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	<description>Medical Cannabis Dispensary in Portland, Oregon and Milwaukie, Oregon</description>
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		<title>The Last Garden: Maine’s Medical Cannabis Program Under Siege</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/the-last-garden-maines-medical-cannabis-program-under-siege/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2026 03:01:42 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Maine built one of the most vibrant, patient-driven medical cannabis markets in America. Now a contamination panic, a powerful tracking company and [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/the-last-garden-maines-medical-cannabis-program-under-siege/">The Last Garden: Maine’s Medical Cannabis Program Under Siege</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p><strong><em>Maine built one of the most vibrant, patient-driven medical cannabis markets in America. Now a contamination panic, a powerful tracking company and a regulatory crackdown threaten to squeeze it into something else entirely.</em></strong></p>
<p>There is a farm in Maine where a woman grows cannabis outdoors, off-grid, on land certified organic by the state’s own agricultural authority. She runs a two-person operation. Her plants see the sun. Her records are audited under USDA organic handling standards. She sells directly to patients who know her name. In nearly every meaningful sense, she is doing what the legalization movement promised cannabis could be.</p>
<p>In Augusta, the state capital, there are people who would like to make what she does either illegal or economically impossible. They have a contamination study, a governor who calls the program “the wild, wild West,” a public health coalition of a dozen organizations, and a contract with METRC—the seed-to-sale tracking titan—behind them. They also have a regulator whose professional history runs through the same consulting orbit that helped bring the tracking software to Maine’s adult-use market. The same man who helped shape the adult-use rules that made METRC mandatory now argues it should be imposed on a medical program that has functioned without it for twenty-six years.</p>
<h2 id="the-program-the-community-built" class="wp-block-heading">The Program The Community Built</h2>
<p>Maine has historically been progressive about weed. The state decriminalized possession in 1976. Voters approved medical cannabis by a 61.4% margin in 1999, making Maine the fifth legal medical state. What grew from that was a caregiver program, consisting of small cultivators growing for patients they knew personally, operating under the same kind of trust-based, record-keeping framework you’d find in Maine’s shellfish, dairy or other agricultural industries.</p>
<p>The program expanded through fits and starts. A 2009 ballot initiative established a dispensary framework, initially capped at eight. In 2018, LD 1539 eliminated the list of qualifying conditions entirely—allowing physicians to solely use their professional criteria—and allowing caregivers to open retail storefronts, hire employees, and operate as full commercial businesses. In February 2019, Governor Mills created the Office of Cannabis Policy to “consolidate oversight.” That June, Maine expanded reciprocity to allow visiting patients from other states to purchase simply by showing their home-state credential. The state now accepts medical credentials from 29 states plus Washington, D.C.</p>
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<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img loading="lazy" loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1440" height="960" data-id="313541" src="https://hightimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/AtlanticFarms_GreenhouseWide-1440x960.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-313541"></figure><figcaption class="blocks-gallery-caption wp-element-caption">Photo courtesy of Maine-based Atlantic Farms</figcaption></figure>
<p>Lizzy Hayes is a registered caregiver in this program. She grows exclusively outdoors, off-grid, and her farm holds Clean Cannabis Certification from the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association, verifying compliance with USDA organic standards—including seed-to-sale tracking through audited records. She describes the program as one that developed slowly and organically, with tracking done through paper recordkeeping and testing required only to verify claims made on labeling. The regulators, she notes, already have statutory authority to audit-test operators and inspect both facilities and records.</p>
<p>The numbers tell you the market’s own verdict. As of 2025, 112,547 patients were registered—roughly 8% of Maine’s population, one of the highest per-capita rates in the country, nearly tripled from the 41,858 certifications that existed in 2017. The program supports 1,539 caregivers and over 5,000 employees. In 2021, medical cannabis generated $371 million in sales versus just $81 million for adult-use. Even in 2023, medical ($280 million) still outpaced recreational ($217 million). Year after year, Mainers with access to both programs have renewed their medical cards and chosen the caregiver market. OCP Director John Hudak himself admitted surprise, acknowledging that most people assumed medical would have been absorbed by adult-use by now, as has partially happened in many other states.</p>
<p>So, what’s their secret?</p>
<p>Mark Barnett, founder and policy director of the Maine Craft Cannabis Association, operates a combined coffee shop and dispensary in Portland’s Old Port. He frames what Maine has built in terms that should embarrass every other state program in the country.</p>
<p>“We have by far the highest quality regulatory environment for our medical cannabis program, as evidenced by the amazing number of participants, business participants in that program who are two hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year or less in total turnover. True craft businesses, true micro businesses, all the things that folks like to point out as what we should be supporting—Maine is already doing it and has been doing it since ’99.”</p>
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<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img loading="lazy" loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="768" height="960" data-id="313543" src="https://hightimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/AtlanticFarms_sunstar-768x960.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-313543"></figure><figcaption class="blocks-gallery-caption wp-element-caption">Photo courtesy of Maine-based Atlantic Farms</figcaption></figure>
<p>The smallest registration type allows cultivation of six plants—the most accessible entry point in any legal cannabis program in the country. The largest caregiver canopy caps at 500 square feet. Between those poles, an estimated 237 caregivers operate retail storefronts. According to the OCP’s own 2025 annual report, administrative actions impacted just 1% of all registered caregivers, and the vast majority of violations were resolved through technical assistance rather than fines or revocations. In the language of agricultural regulation, that is a well-functioning program.</p>
<p>In the language of Maine’s current governor, that’s a problem.</p>
<h2 id="colorado-consultants" class="wp-block-heading">Colorado Consultants</h2>
