Montgomery Sued Over TASC Scheme That Hurts Impoverished Cannabis Users
A civil-rights group is taking on the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office for a drug policy that unfairly hurts low-income people.
A civil-rights group is taking on the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office for a drug policy that unfairly hurts low-income people.
Dr. Sue Sisley: “We didn’t want to be activists, but the government forced us into that role.”
“We’re trying to help set the standard by which this industry can and should be banked.”
Colorado-based BDS Analytics weaves data about cannabis consumers and brands into business gold.
“You bring that expertise into it and get the consistency and quality,” Colburn said of K.I.N.D.’s products.
Logan would bang his head against anything hard enough to hurt. He once put his head through a double-paned window.
The numbers add up to a pretty solid foundation for state’s cannabis companies.
He founded Flourish edibles in 2016, catering not only to dispensaries, but to families who choose to treat their children’s illnesses with cannabis
How are you going to celebrate?
Numerous special deals will be available this week despite court’s ruling that many cannabis extracts are illegal. However, 710 Degree Cup cancels its judging.
THC oil, vape pen cartridges, shatter, and edibles, are often used by the state’s sickest and most needy patients.
The group claimed it had collected 75,000 signatures of registered voters, well short of the 150,000 it needed to make the ballot.
The differences in the available types of extracts stem from the extraction process and tend to lead to different effects.
“It is our understanding that nothing dramatic or draconian will occur,” lobbyist Kevin DeMenna said.
Think of it as potcoin.
Extracts, which go by many different names, are used to fill vape cartridges and create most cannabis-infused food and drinks at Arizona dispensaries.
Once the olivetol makes it to the brain, it “bumps” the THC off the CB1 receptors, “flushing” your neurons, Jim said.
Some conservatives had high hopes that the anti-marijuana activist would effectively challenge Greg Stanton in CD9.
To Marvina Thomas, success comes from more than a desire to make money; it comes from having a reason to succeed. Her reason is helping people.
Phoenix New Times now puts more milligrams of journalistic cannabinoids in your Thursday mornings with its new weekly feature, “Cannabis News.”
The steady growth of Arizona’s medical marijuana market has attracted another major cannabis-themed convention to the state: the HempCon Cannabis Business Expo.
Maestas “had the courage to say ‘no, this isn’t right.'”