December 6, 2017 no comments

NEW Michigan Medical Marihuana Emergency Administrative Rules Issued Dec. 4, 2017

On December 4, 2017 Michigan’s Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (“LARA”) issued Emergency Rules for the Medical Marihuana Facilities Licensing Act.  The Emergency Rules are to remain in effect for six (6) months and provide clarification on numerous aspects of acquiring and maintaining state operating licenses for medical marihuana growers, processors, provisioning centers, secure transporters, and safety compliance facilities.  Included in the rules are details for prospective licensees on the following subjects:

 

  • Requirements of the marihuana facility plan
  • Pre-licensure investigation and inspection of the proposed facilities
  • The grounds on which a license may be denied
  • Renewals of licenses, changes to facilities
  • Notifications, reporting, inspections, penalties, sanctions, fines
  • Transition period and licensee requirements to get marihuana product into the statewide monitoring system
  • Requirements and obligations of licensed marihuana facilities
  • Applicable state laws/rules, fire safety, security measures, prohibitions
  • Requirements, restrictions, and maximum THC-levels for marihuana-infused products
  • Storage, labeling requirements, product destruction, and waste management
  • Statewide marihuana tracking system
  • Daily purchasing limits and marketing/advertising restrictions
  • Employee background check requirements
  • The hearing and review process recommended by the Michigan Administrative Hearing System

MarijuanaAttorney.Pro will be digging into the details of the new Emergency Rules and providing breakdowns of key provisions along the way.  In the meantime, the LARA’s Emergency Rules can be found here.

December 4, 2017 no comments

Section 280E Amendment May Not Make GOP Tax Bill

Last week, the buzz throughout the marjiuana community was the potential for Section 280E – an Internal Revenue Code provision that prohibits tax deductions for businesses trafficking in controlled substances – to be amended within the new GOP Tax Bill.  Originally meant to prevent drug cartels from deducting expenses related to their illegal drug dealings, the impact of Section 280E has more recently been felt by legitimate marijuana businesses operating legally under state laws and who are unable to write off any tax exemptions related to their business operations.

 

Senator Cory Gardner of Colorado was to sponsor the Section 280E amendments, which would exempt businesses consisting of marjiuana sales conducted in compliance with state law.  However, because the Section 280E amendment would add to the country’s deficit, Senator Gardner did not believe he would be able to acquire enough votes to include it within the GOP Tax Bill.  Therefore, the current version of the GOP Tax Bill that does not include a Section 280E amendment and it seems unlikely to be added now that the bill is undergoing bipartisan review.

 

Fortunately, there are two standalone bills still pending that could amend Section 280E to benefit marjiuana businesses.  H.R. 1810 (“Small Business Tax Equity Act of 2017”) was introduced in the House on March 30, 2017 and was referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.  H.R. 1810 currently has forty cosponsors and counting.  An identical bill, S.777 was also introduced into the Senate and sent to the Committee on Finance, but it has only six cosponsors.

 

With 29 states allowing legal medical marijuana and eight states plus Washington D.C. allowing legal recreational marijuana, it is becoming increasingly apparent that Section 280E may need to be amended so that marijuana businesses can allowed to claim tax deductions comparable to other businesses in this country.

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