LARA-MMFLA-Will co-location of facilities be allowed

LARA-MMFLA-Will co-location of facilities be allowed

Will co-location of facilities be allowed?

 

Operation at a same location (commonly referred to as co-location) is allowed for grower, processor, and provisioning center licenses when specific requirements are meant:

  • The operation at a same location shall not be in violation of any municipal ordinances or zoning regulations.
  • The municipality shall not limit the type or number of marihuana facilities under section 205 of the act or prohibit the operation at the same location by local ordinance or zoning regulations.
  • For clarification purposes, the intent is that the applicant cannot circumvent the municipal ordinance or zoning regulation, which may limit the type or number of marihuana facilities under section 205 of the act, simply by operating at a same location.
  • Each license has distinct and identifiable areas with designated structures that are contiguous and specific to the state operating license.
  • Have separate entrances and exits, inventory, record keeping, and point of sale operations, if applicable.
  • Operation of a state operating license at the same location that includes a licensed provisioning center shall have the entrance and exit to the licensed provisioning center and entire inventory physically separated from any of the other licensed marihuana facility or facilities so that persons can clearly identify the retail entrance and exit.
  • Any other requirements outlined in the emergency administrative rules or MMFLA.

Refer to Emergency Administrative rule 24 for additional information on co-location of facilities.


Komorn Law has represented numerous clients through the legal chaos of starting up a business in the Michigan Medical Marihuana Industry.

Contact Us For More Information.

800-656-3557

LARA-MMFLA Bulletin Release Guidelines for Safety Compliance Facilities 7-6-18

LARA-MMFLA Bulletin Release Guidelines for Safety Compliance Facilities 7-6-18

A new advisory bulletin has been issued by the Bureau of Medical Marihuana.

Proficiency Testing Guidelines for Safety Compliance Facilities.

Released July 5, 2018

The Medical Marihuana Facilities Licensing Act (MMFLA) and the May 30, 2018 Emergency Rules require the Dept of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs to establish a proficiency testing program and designate safety compliance facility participation.

A safety compliance facility shall analyze proficiency test (PT) samples using the same procedures with the same number of replicate analyses, standards, testing analysts and equipment as used for marihuana product testing. The following proficiency testing must be performed by Safety Compliance Facilities (SCFs) annually:

  • SCFs will need to complete one set of PT samples for all tests on their scope of accreditation.
  • Proficiency test results must be conveyed as numerical accuracy percentages, not simply as PASS/FAIL results. Actual PASS/FAIL results must be calculated based on accuracy thresholds generated by reproducibility studies specific to each assay.
  • Safety Compliance Facilities may use any ISO 17043 accredited laboratory for their testing needs. There are several ISO 17043 accredited laboratories where samples can be purchased, including The Emerald Test, NSI Lab Solutions, Sigma-Aldrich and Absolute Standards Inc.
  • For parameters where there are currently no commercially available PT samples, SCFs should send samples (as blind samples) to another licensed SCF who performs testing by the same or similar methodology. The results should then be compared. A passing grade for the PT requires a score of at least 80%.
  • Copies of all proficiency testing (both acceptable and unacceptable) results need to be sent to the department for review via email: LARA-BMMR-Enforcement@michigan.gov. Please indicate in the subject line “Proficiency Testing Results for Review-SCF Name.”

 

It is also available at the following link…PDF Document

LARA-MMFLA-Will co-location of facilities be allowed

LARA-MMFLA-What does the Medical Marihuana Licensing Board do

What does the Medical Marihuana Licensing Board do?

The Medical Marihuana Licensing Board is comprised of 5 members, appointed by the Governor (with input from the Senate Majority Leader and the Speaker of the House), to administer the Medical Marihuana Facilities Licensing Act. This includes reviewing applications, issuing licenses, revoking/suspending licenses, renewing licenses, and investigating individuals who are applying for licensure or complaints received about someone who holds a license.

LARA-MMFLA-Will co-location of facilities be allowed

LARA-MMFLA-Michigan communities that have opted in to the MMFLA

Michigan communities that have opted in to the MMFLA

This is an unofficial document compiled by Bureau of Medical Marihuana Regulation staff for informational purposes only. This is a working document that may be revised. This document will be updated weekly.

Document Link

Updated as of 6/15/18

 


Komorn Law has represented numerous clients through the legal chaos of starting up a business in the Michigan Medical Marihuana Industry.

Contact Us For More Information.

800-656-3557

LARA-MMFLA-Will co-location of facilities be allowed

LARA-MMFLA-financial institutions generally disfavor cannabis-what does the state have in place to accept fees and taxes

Since financial institutions generally disfavor cannabis businesses what procedure does the state have in place to accept fees and taxes?

 

The Department intends to allow the acceptance of fees online via credit card payment, or in person via cash, check or credit card. Questions regarding the methods by which taxes may be paid should be directed to the Michigan Department of Treasury.

 


Komorn Law has represented numerous clients through the legal chaos of starting up a business in the Michigan Medical Marihuana Industry.

Contact Us For More Information.

800-656-3557

LARA-MMFLA-Will co-location of facilities be allowed

LARA-MMFLA-If you get licensed as an individual and then later create a company

If you get licensed as an individual and then later create a company with a different business structure, can that change be made to the license?

 

No. A change in a business organizational structure would require a new application.

 

 


Komorn Law has represented numerous clients through the legal chaos of starting up a business in the Michigan Medical Marihuana Industry.

Contact Us For More Information.

800-656-3557