<p>When Maine voters approved recreational cannabis in 2016 by a narrow 51% margin, the state hired a consulting group to draft the implementation framework. The group included <strong>Andrew Freedman</strong>, Colorado’s first cannabis policy director; <strong>Lewis Koski</strong>, former director of Colorado’s Marijuana Enforcement Division; and <strong>John Hudak</strong>, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. During the period Koski was contracted with Maine, he took a position at METRC—the biggest seed-to-sale tracking company in the US—where he now serves as Chief Strategy Officer. METRC’s parent company is Franwell, Inc.</p>
<p>The adult-use program that was then deployed in Maine was heavily inspired by the one in Colorado, requiring METRC tracking and mandatory batch testing—the standard template that has been replicated as states adopt legal cannabis. Maine’s medical program, by contrast, remained a grassroots industry with a low barrier to entry, treated more like other regulated agricultural sectors.</p>
<p>The adult-use rules that emerged included mandatory batch testing across seven analyte categories, and a compliance infrastructure that now costs licensees $40 per month plus RFID tag fees ($0.25 per package, $0.45 per plant), third-party integration software ($100–$500/month), and the less visible costs of dedicated compliance labor and system downtime. The state’s original six-year METRC contract was at that time <a href="http://maine.gov/dafs/ocp/news-events/news/metrc-track-and-trace" rel="noopener">valued at $540,000</a>. The medical program had none of this. It continued under its trip-ticket, transaction-log, and audit-inspection framework—a system that, as Hayes notes, records the date, time, location, registration numbers, and description of every cannabis transfer, and which she argues is sufficient to conduct a recall.</p>
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<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img loading="lazy" loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1280" height="960" data-id="313547" src="https://hightimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/1000016288-1280x960.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-313547"></figure><figcaption class="blocks-gallery-caption wp-element-caption">Photo by @thecuratorco.me at @artandcraft_can</figcaption></figure>
<p>“To get that passed at the last minute, they added municipal control of licensing. They kind of cracked down or doubled down on the thing that would eventually become METRC—which is the requirement for seed-to-sale tracking, which is kind of the Voldemort of the cannabis industry. No other industry has to deal with anything like that at all,” says Barnett.</p>
<p>And he underlines that the cannabis community was not asked whether it supported those additions. That was a deal made at the last minute. Closed doors. And this then led to the attempt to transpose those same rules onto the medical program that had been working for two decades. Advocates responded by passing <a href="https://www.legislature.maine.gov/vla-ld-1242" rel="noopener">LD 1242</a>, a bill that stripped the executive branch’s ability to impose rules on the medical program without originating legislation through the full legislature, with public hearings and elected accountability. The OCP could no longer rewrite the medical program in the dark.</p>
<p>That shield held for years but it’s now being eroded.</p>
<h2 id="the-fox-in-the-cannabis-office" class="wp-block-heading">The Fox in the Cannabis Office</h2>
<p>John Hudak, Ph.D., was appointed director of Maine’s Office of Cannabis Policy in late 2022. He had been one of the founding members of the consulting group—alongside Freedman and Koski—contracted to help draft Maine’s adult-use law and, more critically, the administrative rules that gave it operational shape. Those rules ran to hundreds of pages and included the METRC mandate that the cannabis community had opposed throughout the process.</p>
<p>“Like so much stuff in cannabis, the disaster and the damage isn’t in the statute that enables it. It’s in the rule. And then the executive branch, which gets to enforce the rule and which generally has a much easier time making rules than passing bad statute—that’s where the damage happens because people stop paying attention,” said Barnett.</p>
<p>Hudak’s appointment set off alarms not because of his credentials—he is a published policy scholar with a doctorate—but because of concerns about disclosure, process, and public trust. He had co-founded a consulting venture with Lewis Koski, who went on to become a METRC executive. As OCP director, Hudak then negotiated an expanded contract with METRC valued at $890,000—a significant increase over the original $540,000 deal—without recusing himself. When certain legislation explicitly sought to strip back elements of METRC’s role, the result under Hudak’s leadership was, somehow, a larger METRC contract.</p>
<p>After pressure from lawmakers—notably Rep. <a href="https://legislature.maine.gov/doc/11564" rel="noopener">David Boyer</a> (R-Poland)—the Maine Government Oversight and Accountability Committee launched an investigation. The findings landed in disputed territory.</p>
<p>“If you look at it and you look at the facts of the case… He helped bring METRC in in the first place—but over the years of his administration, despite the legislature and the public clearly trying to remove METRC from our program, he’s re-signed them, expanded the contracts with them, given them more of our taxpayer money,” explains Barnett.</p>
<p>The <a href="https://legislature.maine.gov/doc/11971" rel="noopener">OPEGA report</a> reviewed the concern raised by Boyer regarding the appearance of a conflict of interest between Hudak and METRC. OPEGA found that Hudak did not have ownership or equity in Freedman &amp; Koski, found no evidence that Lewis Koski was involved in the METRC contract amendment negotiations, and concluded that the facts did not support a conclusion that disclosure or abstention was required by statute in relation to the amendment. OPEGA did, however, recommend that DAFS adopt more formal guidance and documentation procedures for conflicts of interest in procurement. Alexis Soucy, OCP’s Director of Media and Stakeholder Relations, told High Times that the Government Oversight Committee voted unanimously on November 19, 2025 to accept those findings.</p>
<p>Hudak was not formally charged with violating the state’s corruption statute. Whether the OPEGA investigation constitutes vindication or a soft landing depends on who you ask. What is not in dispute is the timeline: Hudak co-founded a firm with the man who became METRC’s Chief Strategy Officer, then as regulator expanded that company’s contract by 65% without recusal, in a process that generated enough concern for legislators to request a formal oversight review.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, METRC itself is under separate scrutiny. In April 2025, former METRC executive Marcus Estes filed a whistleblower lawsuit in Oregon federal court alleging the company knowingly ignored compliance violations in California that facilitated cannabis diversion—the very problem seed-to-sale tracking is supposed to prevent. The Oregon case was dismissed in June 2025, but not on the merits: Judge Karin Immergut ruled that because the same claims were being litigated in a separate Florida case, dismissal rather than transfer was appropriate, <a href="https://mjbizdaily.com/news/whistleblower-lawsuit-against-cannabis-firm-metrc-dismissed/404995/" rel="noopener">reported</a> MJBizDaily. As of June 2025, the Florida case remained ongoing after mediation failed.</p>
<p>In August 2025, METRC announced a <a href="https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/08/05/3127589/0/en/Metrc-and-BioTrack-Announce-Strategic-Partnership-to-Advance-Cannabis-Technology-Solutions.html" rel="noopener">partnership with its primary competitor</a>, BioTrack, a move that critics say further consolidated the regulatory technology market. METRC disputes the monopoly label, noting that each contract is the result of state-level competitive procurement.</p>
