Medical Marijuana: Expect Patient Friendly Changes In Canada After Allard

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
From 420 Magazine...

This is an update to our article from earlier this week, “Allard has no Appeal”.

In that article we pointed out the massive risks caused by the Allard decision, leaving the MMPR’s in legal limbo. Read that article for context and background, then come back here for the update.

The news of the week is that Canopy Growth Corp. announced on March 31 that one of its subsidiaries was granted a license to produce, possess and ship dried marijuana at its facilities in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario.

What does this mean? First, specific to market competition, this licence helps CGC compete in the lower margin commodity space, perhaps to defend market share against a company like Aphria Inc., from Leamington, Ontario. The existing Canadian medical marijuana market is so small that all market share is important market share.

How small is the Canadian medical marijuana market? Here’s a simple exercise. Pull the latest quarterly financials from all the publicly traded MMPR’s. Add up their gross revenues. Make an educated guess about revenue levels for the private MMPR’s. Add that in. See for yourself how minute the market currently is.

Second, from a broader perspective, we had pointed out the government’s decision not to appeal Allard created a fair amount of uncertainty in the market. Increased uncertainty leads to less equity value.

With the licence being granted to CGC’s subsidiary, some of that uncertainty has been eliminated. The rumour mill also tells us that Health Canada inspections are continuing, and that no one has been laid off or re-assigned from Health Canada’s medical marijuana department. It’s business as usual on the operational front.

In the rest of the market, the MMPR’s are carrying on as though Allard didn’t happen. This is part whistling past the graveyard, part sound business strategy. For example, look at Aurora Cannabis Inc.’s update from April 1, that is obviously intended to offer a steadying hand to a nervous market: “Nothing to see here, folks, we’re doing fine, move along, move along.” (I am a fan of the company and put it in the top tier of growers.)

It appears the federal government is steady on with the MMPR’s, even though that system of regulating the MMPR’s has been declared constitutionally invalid. The Liberals have until the middle of August, 2016 to introduce replacement regulations.

Our conclusion: Combining Health Canada’s ‘business as usual” approach with the pro-patient court rulings in Allard and Smith means the replacement regulations will be patient-friendly. They will lead to an expanded albeit still small market within the medical marijuana community and sets the stage for the Liberals to introduce de-criminalization should they win a second majority in 2019.

 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
sets the stage for the Liberals to introduce de-criminalization should they win a second majority in 2019.
Uhmm...the Liberals didn't advertise nor do they support decriminalization and I don't think they will wait until 2019 to legalize, it's coming within the year, imo. The author provides nothing to validate their predictions, yet writes as if what they say is fact.
 

bigmanc

Well-Known Member
Is that really true? Where did you hear that? Jesus those guys are fuckin scumbags if that's true. Not that I didn't think that already but this is a whole new level.
It started when a consultant bashed dispensaries and displayed pro-tilray objectives. Didn't even try to protect LPs, just Tilray. Not too long ago tousaw was posting about Tilray putting down patients gardens. Jason Wilcox said it in a video same with POT.tv..well pot.tv said the plant count
 

nsbudca

Well-Known Member
Uhmm...the Liberals didn't advertise nor do they support decriminalization and I don't think they will wait until 2019 to legalize, it's coming within the year, imo. The author provides nothing to validate their predictions, yet writes as if what they say is fact.
Decriminalization and 2019 threw me off too. That's news to me but probably bs.

I think that if we get new regs that allow homegrows, DG's and LPs then it may speed up the legalization process. I mean at that point, if the new regs are in our favour, you've got more legal medical marijuana than we know what to do with. Not to mention if we end up with some sort of legal storefront operations, dispensaries or LP run.

The LPs are going to take a cut or Justin's buddies over at tweed will start pushing, as well as all of the LPs for that matter.
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
It started when a consultant bashed dispensaries and displayed pro-tilray objectives. Didn't even try to protect LPs, just Tilray. Not too long ago tousaw was posting about Tilray putting down patients gardens. Jason Wilcox said it in a video same with POT.tv..well pot.tv said the plant count
LP's will be trying, but they do not have a say in determining patient plant. Dosage is a medical decision. Does anyone actually believe the LP's care about medical? I'm guessing they will be given something in the recreational system to compensate for the loss of medical customers.
 

nobody important 666

Well-Known Member
LP's will be trying, but they do not have a say in determining patient plant. Dosage is a medical decision. Does anyone actually believe the LP's care about medical? I'm guessing they will be given something in the recreational system to compensate for the loss of medical customers.
The only thing i could see lps have any input on is how many plants it takes them to produce on gram per day basis. Even then it really dont count for much.
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
The only thing i could see lps have any input on is how many plants it takes them to produce on gram per day basis. Even then it really dont count for much.
Ya,that won't count for much. The average patient doesn't have a multi-million dollar operation to produce the yield LP's do.
 

TheDizzyBizzy

Well-Known Member
It started when a consultant bashed dispensaries and displayed pro-tilray objectives. Didn't even try to protect LPs, just Tilray. Not too long ago tousaw was posting about Tilray putting down patients gardens. Jason Wilcox said it in a video same with POT.tv..well pot.tv said the plant count
A 'consultant'? Where? Who? What? I wouldn't believe Jason with something as simple as telling me his name is Jason.
 

TheDizzyBizzy

Well-Known Member
Is that really true? Where did you hear that? Jesus those guys are fuckin scumbags if that's true. Not that I didn't think that already but this is a whole new level.
Sounds perfectly believable, but I don't think he actually has any proof, just rumours from Wilcoxxy.
 

buckets

Well-Known Member
Wow. Those bastards! I wonder if it's okay if we write in to the minister of health and ask them about what in the hell are they doing?
 

bigmanc

Well-Known Member
Absolute proof, of course not. Although there is proof of Tilray sending letters to victoria MPs/council members about licensing dispensaries. When they did this they did not say "this is why LPs are better and safer" they told the council why "Tilray is better and safer" Why would Tilray give an opinion and one as biased as that to open discussion in a different city is beyond me.

Tilray has been bashing patients gardens since the get go. There were a lot of things let out once they laid off 50-60 people last year.
 
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