CAL AMSTERDAM! – “I don’t know how you know or realize this is a hemp product. It says Tune Up sparkling water. Then you barely find that it’s THC in there. It’s a disgrace.” Gov. Newsom proposes THC product regulations citing concerns about children accessibility.

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SAN FRANCISCO — Governor Gavin Newsom proposes emergency regulations to protect children from dangerous products containing THC.

The governor says they’re popping up in grocery and corners stores across the state, and wants to prevent them from being sold outside of dispensaries.

“We want these products off the shelf. We want the retailers, the grocers to get them off themselves today,” Gov. Newsom said.

Officials say the new rules are aimed particularly at protecting children from potentially harmful health effects of intoxicating hemp products.

As Newsom holds several cans, he said, “I don’t know how you know or realize this is a hemp product. It says Tune Up sparkling water. Then you barely find that it’s THC in there. It’s a disgrace.”

And it’s not just THC, the tougher regulations would expand the number of psychoactive cannabinoids that will need to be undetectable in order to be sold outside dispensaries.

“CDPH determining based on science has added another 30 that go into that undetectable sense. So we’re not just saying “same old same old cannabinoids,” said Dr. Mark Ghaly, California Health and Human Services Secretary.

And as far as the public’s perspective, ABC7 spoke with people outside a Mill Valley grocery store about the potential regulations.

“I think THC can be really beneficial for people, but as far as children getting their hands on it, I think that could be potentially controversial,” said Isabelle Ellingson, Mill Valley Resident.

April Abbott, Mill Valley Resident: “And THC, I wasn’t aware of that, but it definitely has to be regulated and monitored.”

Tara Campbell: “Do you think it should be in stores, like grocery stores?”

Abbott: “Absolutely not. Absolutely not. Why?”

And from parents and grandparents, to pet parents…

“This is my child, so I don’t have human children, but I sure wouldn’t want my children taking in THC just by chance,” said Susan Hopp, Mill Valley Resident.

But the governor got some push back Friday from the industry.

The U.S. Hemp Roundtable said it’s exploring legal options. They released a statement writing in part:

“Newsom has decided to unilaterally destroy countless small businesses and farmers across California. We will not let this stand without a fight.”

The governor, however, saying that’s not his goal.

“We don’t want to kill the hemp industry. We want the industry to be regulated. It was not intended for intoxicating products,” the governor said.

The proposed regulations still require approval from California’s Office of Administrative law.

If that happens, the rules will go into effect immediately.

That means stores will have to remove any consumable products containing any level of THC.

https://abc7.com/post/governor-gavin-newsom-proposes-thc-product-regulations-citing-concerns-children-accessibility/15277322/

CAL AMSTERDAM – Dr. Drew warns over marijuana studies revealing ‘extremely worrisome’ data – Chances of developing bipolar, schizophrenia disorders rises 50% after cannabis use, study shows – psychotic episodes after using cannabis

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One of TV’s favorite medical personalities is weighing in on the “extremely worrisome” findings coming from a recent study on marijuana use.

“When this first started coming up, I actually was somewhat doubtful. It seemed too much to me,” addiction medicine specialist Dr. Drew Pinski said on “The Bottom Line” Friday. “We were always aware that cannabis was associated with psychotic episodes, but the previous suspicion was it was primarily people who were sort of heading that way already, perhaps that’s why they were using the drug.”

But according to data from recent analysis and studies, people who have had at least one psychotic episode after using cannabis are almost 50% more likely to develop schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, and that the risk is even higher for teens and young adults.

“Particularly in the states where it’s legal for recreational use, the concentration of the cannabis is so spectacular, it’s approaching 100% that, literally, it’s a different drug, it has a different effect on people,” Dr. Drew explained. “And now, very commonly, we’re seeing hyperemesis, people that develop these vomiting episodes that are uncontrolled.”

“It’s very common from weed,” he continued. “And psychotic episodes have become increasingly common to the point that they’re actually kind of characteristic features to the psychosis these kids are getting from the weed.”

Dr. Drew Pinsky discusses “extremely worrisome” data on marijuana use and mental disorders, on “The Bottom Line”.

A 2017 American Journal of Psychiatry study found that the risk of developing bipolar or schizophrenic disorders was highest for cannabis users aged 16 to 25, and had a greater influence than alcohol, opioids, amphetamines and hallucinogens.

This week, an analysis from Truveta spotlighted how the rates of cannabis-use disorder diagnoses were more than 50% higher in November than compared to the same time in 2019. There was also a nearly 50% increase in the number of cannabis-related emergency room visits.

Twenty-five U.S. states have decriminalized and currently recognize marijuana as a recreational drug, which Dr. Drew cautioned can open doors for easier access for young adults.

“You’re fighting a profound cultural bias where they literally have been taught to believe that tobacco is significantly worse than cannabis, and they’re right in terms of alcohol, in terms of impact on overall health, in terms of being carcinogenic, in terms of lost work years, yes, the cumulative effects of alcohol are measurably worse than cannabis. But cannabis is also bad,” he said.

“Now that we have such incredibly high concentrations of cannabis,” Dr. Drew added, “we’re starting to see a real problem with really unanticipated psychotic episodes and more addiction. I have family members that are in recovery from cannabis addiction.”

Former White House drug policy adviser Kevin Sabet argues that high-potency marijuana leads to an increase in mental illness and psychosis on ‘Varney & Co.