<p>So, based on the available information, someone could reasonably connect the dots as follows: a regulator whose prior professional relationships raised conflict concerns, overseeing a contract he expanded over legislative objections, pushing to impose that same system on a program that has functioned without it for a quarter-century—while the company itself faces federal allegations that its system failed to prevent the very kind of diversion it is supposed to track.</p>
<h2 id="the-42-headline" class="wp-block-heading">The 42% Headline</h2>
<p>In November 2023, the OCP released the study that reshaped the political terrain. Director Hudak had dispatched field investigators to collect 120 samples from medical cannabis sellers. Apparently, 42% <a href="https://www.maine.gov/dafs/ocp/news-events/news/office-cannabis-policy-report-identifies-harmful-contaminants-42-samples-collected" rel="noopener">contained at least one contaminant</a> that would have failed adult-use testing thresholds. The headline almost wrote itself. Hudak even went all the way with a Press Release that unequivocally reads: “This data indicate that Maine’s medical cannabis program needs a comprehensive solution to reform and modernize the system in order to protect Maine’s patients.”</p>
<p>Flower failed at an even higher rate of 44.6%. The most alarming finding involved myclobutanil at 58,600 parts per billion—293 times the adult-use threshold. Myclobutanil releases hydrogen cyanide gas when combusted. Investigators also found 26 samples failing for pesticides across 11 different compounds, 4 for heavy metals including arsenic, cadmium, and lead, and 30 for yeast and mold.</p>
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<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img loading="lazy" loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1226" height="960" data-id="313550" src="https://hightimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/1000016276-1226x960.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-313550"></figure>
<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img loading="lazy" loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="587" height="960" data-id="313549" src="https://hightimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/1000016277-587x960.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-313549"></figure><figcaption class="blocks-gallery-caption wp-element-caption">Photo by @thecuratorco.me at @highstrikerfarms</figcaption></figure>
<p>The study gave Governor Janet Mills the ammunition for her January 2025 budget address, where she declared the state could no longer “encourage the wild, wild West of medical cannabis.” It armed the Alliance for Responsible Cannabis in Maine—a coalition of bipartisan lawmakers and roughly 12 public health organizations including the Maine Medical Association, Maine Osteopathic Association, and Maine Public Health Association—with the language of patient safety. Matt Wellington of the Maine Public Health Association <a href="https://spectrumlocalnews.com/me/maine/health/2026/02/04/maine-lawmakers-consider-medical-cannabis-testing-bill#:~:text=%E2%80%9CWe%20are%20the%20only%20state,director,%20Maine%20Public%20Health%20Association" rel="noopener">framed</a> Maine as “the only state out of more than 30 states with medical cannabis programs that does not require and enforce testing.”</p>
<p>The study was a silver bullet, as nobody can dismiss myclobutanil at 293 times the threshold. But the operators who live inside the program saw something specific in the study’s construction. One hundred and twenty samples were collected from a program with more than 1,800 registrants. The results were aggregated across categories with wildly different risk profiles. Barnett argues the framing was designed to produce a headline.</p>
<p>“What they did was they essentially misrepresented the results of what they had done without doing it on the adult-use program. And the vast majority of them were total yeast and mold,” a biologically occurring phenomenon, particularly among flowers that might be showcased on shelves for a couple of weeks.</p>
<p>Grouping that alongside cyanide-producing pesticides without disaggregating the results by category is a framing choice to serve a policy agenda. Moreover, the study was never replicated on the adult-use side, despite the fact that Maine’s own adult-use market had its own contamination scandal: in October 2025, <a href="https://www.maine.gov/dafs/ocp/recalls/norco-10-2025" rel="noopener">thousands of Yani vape cartridges</a> were found tainted on retail shelves—in the program with METRC and mandatory batch testing. It was a consumer complaint that caught the problem.</p>
<p>Then, in January 2026, the OCP issued its first-ever Medical Cannabis Patient Advisory, for MarijuanaVille dispensary in Waterville—five strains of cannabis concentrates contained unsafe levels of eight different pesticides, including bifenthrin at more than 190 times the acceptable level. The OCP explicitly stated it could only issue an <a href="https://www.maine.gov/dafs/ocp/sites/maine.gov.dafs.ocp/files/inline-files/Update%20on%20Medical%20Cannabis%20Patient%20Advisory%20Issued%20by%20OCP%20Jan%202026.pdf" rel="noopener">advisory</a>, not a mandatory recall, and that “limited inventory recordkeeping requirements in the medical program hinder OCP’s ability to identify sources of contamination.”</p>
<p>This is where the argument scrambles—and where the two sides diverge on the basic facts. Hayes and medical program advocates maintain that audit testing is already written into the program rules, and that the OCP has simply declined to implement it for eight-plus years. OCP disputes this. Soucy told High Times that the claim is “simply incorrect,” arguing that the original statutory authority for testing provisions (22 MRS § 2430-A) was repealed in December 2018, and that current inspection authority under § 2430-K is not the same thing.</p>
<p>“The medical program statute does not specify the requirements necessary for the Office to implement a mandatory contaminant testing program,” Soucy said. “Absent statutory changes specifying that certain levels of certain substances are harmful contaminants that should not be in cannabis, OCP is limited in what it can do with any audit test results.”</p>
<p>Yet the OCP itself conducted the 2023 study using precisely the audit-testing methodology that operators have been requesting—pulling samples from shelves, sending them to labs, publishing the results. Soucy acknowledged as much, stating that “OCP conducted audit testing and generated the report to bring data to the open question of whether the medical cannabis supply chain was contaminated.”</p>
<p>The question that follows is: if the office has the capacity to audit-test when it wants to build a case for new regulation, why was that same capacity never operationalized as an ongoing patient safety program?</p>
<h2 id="their-way-or-the-highway" class="wp-block-heading">Their Way or The Highway</h2>
<p>A full-panel test in Maine runs approximately $500. A mid-sized caregiver growing 37 varieties—not unusual in a craft market built on genetic diversity—faces testing costs alone approaching $25,000 per year. Add the $40 monthly METRC fee, RFID tags for every plant and package, integration software, and the data-entry labor required on a two-person farm, and the compliance cost on a business doing $200,000 in annual sales becomes unbearable.</p>
