Arkansas Now Accepting MMJ Applications

Arkansas Now Accepting MMJ Applications

BY TAFI MUKUNYADZI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) The application period for people seeking to grow, distribute or use medical marijuana in Arkansas is officially open.

State officials opened the application period Friday and it runs until Sept. 18.

Voters last November made Arkansas the first Bible Belt state to legalize medical marijuana, clearing the way for people with certain medical conditions to use the drug. There are 18 qualifying conditions that allow people to be eligible for medical marijuana cards, including intractable pain, cancer, severe nausea, seizures and post-traumatic stress disorder.

The state Department of Health expects 20,000 to 40,000 people to apply to use the drug. Arkansas Department of Health spokeswoman Meg Mirivel said applications are starting to trickle in.

As of just about 2 p.m. Friday, the department had received 23 online applications and one paper application for the medical marijuana cards, she said.

The cards cost $50 and must be renewed yearly. All applicants must have a drivers license or state-issued ID card to obtain a medical marijuana card, and those younger than 18 need a parent or guardians consent to apply.

The health department said the cards will be issued about 30 days before medical marijuana is available for legal purchase in the state.

The Arkansas Department of Finance and Administrations Alcoholic Beverage Control Division will award five cultivation licenses and 32 dispensary licenses.

Several people throughout the state are hoping to get into the medical marijuana business, including Arkansas Cannabis Industry Association founder Storm Nolan and AR-Canna president and CEO Brian Faught.

Faught hopes to build several greenhouses on 5 acres of land in Fayetteville.

Nolan, who wants to establish a cultivation facility in Fort Smith, told The Associated Press that the ...

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