Marijuana legalization is a ‘huge mistake’.

Former White House drug policy adviser Kevin Sabet argues that high-potency marijuana leads to an increase in mental illness and psychosis on ‘Varney & Co.

The mental health and addiction expert added that he personally knows the “devastating consequence” of marijuana substance abuse, seeing lifelong panic disorder firsthand.

“I don’t believe there’s any such thing as a bad chemical. I think there are things that are risks with any chemical that humans relate to,” Dr. Drew said. “And you just have to understand those risks.”

https://www.foxbusiness.com/healthcare/dr-drew-warns-marijuana-studies-revealing-extremely-worrisome-data

CAL AMSTERDAM – All Up In Smoke – California pot industry facing “extinction event” Industry insiders are warning that hundreds of pot shops could go out of business this year – pot shops with over $500,000 in unpaid bills – over 13% of California’s retailers, or 265 pot shops, failed to make any tax payments

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California’s pot industry could be on the verge of an “extinction event,” with pot shops going out of business as they miss tax payments and sink under millions of dollars of debt.

Debt problems have plagued the industry for years — a 2022 report estimated that the industry was collectively sitting on over $600 million in debt — but a change in tax law that took effect this year has stakeholders worried the mounting debt bubble will finally become fatal. A San Francisco politician introduced a law this year in the state legislature that would crack down on pot businesses that don’t pay their debts.

State law recently shifted the burden for paying cannabis excise taxes from distributors to retailers, with the first tax payments due May 1. Retailers have historically had the most trouble paying their bills, and it appears that many shops lack the cash to pay their state excise taxes, according to new state tax data obtained by SFGATE.

Over 13% of California’s retailers, or 265 pot shops, failed to make any tax payment by the May 1 deadline, according to the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration. Those businesses are now facing a 50% penalty on the taxes they owe, which could be a death blow to many shops.

And the number of shops affected could climb higher. The state agency said it’s still processing 581 tax returns, which could include retailers that failed to pay.

Michelle Mabugat, a cannabis attorney at the Greenberg Glusker firm in Los Angeles, told SFGATE she expects debt problems to shut down many shops in the state.

“There’s a debt bubble that’s been building over the last few years that’s getting close to bursting,” Mabugat said. “I do anticipate a lot of retailers going out of business this year, just like we saw a lot of cultivators go out of business last year.”

Ali Jamalian, the owner of Sunset Connect, a cannabis manufacturer in San Francisco, said he’s seen pot shops with over $500,000 in unpaid bills, and he expects the new tax structure to cause an “extinction event” for pot shops in the state.

“I’ve been in the weed game, so I’ve seen a lot of cycles. But this will have a real impact. … The extinction event is when the government wants its taxes, and no one can pay it,” Jamalian said.

The entire cannabis supply chain has faced a chronic debt problem: Farmers report never getting paid for thousands of dollars in product, distributors say retailers don’t pay them and have started blacklisting some shops, and even the federal government is getting stiffed. An analysis done last fall by Green Market Report found that 10 of the largest pot companies in the country owed over $500 million combined in unpaid taxes.

These debt problems have attracted scrutiny from lawmakers. Assemblymember Phil Ting, a Democrat from San Francisco, proposed a bill this year that would require pot businesses to pay their cannabis suppliers for any transactions worth $5,000 or more within 15 days or face a penalty. Ting blamed the problem on federal prohibition, which blocks pot entrepreneurs from accessing the loans that are typically used to maintain cash flow at other businesses.

“For years, restrictions at the federal level have left our state’s legal cannabis operators with limited options for financing and capital. This has led to a severe debt bubble across the supply chain from cultivators all the way through to the retailers,” Ting said in a news release.

The proposed law is supported by associations representing distributors and manufacturers but has been opposed by some cannabis retailers in the state. It’s on the agenda for the House Appropriations Committee’s May 18 meeting.

Without traditional bank loans, pot companies have turned to issuing loans to each other by selling products on credit. Pot farms often give products to distributors and retailers with no money down but with the expectation that they will be paid later, usually within 30 or 60 days.

But the retailers frequently take months to pay — if they pay at all. Some California retailers are holding more than a million dollars in debt to other pot businesses, according to Brett Gelfand, the managing partner of CannaBiz Collects, a cannabis-focused debt collection agency.

“We’re seeing the same debtors over and over again. Sometimes we have 20 different clients submitting their claims against the same debtor, so the debtor is drowning in debt,” Gelfand said.

Ting’s bill would specifically target these repeat offenders by creating a system that tracks and penalizes companies that don’t pay their cannabis suppliers.

These debt-ridden retailers are now at risk of going out of business thanks to the state’s recent tax payment change. The state’s decision to shift tax payments from distributors to retailers both removed a form of financing — retailers were using excise tax collections as a way to finance their businesses — and created a big penalty for cash-strapped retailers.

Mabugat said retailers had been “hoping and praying” that they would come up with more cash before they had to pay the excise taxes. But with the May 1 deadline past, hundreds of pot shops were unable to come up with the money and could be headed toward failure.

As Mabugat said: “That kind of financing model, if you can even call it that, is a really easy way to go upside down fast.”

https://www.sfgate.com/cannabis/article/california-pot-industry-facing-extinction-event-18104578.php

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