<p>So basically compliance costs will make the minimum capital required to operate surge dramatically.</p>
<p>The Paul McCarrier <a href="https://legislature.maine.gov/legis/bills/getTestimonyDoc.asp?id=195329" rel="noopener">testimony</a> before the VLA Committee estimated total annual METRC and testing compliance costs for a mid-sized operation at $119,440 to $187,440. These figures were not confirmed or disputed by METRC on the record.</p>
<p>That’s likely why Hayes thinks that “these regulations will result in an enormous loss of product diversity. Right now, if you have patients who want a specific plant, one that is less commercially viable, we are able to still produce that for them. But if a single plant grown for that patient now can’t be transferred without a $500 testing bill, it just becomes impossible to maintain that type of personalized medicine.”</p>
<p>Or, just as likely, current and new operators will divert their production into the illicit market, therefore damaging the whole legal cannabis ecosystem in the state.</p>
<p>What a spokesperson did tell High Times was that “While track-and-trace technology alone cannot fully prevent diversion or contamination, systems like METRC are designed to create accountability by helping regulators identify irregularities, facilitate recalls, verify testing compliance, and investigate illegal activity within licensed markets.”</p>
<p>While METRC alarms have triggered numerous busts and recalls in different states, another reality check is that no agricultural industry in America—not alcohol, not dairy, not tobacco—operates under comparable real-time surveillance requirements. Even pharmaceutical serialization under the federal Drug Supply Chain Security Act, the closest analogue, applies only to finished products.</p>
<h2 id="the-surveillance-infrastructure-nobody-is-discussing" class="wp-block-heading">The Surveillance Infrastructure Nobody Is Discussing</h2>
<p>There is an entire dimension of the METRC debate that almost never surfaces in legislative hearings or press coverage, and it has to do with the data.</p>
<p>METRC is not only a compliance tool but also a surveillance infrastructure that warehouses granular, monetizable consumer behavior data—purchase patterns, product preferences, consumption frequency, medical conditions by inference—with a dominant provider that operates across numerous jurisdictions and serves hundreds of thousands of users and tens of thousands of licensed operators.</p>
<p>Barnett raises a question that should concern every cannabis consumer in America, not just Maine’s caregivers.</p>
<p>“We’re talking about monetizable consumer behavior being warehoused … and has, to my knowledge, almost no regulation of how it handles that data. In an age where we’re seeing state and federal governments abuse Americans’ consumer data like never before, how can we justify such invasive data harvesting with no safety guardrails? When will we see the Trump administration start using METRC data to target non-citizens for deportations?”</p>
<p>ICE already uses commercial databases, utility records, and DMV data for enforcement operations. Cannabis purchase data—linked to individual identities through state-mandated tracking—would be an intelligence asset of obvious value to an administration that has made interior enforcement a public banner.</p>
<p>Every METRC transaction creates a record that ties a named individual to a federally illegal substance. The system that is sold as consumer protection is, simultaneously, a federally accessible record of participation in a Schedule I market.</p>
<p>METRC stated that “there have been no reported issues related to data privacy, retention, sharing, or law enforcement access” and that the company operates under strict contractual requirements set by each state regulator.</p>
<h2 id="the-national-record-what-metrc-delivered" class="wp-block-heading">The National Record: What METRC Delivered</h2>
<p>If the track record in other states vindicated METRC, the argument for imposing it on Maine would be considerably stronger. It does not.</p>
<p>California deployed METRC statewide. Active cultivation licenses dropped 43% between 2021 and 2024—from 8,493 to 4,805. Despite METRC, an estimated 60% of cannabis consumed in California still comes from the unregulated market—approximately 11.4 million pounds of illicit production versus 1.43 million through legal channels. Eradication efforts accounted for an estimated $544 million worth of unlicensed cannabis seized, capturing roughly 5% of annual illicit output by value.</p>
<p>Oklahoma implemented METRC in May 2022 after fierce resistance, including operator lawsuits and a temporary restraining order. Active licenses fell 27% within one year. A moratorium on new licenses followed. Colorado—where METRC was born in 2011—passed legislation in 2024 eliminating its RFID tag requirement effective January 2027. The state’s METRC contract expires in 2026, and industry observers report METRC is not assured of renewal. Colorado is now considering moving to the audit-testing model that Maine’s medical operators have been requesting for years.</p>
<p>A 2023 MJBizDaily investigation found that cannabis operators nationally report track-and-trace expenditures offering <a href="https://mjbizdaily.com/news/cannabis-track-and-trace-expenditures-offer-little-return/383589/" rel="noopener">minimal return</a>, with hidden costs—integration software, compliance staff, error correction, system downtime—compounding far beyond visible fees. In that report, the system appears to be widely questioned by cannabis operators that already operate under this standard. Looking at the stats, its “value proposition”—preventing cannabis from leaking in or out of legal markets—is at least dubious.</p>
<h2 id="the-floor-fight-ahead" class="wp-block-heading">The Floor Fight Ahead</h2>
<p>Two bills defined the 2025 legislative session on this issue. LD 104, introduced at OCP’s request, would have imposed testing and tracking on the medical program. The Veterans and Legal Affairs Committee killed it in May. <a href="https://legislature.maine.gov/legis/bills/display_ps.asp?LD=1847&amp;snum=132" rel="noopener">LD 1847</a>, sponsored by Rep. Anne Graham (D-North Yarmouth), survived. It mandates testing for potency, mold, arsenic, lead, and PFAS; requires seed-to-sale tracking mirroring the adult-use system; establishes THC potency caps on medical edibles; and includes an exemption for growers under 30 plants—though their products must carry an “untested” label.</p>
<p>LD 1847 was carried over to the 2026 session and is now in VLA Committee work sessions, with competing amendments circulating and a committee vote expected in the coming weeks.</p>
<p>The advocacy community, which defeated similar bills in 2018, 2021, 2023, and 2025, is not unified on tactics. Some operators with dual medical and adult-use licenses see a version of testing as survivable. Others view any mandate beyond the audit model as the beginning of the end.</p>
<p>The medical community’s counter-proposals consist of annual inspections of all operators (the OCP does not currently inspect everyone annually), increased recordkeeping requirements sufficient to demonstrate recall ability, and audit testing—the model where the regulator pulls products from shelves rather than requiring every grower to pay for pre-sale batch testing. VLA Committee Chair Sen. Craig Hickman (D-Winthrop), himself an organic farmer, proposed a <a href="http://sunjournal.com/2026/02/18/maine-could-finally-require-mold-chemical-testing-for-medical-cannabis/" rel="noopener">version of this model</a>.</p>
<p>In the next few weeks, the VLA Committee will vote LD 1847 out for floor debate.</p>
