Canadian government threatens Med patients

DEALTALK-Canadian cannabis producers set their sights high

REUTERS


DEALTALK-Canadian cannabis producers set their sights high




By John Tilak

TORONTO, June 13 Fri Jun 13, 2014 10:30am IST


(Reuters) - By unlocking the once-obscure medical marijuana market, Canada has created a fast-growing, profitable and federally regulated industry with a distinct appeal to the more daring global investor.

About a dozen producers of the drug will find themselves in the spotlight this year as they consider going public or prepare to so through share sales or reverse takeovers to capitalize on recent regulatory changes, investment bankers said.

The Canadian companies are in a race to raise money to build facilities, attract patients and grab shares in a market projected to grow to C$1.3 billion ($1.20 billion) in the next 10 years.

Despite facing considerable risks, they have the advantage of being in one of the few countries where medical marijuana is legal nationwide and where licensed operators can mass-produce it.

In the United States, the drug remains illegal at the federal level. Some 20 U.S. states have legalized medical marijuana, but investors worry about the prospect, however remote, that the federal government may strike down those laws.

Although the U.S. market is home to companies including Medical Marijuana Inc and Cannabis Science Inc , their northern counterparts are likely to benefit from greater legitimacy and legal clarity. Sources said much of the private equity investment in the Canadian industry had come from the United States.

"Canada is one of the few countries anywhere where its citizens have a constitutionally protected right to access medical marijuana with a physician's consent," said Paul Rosen, chief executive officer of PharmaCan, a holding company with large stakes in four producers. "And you've got the government trying to create an industry around it."

Tweed Marijuana Inc, which converted an old chocolate factory into a marijuana farm, led the pack by becoming the first publicly held Canadian company in the sector. Its April offering was oversubscribed within 15 minutes of being announced, sources said.

Inspired by Tweed, PharmaCan plans a listing in the next month or so. Producers Organigram, Aphria and Bedrocan expect to go public in the next three months, while CannMedica and others are looking at doing so.

Highlighting the industry's mainstream allure, Tweed's listing was led by two highly respected Bay Street firms, mid-sized investment bank GMP Securities and boutique adviser Jacob Securities.

Other banking firms involved in the sector include Dundee Securities, Bloom Burton, PowerOne Capital Markets, Jordan Capital Markets and Delavaco Group.

RISKS AND REWARDS

An April overhaul by regulator Health Canada has thrown the market open. More than 850 companies have applied for licenses to produce the drug, and 13 have obtained them so far.

"This is Health Canada's realization that medical marijuana deserves to have a space in the treatment paradigm," said Bloom Burton President Brian Bloom. "What they're asking in return is that the standards of manufacturing, distribution and vigilance are similar to what is seen in the pharmaceutical industry."

Analysts expect only a few major companies to remain standing a few years from now.

"The winners will be the ones that are going to have a strong brand, a strong customer acquisition strategy, and have the ability to scale up quickly," said Jacob Securities analyst Khurram Malik.

Health Canada estimates the sector will grow tenfold in its first 10 years, reaching about 450,000 users and C$1.3 billion in sales.

Malik says that is only half of the market's potential because the same number of people already use medical marijuana through the black market and Health Canada's measures will bring greater access and lower prices.

"It's an industry that has been born out of almost nothing, and it is moving very rapidly into something very large," he said. "The flip side is you're also going to have a lot of risk."

Indeed, a list of risk factors takes up about half of the 22 pages in Tweed's latest quarterly filing.

Potential industry pitfalls include legal changes, resistance from home growers suing for the right to keep producing their own pot and physicians who are not convinced about the drug's benefits.

"We believe that there's not enough evidence out there that shows us that we could use this product safely," said Dr. Louis Hugo Francescutti, president of the Canadian Medical Association. "We're actually being asked to authorize use of a product blindfolded."

Michael Krestell, president of investment bank M Partners, says investors betting on the sector at this stage are looking for "high-risk, high-reward" opportunities.

He expects the planned offerings to be in the C$5 million to C$20 million range, with the companies valued at C$60 million to C$100 million.

Tweed, which has a market capitalization of $108 million, raised C$15 million when it went public through a reverse takeover of a listed entity.

Bankers expect most of the medical marijuana companies to take this approach since it is often faster and cheaper.

For despite the potential of the industry, its biggest challenge is to establish credibility among patients, doctors and more-cautious investors.

"I don't care if we're the biggest seller of medical marijuana in the first year or two," said Aphria CEO Vic Neufeld, who previously led vitamin maker Jamieson Laboratories, "but I want to make sure that we are the most trusted."

