Region’s first medical marijuana dispensary opens in Leicester
By
Elaine Thompson
Telegram & Gazette Staff
Posted Dec 5, 2017 at 7:32 PM
Updated Dec 6, 2017 at 11:36 AM
LEICESTER - Cultivate Holdings Inc. on Main Street is the first medical marijuana dispensary to open in Worcester County.
The
heavily-secured facility, located in a 23,000-square-foot former tool
and die shop at 1764 Main St., has marijuana cultivation, processing and
dispensary under one roof. The business is along the western portion of
Route 9, one of the commercial zoning districts where medical marijuana
facilities are allowed.
“We grow it here.
We’re extracting it here and packaging and selling it right out the
front door. It’s like farm to table, but in the cannabis world,”
24-year-old Sam Barber, company president, said Tuesday.
The
business opened Friday, and is open to the public from 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. seven days a week. Mr. Barber said about 40 clients from throughout
the state visit the business each day.
“People
in Worcester County are driving an hour to Northampton or to Newton,
the nearest locations. And when they get there, they end up waiting an
hour in line to be served,” he said. “We’re seeing people from all over
the state who just want to check out the next new spot and see what new
products are out there.”
The company,
formerly called Natural HealthCare, offers nine strains of the cannabis
flower that have varying percentages of THC and CBD that result in
different effects. For instance, different strains are used for body
relaxation, pain relief, better focus or improved creativity.
The company is working on 20 to 30 other product lines, including edibles, to be available in the next few months.
Clients
must have current government-issued identification and a state medical
marijuana license before they are allowed to enter the dispensary. Once
they are inside, the business creates a profile of the client in their
database.
Suzanne Melanson, dispensary
manager, said for many patients it’s a matter of trial and error to find
the right strain for their ailment. Customers are offered a journal so
they can track what works for them and at what dosage. Company employees
cannot recommend a particular strain.
“The patient advocate here guides them. We can
speak to them about how other patients have benefited from the
medicine,” she said.
Ms. Melanson said her 19-year-old son, who has
attention deficit disorder, has been able to cut his medication in half
by taking a particular strain of marijuana. It also stimulates his
appetite and helps him sleep better, she said. He and his twin sister
were born prematurely, and his sister had a full spinal fusion operation
a couple of years ago. Instead of using opioids to deal with chronic
pain and inflammation, she uses other strains of medical marijuana, Ms.
Melanson said.
Jennifer S. Grace of
Leominster, a former hospice and home-care nurse in the Worcester and
Boston areas for 10 years, now works as a patient assistant at
Cultivate. She said she saw a tremendous need for better pain control
and better symptom management.
“A lot of
patients in pain don’t want to take pain medication because of the side
effects, including depression and constipation,” she said. “And when
they’re medicated, they don’t feel like they are part of their
surroundings. They’re out of it. They’re med-headed. A lot of people
don’t like to have that feeling. Medical marijuana provides pain relief
without those side effects.”
Mr. Barber
said several customers have been veterans who suffer from post-traumatic
stress disorder. The company offers several discounts, including one
for veterans. There is also a discount for senior citizens and a
hardship discount calculated on a sliding scale. Prices range from $15
for pre-rolled medical marijuana cigarettes to $50 for 1/8 of an ounce
to $350 for 1 ounce.
“Everyday I hear a new
story about how this is changing people’s lives ... helping them to be
able to get up in the morning and live their life in a better way,” Mr.
Barber said. “Going at this from the beginning, we saw there is a huge
benefit, but we need to get rid of the stigma of marijuana in general.
There is this idea that it’s bad. But we see a lot of the positive that
is coming from it.”
He said he has been
working on the business for about four years. He applied for a license
in 2015. He spent another 18 months working with the town. Under the
host agreement, the company will pay the town an annual impact fee of
$50,000, effective the 13th month after opening.
Mr. Barber said the business has also created
20 jobs and expects to hire 30 more people in the next few months. He
said “thousands” of people applied for the jobs. There were more than
600 applicants just for the job of assistant manager, he said. Many of
the employees are from Leicester and surrounding towns, he added.
The
Portland, Maine, native commutes from Boston. He earned a bachelor of
science degree in business and entrepreneurship from Babson College in
Wellesley in 2016. His partners are his father, Steve Barber, former
operator of Barber Foods, a chicken processing company in Portland that
was sold to Tyson Foods; and Robert Lally, owner of Mount Abram ski area
in Maine.
Mr. Barber said the partners
plan to extend their business to offer recreational marijuana when it is
allowed by the state next year.
I read articles like this and shake my head. The State/Country has a chance to legalize marijuana like tomato's. The obvious reason that officials dont agree is the absolute drain legalizing marijuana would have on budgets. From Cops to Courts to Prisons we would see reductions in staff/funding.
ReplyDeleteInstead we do the quasi legalization in piecemeal fashion. We are increasing government in the process.
Now, back to this guy selling medical marijuana. Who thinks that this process is going to eliminate the black market for marijuana. When dispensaries in MA are selling ounces for $350.00 and Colorado is selling Pounds for $1300 (16 ounces) the crime is already laid out. Why would anyone think differently. Take NY and cigarettes as an example. Cigarettes are legal, but an illegal trade was created by raising taxes disproportionately compared to neighbor States.
Just as an example. You dont think someone is going to figure it might be worth driving to Colorado, buying $1300 lbs and selling them in MA at $350 and ounce for a profit of $4300. C'mon, they are doing it with cigs!!!!!
No reasonable justification exists for this type of pricing for a legal product other than greed or manipulation.
My bet is that at $350 an ounce those in the black market in marijuana are just smiling all the way to the bank.
This type of system will lead to corporations and cartels controlling marijuana, more regulations and rules and the exact opposite of what the people who started this trend wanted for results.