<p>The craft cannabis community is organizing mass action against what it calls the continued assault on the program. The OCP’s METRC contract is expiring. And 112,547 patients are stakeholders on whether the best grassroots market, and last cannabis garden in America will be chopped down into an enclosing regulatory corset, or pushed into illicit activities again.</p>
<p>Until then, Maine’s garden is still growing. For now.</p>
<p><em>Editor’s note: This article contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information and is not intended to assert undisclosed facts. This story includes responses from Maine’s Office of Cannabis Policy and METRC. Allegations described in cited whistleblower litigation remain allegations unless and until proven in court. Readers are encouraged to review the underlying materials and draw their own conclusions.</em></p>
<p>&lt;p&gt;The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://hightimes.com/activism/the-last-garden-maines-medical-cannabis-program-under-siege/">The Last Garden: Maine’s Medical Cannabis Program Under Siege</a> first appeared on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://hightimes.com/">High Times</a>.&lt;/p&gt;</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/the-last-garden-maines-medical-cannabis-program-under-siege/">The Last Garden: Maine’s Medical Cannabis Program Under Siege</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>The best cannabis products for Dry January 2025</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/the-best-cannabis-products-for-dry-january-2025/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Jan 2025 03:05:32 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[aggregated]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Hit those goals with new weed gummies, hemp drinks, and more from 17 states. The post The best cannabis products for Dry [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/the-best-cannabis-products-for-dry-january-2025/">The best cannabis products for Dry January 2025</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p>Hit those goals with new weed gummies, hemp drinks, and more from 17 states.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/news/strains-products/hot-pot-products-of-dry-january">The best cannabis products for Dry January 2025</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/">Leafly</a>.</p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/the-best-cannabis-products-for-dry-january-2025/">The best cannabis products for Dry January 2025</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>Cat Piff—The Papermill Cannabis Co., Maine, fall 2024</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/cat-piff-the-papermill-cannabis-co-maine-fall-2024/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Oct 2024 03:03:19 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[90 points and up]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[aggregated]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[top-shelf]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://paradisefoundor.com/cat-piff-the-papermill-cannabis-co-maine-fall-2024/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Cat Piff is Cat Piss x Purple Manguito. The post Cat Piff—The Papermill Cannabis Co., Maine, fall 2024 appeared first on Leafly.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/cat-piff-the-papermill-cannabis-co-maine-fall-2024/">Cat Piff—The Papermill Cannabis Co., Maine, fall 2024</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p>Cat Piff is Cat Piss x Purple Manguito.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/news/strains-products/cat-piff-the-papermill-cannabis-co-maine-fall-2024">Cat Piff—The Papermill Cannabis Co., Maine, fall 2024</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/">Leafly</a>.</p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/cat-piff-the-papermill-cannabis-co-maine-fall-2024/">Cat Piff—The Papermill Cannabis Co., Maine, fall 2024</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>America’s yummiest gummies of summer 2024</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/americas-yummiest-gummies-of-summer-2024/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Aug 2024 03:02:40 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[adult-use cannabis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[aggregated]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[gummies]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://paradisefoundor.com/americas-yummiest-gummies-of-summer-2024/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Top THC gummies from more than a dozen states. The post America’s yummiest gummies of summer 2024 appeared first on Leafly.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/americas-yummiest-gummies-of-summer-2024/">America’s yummiest gummies of summer 2024</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p>Top THC gummies from more than a dozen states. </p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/news/strains-products/best-thc-weed-gummies-2024">America’s yummiest gummies of summer 2024</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/">Leafly</a>.</p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/americas-yummiest-gummies-of-summer-2024/">America’s yummiest gummies of summer 2024</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>Coconut weed strains are a thing—Here’s America’s best</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/coconut-weed-strains-are-a-thing-heres-americas-best/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jul 2024 03:02:24 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[aggregated]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>In case you’ve just fallen out of a coconut tree. The post Coconut weed strains are a thing—Here’s America’s best appeared first [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/coconut-weed-strains-are-a-thing-heres-americas-best/">Coconut weed strains are a thing—Here’s America’s best</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p>In case you’ve just fallen out of a coconut tree.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/news/strains-products/best-coconut-weed-strains-2024">Coconut weed strains are a thing—Here’s America’s best</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/">Leafly</a>.</p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/coconut-weed-strains-are-a-thing-heres-americas-best/">Coconut weed strains are a thing—Here’s America’s best</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>Feds File Charges Against Maine Weed Grower After Probe Spanning 20 States</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/feds-file-charges-against-maine-weed-grower-after-probe-spanning-20-states/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2024 03:01:26 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[aggregated]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cannabis cultivation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[home grow]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Passadumkeag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Police]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Xisen Guo]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>A Maine man was arrested and held without bail last week for allegedly operating an unlicensed cannabis operation in a rural area [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/feds-file-charges-against-maine-weed-grower-after-probe-spanning-20-states/">Feds File Charges Against Maine Weed Grower After Probe Spanning 20 States</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p>A Maine man was arrested and held without bail last week for allegedly operating an unlicensed cannabis operation in a rural area about 60 miles north of Bangor, according to law enforcement officials and court records. Police seized 40 pounds of processed marijuana from a house in Passadumkeag, Maine and arrested Xisen Guo, who is accused of drug trafficking and turning the property into a sophisticated cannabis cultivation operation. </p>
