Colorado voters approved an initiative authorizing the medical use of marijuana in 2000. In 2010, the Colorado Legislature approved two bills that substantially amended the original law:
This website provides an overview of some of the key provisions of the two bills. House Bill 1284, Concerning Regulation of Medical Marijuana
The initiative passed by Colorado voters in 2000 mirrored in most respects the initiative approved in Montana in 2004. In particular, it created a system of patients and caregivers similar to the system now in place in Montana.
However, Colorado lawmakers set the stage for significant revisions to this system with passage this year of HB 1284. The bill created an entire new article of the Colorado Revised Statutes to put in place a system for regulating the production and distribution of medical marijuana. Some of the key provisions of HB 1284 are listed below.
The bill creates four types of licenses for individuals or entities involved in growing or selling medical marijuana:
Care givers, who are defined in Colorado law in essentially the same way they are in Montana law, are limited to having 5 patients. A care giver may not also have a medical marijuana center license.
A patient who has designated someone as a care giver for the patient may not be designated as a primary care giver for another patient.
The Colorado Department of Revenue is the designated licensing and regulatory authority for medical marijuana centers, optional premises cultivation licensees, and infused products manufacturers. The Department will grant, refuse, or renew licenses for those licensees and may also suspend, restrict, or revoke licenses or fine licensees for violations of the law or any administrative rule.
The Department is to adopt rules that, among other things:
To obtain a license, an applicant must provide the names and addresses of the officers, directors, and managers of the business. Licenses may be denied if the applicant:
License applicants must submit fingerprints for a fingerprint-based criminal background check and must post a $5,000 bond with the state to ensure that they will pay all taxes due to the state.
A medical marijuana center, optional premises cultivator, or infused products manufacturer may obtain a local license only if the local governing body has adopted an ordinance or resolution that contains licensing standards. Local governments may adopt additional standards for licensing, including distance limits between licensed locations and restrictions on the size of licensed premises.
Medical marijuana facilities may not be within 1,000 feet of a school, an alcohol or drug treatment facility, the principal campus of a college, or a residential child care facility. The fiscal note for the final version of the bill estimated that about 1,900 medical marijuana centers, cultivation premises, and infused products manufacturers will be licensed annually. License fees must cover the cost of regulation, which was estimated at $2.7 million in the first year.
The fiscal note estimated that license fees initially may be set as follows: $1,800 for medical marijuana centers; $500 for optional premises cultivation; $500 for infused products manufacturers; and a range of $10 to $125 for employees, depending on their role in the operation. It estimated that 1,100 medical marijuana centers would employ about 6,600 people.
Senate Bill 109, Concerning Regulation of the Physician-Patient RelationshipUntil SB 109 passed this year, the Colorado law allowed the Department of Public Health and Environment to establish rules for a number of items involving the medical marijuana registry and the application process for people seeking a medical marijuana card.
SB 109 amended this general rulemaking authority to add the following items:
• The term “bona fide physician-patient relationship” is defined as one that includes a personal physical examination, requires the doctor to have consulted with the patient about the debilitating medical condition before the patient applies for a card, and requires the doctor to be available for follow-up care and treatment. The definition applies only for the purposes of the medical marijuana program.
A physician making a medical marijuana recommendation must have a valid, unrestricted license to practice medicine in the state and a valid and unrestricted registration with the Drug Enforcement Administration.
Physicians who provide written recommendations for medical marijuana are prohibited from:
The Department of Health may notify the Board of Medical Examiners if it has reasonable cause to believe a physician is violating any provision of the law and may suspend the physician’s authority to recommend the use of medical marijuana while an investigation is conducted.
Patients who are convicted of a criminal offense involving the state’s drug laws or who are ordered by a court to undergo drug or substance abuse treatment must immediately apply for renewal of their card and have a recommendation from a physician with whom they have a bona fide physician-patient relationship.
Parents who apply for a medical marijuana card on behalf of their child must have their signatures notarized.