is a “scary” place for him, where there is no way to know where a product came from or what’s in it.“If we are opening up through a legal market, why not use the law to protect what you are doing, to keep yourself safe — keep your products tested, keep it mold free, pathogen free?” he asked. “As far as health and legal issues, it’s enough for me to stay out of the black market.”On Tuesday, as legalization for personal use takes effect, the Regulation and Licensing Department’s Cannabis Control Division will hold a virtual forum to gather public input on the first set of proposed state guidelines for those who want to get into the production industry.There are challenges to overcome before applying for a license later this year: raising capital, navigating required water rights, finding a facility and developing security provisions.The state has not yet released a set of proposed rules for retailers. It expects to start issuing licenses to sell cannabis next year — no later than April 1.One nagging question is how the new law will help create equity, as lawmakers who backed it said it was intended to do.Legalizing adult use of recreational cannabis has long been promoted by advocates as a way to diversify New Mexico’s economy, create jobs, encourage homegrown entrepreneurship and decriminalize an act many say has led to people of color being unfairly targeted. But the law has been criticized as having too many missing pieces to effectively accomplish those goals.“It definitely feels like we’re building the ship as we sail,” said Henry Jake Foreman, a program director at the Albuquerque-based nonprofit New Mexico Community Capital, which works to help Native American entrepreneurs in the state.Like Gonzales, he’s eager to start growing his own marijuana at home.“Just being able to be self-sufficient is the best avenue,” he said.Foreman, who is Native American, said one of the big problems he sees with the new law when it comes to equity is that it offers no financial aid to Native New Mexicans, including farmers who could profit from the venture.While working to raise funds and develop support systems to help Native farmers get started, Foreman said, his biggest concern is “we are going to see a lot of out-of-state people come into this space as well, and that’s a worry.”That’s an issue Trujillo said gives her “sleepless nights” — the idea that small New Mexico entrepreneurs will struggle to put together enough cash to enter the cannabis business while larger, established operations from out of state take root.She worries prospective cannabis operators will “cash out their retirement or family savings, or put their home up to get money, and they’re not going to have thought it through.”Her department will push legislators to create a social equity fund to help New Mexicans break into the business, she added.State Rep. Javier Martínez, D-Albuquerque, one of the biggest proponents of the new recreational cannabis act, initially proposed including an equity fund in the law but dropped it as part of a compromise to keep the bill moving forward in the Legislature.He said he would introduce an amendment to the bill in next year’s 30-day session to include the funding provision.“We absolutely need to have a fund to support small entrepreneurs in New Mexico,” Martínez said.A similar concern advocates have raised is the lack of a provision prioritizing ethnic and racial diversity for licensure approval.New York, which recently legalized recreational cannabis, approved a provision to ensure half of all licenses go to “social equity” applicants, a group that includes struggling farmers.A 2017 survey by the Colorado-based news outlet Marijuana Business Daily found 81 percent of cannabis businesses in the country were operated by whites. Less than 6 percent were run by Hispanics.Kaltenbach said one possible solution in New Mexico is for municipalities, which will benefit from gross receipts taxes on cannabis sales, to develop their own funds to help local low-income residents and ethnic minorities break into the business.That is not likely to happen for at least another year, she said, which means in the interim, bigger and more established businesses “will have a leg up” in the field.Some in the industry think the state’s proposed production rules are encouraging.Matt Kennicott, a partner with the P2M Cannabis Group, a consulting firm in Albuquerque, said they are “a pretty solid set of regulations.”Ben Lewinger, executive director of the New Mexico Cannabis Chamber of Commerce, said the rules are “an excellent start.”Gonzales said he is watching the rule-making process play out from the sidelines. He’s just happy to know he can triple his cannabis grow from four plants under the Medical Cannabis Program to 12. He has an adult roommate, which allows him to double his household grow.He declined to disclose the medical condition that qualifies him as a cannabis patient but said using the drug helps him get away from his “troubles.”He hopes to one day foster community grow fields, if that becomes permitted, and become a grow master who can pass his skills on to others. He hasn’t ruled out the possibility of becoming a large-scale producer someday.But he’s postponing a hard and fast move until “we get the final criteria,” he said.Gonzales said he’ll share — not sell — his marijuana with others while they wait for state-licensed shops to open.“There are blessings all around us,” he said, “and when this is legalized, there will be more.”If You Go: What: New Mexico Cannabis Legalization Conference, a two-day event with talks by experts in the cannabis field on implementation of the new state law legalizing recreational cannabis, how to develop a business, networking and other issues. The conference is intended for nonprofit producers, microbusiness applicants and local elected officials and regulators.When: 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham will speak at noon Wednesday.Where: Albuquerque Convention Center, 401 Second St. NWCost: Tickets range from $100 to $175. More information: http://www.newmexico.green/conferenceWill established medical cannabis operators let small growers take root in new Mexico?URL: http://drugsense.org/url/VTtNTjQnRobert Nott, General Assignment ReporterRobert Nott has covered education and youth issues for the Santa Fe New Mexican. He is assigned to The New Mexican's city desk where he covers a general assignment beat.Source: Santa Fe New Mexican (NM)Author: Robert Nott, General Assignment ReporterPublished: June 27, 2021Copyright: 2021 The Santa Fe New MexicanContact: letters sfnewmexican.comWebsite: http://www.sfnewmexican.com/URL: http://drugsense.org/url/LEZwcpmwCannabisNews -- Cannabis Archiveshttp://cannabisnews.com/news/list/cannabis.shtml Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help Post Comment