Earlier this month we revealed state plans to end medical cannabis as we know it: to reduce patient possession limits, remove patient growing rights, and eliminate certain defenses for medical cannabis patients charged with pot crimes.

This afternoon the state’s medical cannabis workgroupโ€”comprised of the liquor board, health department, revenue department, and the governor’s officeโ€”released their formal recommendations, and they are just as drastic as we initially revealed.

The basic idea is that the voter-approved medical cannabis law would be mostly scrapped, and patients who are accepted into a proposed government registry would be allowed tax deductions exemptions on pot, which could only be purchased at I-502 stores. Among the recommendations:

  • Eliminate patient home growing rights
  • Eliminate collective gardens
  • Eliminate medical dispensaries that don’t comply with I-502
  • Eliminate the affirmative defense for pot patients
  • Create a state-funded patient registry program
  • Require health care professionals to register patients with the state
  • Forbid doctors from running a medical cannabis specific business
  • Remove the right to petition for new medical marijuana conditions
  • Reduce patient possession amounts from 24 ounces to 3 ounces
  • Allow I-502 stores to sell reduced-tax pot to registered patients