($1 = 1.0844 Canadian dollars) (Additional reporting by Euan Rocha; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
 
They're all just setting up with enough capital until Justin is elected to the PMO next year and legalizes MJ for recreational use. With Doc's now theatened with scrutinization from their respective colleges for writing MJ "documents"...it's gonna be a longtime before the LP see any money from MMJ. Their only hope of survival is for a change of Gov, and full out MJ legalization.
 
Huffington Post Canada

Sunny Freeman

New Rules Will Force Pot Producers To Turn Over Patient Info

Don't we just 'love' her?
thumbs_down.gif


20140613-170012-g.jpg

HEALTH MINISTER RONA AMBROSE

Branding those prescribed medical cannabis (marijuana) in Canada will seriously harm it's market, as most patients and doctors don't want to be on such 'list'.

It's just an other deterrent against the use of medical marijuana...not surprising from the behalf of Harper's marijuana prohibitionist 'Reformist Conservatives'.

MMPR licensed producers should strongly object against this new (AGAIN) law...even sue 'Hellth' Canada if necessary - for trying to ruin their businesses.

If this new law passes, it will look VERY bad for 'Hellth' Canada in Federal Court in February 2015 (re: John Conroy's Allard case).

I bet that 'dumbbell' Ambrose never thought of that one...if she can 'think' and 'decide' by herself that is!

Marc
 
Harpercrites!

Under 'Hellth' Canada's SAP (Special Access Program), a Canadian doctor may prescribe MANY drugs which have not yet been approved in Canada, other investigative drugs, and they can even prescribe heroin and cocaine under this same program...which are otherwise considered ILLEGAL under the CDSA law (Controlled Drugs and Substances Act).

Is 'Hellth' Canada (and the RCMP) and THEM branding doctors and patients under their SAP too?

I don't believe so.

So why does 'Hellth' Canada (and the RCMP) and THEM want this branding for prescribed medical cannabis (marijuana)?

On one hand, 'Hellth' Canada wants the MMPR and it's licensed growers to succeed and survive, and with the other hand, they want to destroy the MMPR and the businesses of their twelve or thirteen licensed growers.

Are they CRAZY or what? :crazy:

What a bunch of Harpercrites! :down:

Marc
 
Is she Delusional ???




Rona Ambrose says you're delusional!

She's Canada's Minister of Health, she runs our national medical cannabis program, but she says cannabis isn't really a medicine!

Ambrose recently told CBC that patients just "believe" cannabis helps them, but she knows it doesn't really work!

Will you join us in teaching Rona Ambrose a lesson about cannabis?

Here's two fun things you can do:

1) Join us in our Week of‎ Action! We'll be flooding Ambrose and Health Canada with phone calls from May 11 to May 15. Share this meme. Let's educate the Minister! Get your friends to call too. Click here for more info.

2) Remix Rona's interview! Listen to this interview with Ambrose where she tells CBC that cannabis has no medical value. If you have any skill at making music, then remix her interview into a song and send me a link to [email protected]. We'll promote them on our Facebook page, and I'll personally send the creator of the best one a $500 prize. Click here for more info.

There's so much going on these days! Earlier today, Victoria City Council voted to start moving forward with business licenses and bylaws for cannabis dispensaries, just like Vancouver. Meanwhile in Kelowna, a local dispensary is rallying community support in the face of threats from the city and local RCMP.

Stay tuned for more news and action!

Dana Larsen
[email protected]
 
Hang onto your hats fellow Canadians…


According to Kirk Tousaw's Twitter feed...a decision in the Allard case is coming this Wednesday. Will we be able to keep our homegrows, or will we be forced to purchase gamma irradiated schwagg? if no homegrows, the decision could be appealed...but I don't know who would fund it?

I feel confident that MMJ homegrows will prevail, albeit with stricter regulations.
 
And it's a win for MMJ growers! :pulp:
-----------------------
A Federal Court judge has struck down federal regulations restricting the rights of medical marijuana patients to grow their own cannabis and given the Liberal government six months to come up with new rules.

Judge Michael Phelan ruled Wednesday in Vancouver that the Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations were an infringement on charter rights and declared they have no force and effect.

But the judge also suspended his declaration for six months to give the federal government time to come up with new rules.

Read the full decision (PDF)
The judge was careful to point out that the ruling does not change other laws that make it illegal for Canadians to use marijuana recreationally.

The judge also ordered that an earlier injunction remains in effect, allowing thousands of Canadians with prior authorization to use medical marijuana to continue to grow it at home.

'Some fell through the cracks'

Lawyer John Conroy, who co-represented the plaintiffs in the case, noted the ruling did not automatically include all medical marijuana users.

He said the ruling applied only to about 28,000 Canadians who had the proper licences in place at the time of the injunction.