<p>Maine legalized recreational marijuana in 2016 with the passage of a ballot measure that also established a regulated market for adult-use cannabis. The Maine Office of Cannabis Policy said that Guo has not been licensed to cultivate marijuana and was operating the site illegally, court records show.</p>
<p>Guo was ordered held without bail on the federal charges on Friday, making him the first person in Maine to face such accusations. Two other individuals who were at the site when it was raided in February were released without charges being filed against them.</p>
<p>The grow site was raided after deputies reviewed electricity bills for the property and identified a significant increase in electricity usage. After the rural home was purchased for $125,000 cash, the electricity bill went from about $300 per month to almost $9,000 per month. Investigators said the electricity usage is consistent with the lights, HVAC equipment and other apparatus used in sophisticated cultivation operations.</p>
<h2 id="federal-investigation-encompasses-20-states" class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Federal Investigation Encompasses 20 States</strong></h2>
<p>The arrest of the suspect, a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born in China, comes in the midst of a federal investigation spanning several years and 20 states into illegal pot grows being operated by foreign interests. In 2018, police arrested a Seattle woman and seized thousands of weed plants during an investigation of cultivation sites linked to <a href="https://hightimes.com/news/china-is-sending-monkeys-into-space-to-have-sex-for-science/">China</a>. In Oklahoma, law enforcement officials determined that groups from Mexico and China started growing pot in the state after medical marijuana was legalized in 2018. Instead of remaining in Oklahoma for use by registered patients, however, the weed was diverted to states where it is still illegal.</p>
<p>Last week, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland told the Senate Appropriations Committee in response to a question from Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine that the Drug Enforcement Administration is investigating international criminal groups that are operating illicit cannabis cultivation operations in about 20 states including Maine. </p>
<p>In February, a bipartisan group of 50 lawmakers including Collins wrote a letter to the attorney general asking him to answer questions about reports that China may be connected to illegal marijuana cultivation operations in the United States.</p>
<p>“We are deeply concerned with reports from across the country regarding Chinese nationals and organized crime cultivating marijuana on United States farmland,” the lawmakers wrote in the letter, CBS News <a href="https://www.cbsnews.com/news/marijuana-grow-bust-maine-passadumkeag-foreign-drug-black-market/">reported</a> over the weekend.</p>
<h2 id="100-illicit-grow-sites-in-maine" class="wp-block-heading"><strong>100 Illicit Grow Sites in Maine</strong></h2>
<p>In Maine, the Internal Revenue Service, the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, DEA and local law enforcement are working together to investigate unlicensed cannabis cultivation operations, Garland told lawmakers. Federal officials say that there are currently about 100 illicit pot grow sites in Maine similar to the one in Passadumkeag. Since June, approximately 40 search warrants have been issued for unlicensed cultivation operations in the state.</p>
<p>U.S. Attorney for the District of Maine Darcie McElwee said that dismantling unlicensed cannabis operations with connections to international crime groups is a priority for law enforcement “and we will continue to marshal every tool at our disposal in this effort as appropriate.”</p>
<p>So far, state and local police and federal law enforcement agencies including the DEA and FBI are beginning to see success at dismantling illicit cultivation sites, she said, with “dozens of operations” shut down over recent months.</p>
<p>“The possible involvement of foreign nationals using Maine properties to profit from unlicensed marijuana operations and interstate distributions makes it clear that there is a need for a strong and sustained federal, state and local effort to shut down these operations,” McElwee said, <a href="https://www.pressherald.com/2024/04/21/suspect-held-without-bail-in-maine-as-feds-investigate-illicit-marijuana-grows-in-20-states/">according to a report</a> from the <em>Portland Press Herald</em>.</p>
<p>Raymond Donovan, the former chief of operations for the DEA, told CBS News earlier this month that unusually high electricity bills are one of the easiest ways to identify an illegal cannabis cultivation operation.</p>
<p>“These locations consume huge amounts of electricity,” he said. “In order to accommodate that amount of energy, you need to upgrade your electrical infrastructure — and significantly. We’re getting into specialty electrical equipment that is very scarce and hard to come by, especially in the state of Maine.” </p>
<p>Another illicit grow site in Machias, Maine was raided in December after police noticed unusual electricity usage. After the raid, which yielded 2,600 plants and about 100 pounds of processed and packaged cannabis, Machias Police Chief Keith Mercier said that the cultivation site was using about four or five times as much electricity as a typical residence would.</p>
<p>“Once we subpoenaed the power records from the power company, [it] was pretty hard to explain why somebody anywhere would be using that amount of power,” he told CBS News.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://hightimes.com/news/feds-file-charges-against-maine-weed-grower-after-probe-spanning-20-states/">Feds File Charges Against Maine Weed Grower After Probe Spanning 20 States</a> appeared first on <a href="https://hightimes.com/">High Times</a>.</p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/feds-file-charges-against-maine-weed-grower-after-probe-spanning-20-states/">Feds File Charges Against Maine Weed Grower After Probe Spanning 20 States</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>America’s hottest cannabis of 420 ’24</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/americas-hottest-cannabis-of-420-24/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Apr 2024 03:00:24 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[420]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[strain lists]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Including Blue Lobster, Toad Venom, and Banana Zoap. The post America’s hottest cannabis of 420 ’24 appeared first on Leafly.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/americas-hottest-cannabis-of-420-24/">America’s hottest cannabis of 420 ’24</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p>Including Blue Lobster, Toad Venom, and Banana Zoap.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/news/strains-products/420-best-weed-strains-2024">America’s hottest cannabis of 420 ’24</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/">Leafly</a>.</p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/americas-hottest-cannabis-of-420-24/">America’s hottest cannabis of 420 ’24</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>Amended Maine Bill To Establish Psychedelic Research Committee Heads to Gov.</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/amended-maine-bill-to-establish-psychedelic-research-committee-heads-to-gov/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Apr 2024 03:00:25 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[aggregated]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gov. Janet Mills]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Among the many states currently looking to enact measures to investigate psychedelic regulation and increase psychedelic research, Maine is one of the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/amended-maine-bill-to-establish-psychedelic-research-committee-heads-to-gov/">Amended Maine Bill To Establish Psychedelic Research Committee Heads to Gov.</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p>Among the many states currently looking to enact measures to investigate psychedelic regulation and increase psychedelic research, Maine is one of the latest to throw its hat in the ring. </p>
