HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — After giving careful consideration to the new medical option, Huntsville city administration believe making medical cannabis products available to qualified patients under the care of a physician would be beneficial for those suffering from chronic and terminal illnesses.
To begin, the City is proposing a well-thought-out zoning plan, which will be in addition to the heavy levels of state regulation implemented by the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission (AMCC).
As required by recently enacted state law, municipal governments must pass an ordinance and inform the state if they wish to allow dispensing sites to operate in their communities.
At the City Council’s upcoming Oct. 13 meeting, the City will introduce an ordinance authorizing dispensing sites in Huntsville. Huntsville’s Planning Commission will begin evaluating zoning recommendations Oct. 12.
Following Council consideration, a vote could come two weeks later. If Council approves the ordinance on Oct. 27, the City will finalize a zoning plan and implement any needed changes to City license and tax requirements.
“We’re taking a thoughtful and measured approach to make certain we get this right,” said Mayor Tommy Battle.
Mayor Battle emphasizes Alabama’s medical cannabis program does not legalize or sanction recreational marijuana. Rather, it is a strictly controlled and highly regulated program intended to provide a medical grade product in the authorized form of tablets, cubes, topicals, suppositories, patches, nebulizers and inhalable liquids.
The earliest anticipated date dispensaries could be operable would be mid-2023 after the AMCC grants the licenses.
To be eligible to participate in the program, patients must be diagnosed with at least one of these qualifying medical conditions by a physician certified by the state to recommend medical cannabis to patients:
Cancer-related pain
Weight loss, and vomiting
Autism Spectrum disorder
Crohn’s Disease
Depression; Epilepsy or conditions causing seizures
HIV/AIDS-related nausea or weight loss
Panic disorder
Parkinson’s disease
Persistent nausea that it not responsive to traditional treatment
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Sickle Cell Anemia
Spasticity associated with Multiple Sclerosis or spinal cord injury
Tourette’s syndrome
A terminal illness
Conditions causing chronic or intractable pain
Alabama is the 37th state to allow use of cannabis for medicinal purposes. The law creating Alabama’s medical cannabis system received bipartisan support in the state legislature.
More information is available here.
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