And he noted there remain thousands of other medical users not covered by the original injunction, who will still have to wait six months to legally grow their own medical marijuana themselves.

"We will be heading back to court to fine-tune that injunction," said Conroy on Wednesday afternoon in Vancouver.

In addition, many people who had to change the address of their production site no longer have valid licences registered with Health Canada, and that issue needs to be addressed, he said.

He also cautioned users to have possession licences to make sure they are updated.

"Hopefully within six months we'll have a reasonably regulated system in place that solves the problems for everyone," he said.

Conroy noted that if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wanted to move quickly on the issue, cabinet could simply issue an order-in-council that would remove marijuana from Schedule 2 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.

"The next fight is making sure the dispensaries are legal," he said.

'It was a complete victory'

Lawyer Kirk Tousaw, the co-counsel for Neil Allard, who launched the court challenge, was clearly pleased with the decision.

"Basically we won, and it was a complete victory," said Tousaw, shortly after reading the decision. "[The Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations] were declared to be unconstitutional and violate the charter rights of medical cannabis patients."

Kirk Tousaw marijuana lawyer
Lawyer Kirk Tousaw called Wednesday's ruling a total victory for his client. (Meera Bains/CBC)
Tousaw said it will now be up to the Liberal government to come up with new rules.

"The ball is in the federal government's court. Mr. Trudeau and the justice minister have six months to respond to the court's ruling and come up with a system of medical cannabis regulation in this country that doesn't impact and negatively take away the charter rights of medical cannabis patients and their providers."

He believes the ruling will have implications for those who wish to grow their own pot for recreational use.

"We proved that growing medical cannabis can be perfectly safe, and can be done completely in compliance with the law and people ought to have a right to do that without fear of being arrested and locked in cages for that activity."

"The lessons I think are pretty obvious. If you can grow cannabis for yourself for medical purposes safely and with no risk for the public, surely, you can grow cannabis for yourself for non-medical purposes safely and with no risk to the public," Tousaw said.

The federal Liberal government has committed to regulating and legalizing recreational marijuana but has yet to introduce any legislation.

'Most egregious example'

In his decision, the judge noted that "many 'expert' witnesses were so imbued with a belief for or against marijuana — almost a religious fervour — that the court had to approach such evidence with a significant degree of caution and skepticism."

In particular, he called one RCMP witness for the Crown, Cpl. Shane Homequist, "the most egregious example of the so-called expert.

"He possessed none of the qualifications of usual expert witnesses. His assumptions and analysis were shown to be flawed. His methodologies were not shown to be accepted by those working in his field. The factual basis of his various options was uncovered as inaccurate," he wrote.

"I can give this evidence little or no weight," the judge concluded.

Phelan also dismissed many of the federal government's arguments concerning the risks home grow-ops could pose to homes, noting mould, fire, break-ins and insurance concerns can be addressed within existing laws and regulations.

He found the rules which "limited a patient to a single government-approved contractor and eliminated the ability to grow one's own marijuana or choose one's own supplier" were an untenable restriction on the plaintiffs' liberties.

Homegrown supply banned in 2013

The Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations were introduced by the Conservative government in 2013 and required patients to buy cannabis from licensed producers instead of growing their own.

The constitutional challenge was launched by Nanaimo, B.C., resident Neil Allard and three other British Columbia residents who argued that legislation introduced by the previous Conservative government violated their charter rights.

Judge Phelan heard the case between February and May 2015 in Vancouver. During the hearings, federal government lawyers argued that the regulations ensured patients have a supply of safe medical marijuana while protecting the public from the potential ills of grow-operations in patients' homes.

The lead counsel for the plaintiffs, John Conroy, told court that the legislation has robbed patients of affordable access to medicine. Some people were left with no choice but to break the law, he argued, either by continuing to grow their own or by purchasing on the black market.
------------

http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/canada/british-columbia/medical-marijuana-federal-court-ruling-1.3461694
 
So did I hear right ?

19 to be legal to smoke ?

BUT NO GROWING IN HOME for rec use ?

:help: WTF
 
So did I hear right ?

19 to be legal to smoke ?

BUT NO GROWING IN HOME for rec use ?

:help: WTF

So far... no homegrows in Quebec and Manitoba. Albertans can only grow indoors, no outdoor allowed. No homegrow laws will be challenged and proven to be Charter violations. The Feds only gave provinces the power to control Rec sales and distribution. Home grows will soon be a Canadian right at the Fed level, superseding provinces that don’t wanna play ball.
 
I told hubby the other day that, even if MMJ becomes legal here, I don't plan to register because it's my opinion that will simply make me a target at some point or another.
 
Back
Top