<p>Lawmakers supporting the initial reform bill were hoping to usher in a new era of psychedelic drug regulation for therapeutic use, though the amended bill would pump the breaks and instead set the groundwork to potentially legalize and regulate at a later time.</p>
<p>The legislation would establish a commission to study and make recommendations on psychedelic regulation and related services, specifically examining what a legal framework “for the therapeutic use of psychedelic drugs, including but not limited to psilocybin,” may involve,<em> </em><a href="https://www.marijuanamoment.net/maine-lawmakers-send-governor-bill-to-create-psychedelics-commission-that-would-explore-regulated-access/"><em>Marijuana Moment</em></a> first reported. The bill now heads to the desk of Gov. Janet Mills (D).</p>
<h2 id="a-legislative-compromise-the-original-bill" class="wp-block-heading"><strong>A Legislative Compromise: The Original Bill</strong></h2>
<p>The legislation, <a href="https://legislature.maine.gov/legis/bills/display_ps.asp?LD=1914&amp;snum=131">LD 1914</a>, was approved by the House via voice vote on Tuesday just days after the Senate approved it. While the current language focuses on studying the proper pathways to potentially legalize and regulate psychedelics in therapeutic settings, the original legislation would have legalized psilocybin in therapeutic contexts.</p>
<p>It’s a disappointing turn of events for those pushing for urgent access to psychedelic medicines and treatments, though Maine lawmakers in favor of psychedelic reform, like Rep. David Boyer (R), still recognized that the bill “represents progress,” albeit not as much as many lawmakers and advocates had hoped for. </p>
<p>In an <a href="https://www.marijuanamoment.net/maine-lawmakers-approve-bill-to-create-psychedelics-commission-to-explore-regulated-access-after-amending-legalization-proposal/">email exchange</a> with <em>Marijuana Moment</em>, Boyer cited evidence brought to the committee regarding how psilocybin can help a variety of different people with a wide range of conditions and needs. Still, he said it “seemed like” his Republican colleagues, and even many Democrats, were not ready to vote for the previous measure.</p>
<p>“Hopefully, they do good work and we have a little bit more of a starting place” for the next session, Boyer said. Lawmakers considered other options to amend the bill, like removing provisions that would have allowed for personal possession outside of the regulated program, though Boyer said that route “seemed to cause more problems than solutions.” </p>
<p>So, if Mills gives the final OK, what exactly would the updated legislation entail?</p>
<h2 id="maine-psychedelic-commission-could-pave-the-way-for-future-reform" class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Maine Psychedelic Commission Could Pave the Way for Future Reform</strong></h2>
<p>If passed, the bill would create a 13-member panel comprised of legislative appointees, health experts, a military veteran, academics and folks experienced in psychedelics policy. </p>
<p>Similar to other states that have created investigative groups to research psychedelic medicine and regulation, the Maine commission would review “medical, psychological and scientific studies, research and other information on the safety and efficacy of psilocybin in treating behavioral health conditions.”</p>
<p>It would also look to other states and their approaches to psychedelic regulation. Additionally, the commission would be responsible for laying out a plan detailing how Maine could establish its own regulatory framework for psychedelic substances, psilocybin and otherwise in the future.</p>
<p>Specifically, the commission would be tasked with developing a “long-term strategic plan for ensuring that psilocybin services will become and remain a safe, accessible, and affordable therapeutic option for all persons who are 21 years of age or older and for whom psilocybin services may be appropriate.” It would also be responsible for advising and making recommendations to the legislature surrounding a legal framework for the therapeutic use of psychedelic drugs.</p>
<p>Luckily for psychedelic reform advocates, the turnaround time to report findings is relatively quick, with the commission required to meet six times and deliver its report to the legislature by Nov. 6, 2024. Still, it’s uncertain if and how quickly findings would lead to the regulation of psychedelic assisted therapies in the state.</p>
<h2 id="psychedelic-reform-an-ongoing-local-push-growing-national-trend" class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Psychedelic Reform: An Ongoing Local Push, Growing National Trend</strong></h2>
<p>Maine has made related efforts in recent months, including a <a href="https://legislature.maine.gov/billtracker/#Paper/HP1266?legislature=131">similar bill</a> that would have originally decriminalized drug possession and invested in treatment resources. It was since amended to create a task force to study the proposed reform measures instead.</p>
<p>However, Portland, Maine — the state’s largest city — made waves last year when city council voted to <a href="https://hightimes.com/news/portland-maine-deprioritizes-prosecution-for-psilocybin/">pass a resolution</a> to deprioritize prosecution for possession of psilocybin and other psychedelic drugs. It is not a decriminalization measure but rather “sets official city policy to put those crimes at the lowest priority for prosecution.”</p>
<p>While the latest bill may not immediately result in therapeutic access for psychedelic medicines in Maine, it represents one of many active bills around the country regarding psychedelic research and reform — a topic that was hardly even mentioned only a few years ago — and serves as another reminder that this momentum surrounding psychedelic access across the U.S. is unlikely to slow any time soon.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://hightimes.com/news/amended-maine-bill-to-establish-psychedelic-research-committee-heads-to-gov/">Amended Maine Bill To Establish Psychedelic Research Committee Heads to Gov.</a> appeared first on <a href="https://hightimes.com/">High Times</a>.</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/amended-maine-bill-to-establish-psychedelic-research-committee-heads-to-gov/">Amended Maine Bill To Establish Psychedelic Research Committee Heads to Gov.</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>Weed Megacorp To Exit Maine Adult-Use Market</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/weed-megacorp-to-exit-maine-adult-use-market/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Mar 2024 03:10:01 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[adult-use cannabis]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Curaleaf, one of the world’s largest cannabis companies, is exiting the adult-use cannabis retail market in Maine with the sale of its [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/weed-megacorp-to-exit-maine-adult-use-market/">Weed Megacorp To Exit Maine Adult-Use Market</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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<p><a href="https://hightimes.com/news/brand-spotlight-curaleaf/">Curaleaf</a>, one of the world’s largest cannabis companies, is exiting the adult-use cannabis retail market in Maine with the sale of its licensed dispensary in South Portland. The company’s sole recreational marijuana shop is being sold to Foliage Cannabis Co., which has already begun operations at the retail location, according to a report in local media.</p>
