MjLink Cannabis Business News and Press
While the lines are shorter and the sales slightly less, Michigan’s recreational marijuana business remained brisk through its second week of existence.
In two weeks, the handful of licensed, actively selling retail locations have tallied $3.1 million in sales, the state Marijuana Regulatory Agency reports.
During the opening week of licensed recreational marijuana activity, predominantly at three Ann Arbor businesses between Dec. 1 and Dec. 8, there were $1.6 million in sales.
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Gus Burns ~ Mlive.com ~
What are a tenant’s rights around consuming cannabis at a rental property in a legal medical or adult-use state?
In August 2019, MassLive reported that a medically disabled couple in their 60s, Francine and Timothy Weinandy, were being evicted from their apartment complex near Springfield, Massachusetts, for smoking medical marijuana on their balcony.
The couple had lived in the apartment for 26 years.
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Alexa Peters ~ Leafly.com ~
Like any credit card, customers have to qualify and the average interest rate is around 15%.
Juanita Parker-Reed goes to a Columbia Care dispensary for medical marijuana to treat her chronic pain.
Until recently, she always had to pay cash for her prescription, spending as much as $400 a month.
Even though many states allow the drug, it’s illegal under federal law, so most credit card networks won’t allow their cards to be used in stores that sell marijuana.
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Zambia has legalized the production and export of cannabis for economic and medicinal purposes, the government’s chief spokeswoman said on Monday, becoming the latest country to shift its position on the drug to give its finances a boost.
The approval for the export of cannabis was granted at a special cabinet meeting on Dec. 4, spokeswoman Dora Siliya said in a statement.
It was not clear from the statement if the use of cannabis for medicinal purposes in Zambia had been legalized.
The southern African country joins a host of nations that have legalized, or are considering legalizing cannabis to some degree, as attitudes towards the drug slowly change and investments in its medical benefits grow.
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There are less opioid prescriptions on average in U.S. states where medical and recreational marijuana are legal, research has revealed.
Access to recreational cannabis in the U.S. was tied with a 11.8 percent lower rate of opioids prescriptions each day, and 4.2 percent for medical marijuana.
The authors of the paper published in the Journal of Health Economics said recreational weed laws could make it easier for patients to access the drug, and use it to treat pain and other conditions.
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Kashmira Gander ~ Newsweek.com ~