<p>Online news source Mainebiz reports that Curaleaf and Foliage Cannabis have agreed to the transfer of ownership of the South Portland dispensary, although the terms of the deal have not been released. The retail site will be the second dispensary in Maine for Foliage Cannabis, which operates its original shop in South Portland less than a mile from the new location. Curaleaf continues to operate medical marijuana dispensaries in Bangor, Auburn, Wells and Elsworth, Maine, <a href="https://curaleaf.com/dispensary/maine">according to a listing</a> for the state on the company’s website.</p>
<p>A company spokesperson for Curaleaf confirmed the move, writing in an emailed statement that “We exited adult use, but remain in the medical market with four stores and have no plans to exit medical.”</p>
<p>Curaleaf mentioned the transaction on March 6 when it reported <a href="https://ir.curaleaf.com/2024-03-06-Curaleaf-Reports-Fourth-Quarter-and-Full-Year-Ended-2023-Results">results</a> for the fourth quarter of last year. The announcement had few details, saying only that the company had “entered into an agreement to sell our Maine, adult-use store.” In a press release, the company reported it had generated $345 million in revenue in the fourth quarter of 2023, representing an increase of 4% quarter-over-quarter.</p>
<p>Curaleaf’s fourth-quarter financial also reporting shows that the company’s revenue for the year totaled $1.35 billion, up 6% from 2022. Profitability was elusive, however, with the firm showing a 2023 net loss of $281.1 million, the equivalent of 39 cents per share. Curaleaf owns and operates 145 retail cannabis locations in 17 states. Worldwide, the company employs about 5,600 people.</p>
<p>Alexis Soucy, a spokesperson for the Maine Office of Cannabis policy, said that Curaleaf will complete the sale of the retail location once the business has been approved for an active license. The conditional license the shop is operating under is scheduled to expire in October. Until the active license is approved, the two companies have arranged for Foliage Cannabis to use its name and branding at the dispensary to be transferred. </p>
<h2 id="curaleaf-entered-the-maine-rec-market-three-years-ago" class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Curaleaf Entered the Maine Rec Market Three Years Ago</strong></h2>
<p>Three years ago, Scott Reed, Curaleaf’s general manager in Maine at the time, said that the company had big plans for the state as it entered the recreational market in April 2021.</p>
<p>“We have been proudly serving the Maine medical market with top-quality, locally grown flower, and exceptional customer service for nearly a decade, and we look forward to expanding those offerings to our adult-use customers,” <a href="https://www.mainebiz.biz/article/is-the-bloom-off-the-bud-worlds-largest-cannabis-company-is-quietly-exiting-maine-rec">Reed said</a> at the time, according to the report from Mainebiz.</p>
<p>Reed left Curaleaf in July 2022 when the company went through a round of downsizing. He is now the co-owner of Foliage Cannabis Co. with his partner Scott Lever. Together, they’ve been able to independently raise the money needed to open the two retail locations, giving the partners far more flexibility than many other cannabis companies.</p>
<p>“We’re self-funded, so we’re different from a large company with lots of investors,” Reed said. “We can be nimble.”</p>
<p>Earlier this month, the Office of Cannabis Policy released data showing that the state’s retailers rang up $18.01 million in recreational marijuana sales last month, a figure that was up 28.3% from the $14.05 million in sales in February 2022.</p>
<p>Despite the success of Maine’s adult-use cannabis industry as a whole, the picture isn’t as rosy for some companies in the market. A total of 20 licensed businesses including 11 cultivation sites, four manufacturing facilities and five retail dispensaries exited Maine’s recreational marijuana market in 2023.</p>
<p>Overall, however, the industry is still growing. Despite the shuttered companies, the number of cultivation sites in Maine remained stable from 2022 to 2023, while the number of retailers increased by 27 and the number of manufacturers rose by 13.</p>
<p>Curaleaf’s exit from Maine is not the first time the company has left a state’s recreational cannabis market. In January 2023, Curaleaf announced that it was leaving the mature markets of California, Oregon and Colorado. That announcement was followed by the company’s exit from adult-use cannabis markets in Michigan and Vermont.</p>
<p>Curaleaf executive chairman Boris Jordan said during a third-quarter investor conference call in November that the company is exiting “low-margin, low-growth” markets it now serves in a bid to improve profitability. </p>
<p>“Throughout 2023, the company’s been focused on improving efficiency metrics and dialing in operations to maximize its existing base,” Jordan said, <a href="https://www.cannabisbusinesstimes.com/news/curaleaf-exits-vermont-michigan-dispensary-acquisition-zenbarn/">according to a report</a> from Cannabis Business Times. “We have taken significant steps to eliminate redundancies, strategically reduce headcounts [and] exit unprofitable markets. Most of these actions occurred in the first half of the year. And in the third quarter we took the final steps in our asset optimization plan.”</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://hightimes.com/business/weed-megacorp-to-exit-maine-adult-use-market/">Weed Megacorp To Exit Maine Adult-Use Market</a> appeared first on <a href="https://hightimes.com/">High Times</a>.</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com/weed-megacorp-to-exit-maine-adult-use-market/">Weed Megacorp To Exit Maine Adult-Use Market</a> appeared first on <a href="https://paradisefoundor.com">Paradise Found</a>.</p>
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		<title>Leafly Buzz: 12 hot strains to smoke in 2024</title>
		<link>https://paradisefoundor.com/leafly-buzz-12-hot-strains-to-smoke-in-2024/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jason]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jan 2024 03:03:42 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Leafly Buzz’s premium weed strain roundup includes Cadillac Rainbow, Blue Lobster, and Pablo’s Revenge. (David Downs) The post Leafly Buzz: 12 hot [&#8230;]</p>
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<p>Leafly Buzz’s premium weed strain roundup includes Cadillac Rainbow, Blue Lobster, and Pablo’s Revenge. (David Downs)</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/news/strains-products/12-hot-weed-strains-2024">Leafly Buzz: 12 hot strains to smoke in 2024</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.leafly.com/">Leafly</a>.</p>
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