http://www.mlive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/12/michigan_supreme_court_rejects.html
Thought I would share...
Thought I would share...
It's not in Sec.4.(a) that's for sureAm I reading this wrong but they ruled 12 plants per room period? meaning multiple rooms for multiple patient caregivers?
"Kent County Circuit Judge George Buth ruled that the medical marijuana law had a strict requirement that each set of 12 plants allowed under the law must be kept in an enclosed, locked facility that can be accessed only by one person.
An appeals panel upheld that ruling, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court."
Yeah that article was horrible. That's why I posted the other link too.Ok nvm the wording in the article was tricky but that opinion paper cleared it up for me.
Agreed. I wonder how will this effect Ypsilanti who has recently zoned for co-op style grows. I'm personally happy about this. My wife has been offered a promotion, and we had the option of living in a few MMJ states, but Michigan's was the most attractive to me because of the "industry's" lack of commercial operations. In my opinion, the more medical marijuana stays is in the hands of communities the better.This ruling is no surprise, you can't comingle plants. There is an argument and an AG opinion requiring plants be separated by patients as well, but I strongly doubt that will hold up or even be enforced, it is viewed as a pretty radical interpretation. This ruling doesn't address that.
Dr. Bob
Some people just ask for trouble. Shit like this makes things harder for those of us who do stay within the guidelines. Legal or not, keep your grow on the downlow. It is the best way to prevent problems or attention none of us need.The recommendation I've always made is separate grow rooms for related caregivers and total plant count between the two under 99. You cannot co mingle grows. There are many lessons from this case of what not to do. It is suggested reading. Start with running a damn bright orange power cord to the next building to power your lights. Building inspector found the grow when he was tracing the illegal power source.
Dr. Bob
stay small and stay legal!!Some people just ask for trouble. Shit like this makes things harder for those of us who do stay within the guidelines. Legal or not, keep your grow on the downlow. It is the best way to prevent problems or attention none of us need.
i would say if you and your ..wife partner lover family member are in the same house you are each others CG anyway...?...right..........What I'm curious about, is what happens when two patients live under one roof, and both have their 12 plants(each) in the same room. On top of that, the recent changes (again, if I read it correctly) also "protect" other people under the same roof help you prepare medicine/oils/butter/etc when the patient is incapable. So ... WTF?
The way I read that is "for EACH registered qualifying patient...." Looks like this could be trouble for Caregivers if the Court is affirming that view. I don't think they are though - they left that for another day if I understand it proper. The merely ruled he could appeal from what I can gleam.It's not in Sec.4.(a) that's for sure
this is what is described in Sec.4.(b)
(2) for each registered qualifying patient who has specified
6 that the primary caregiver will be allowed under state law to
7 cultivate marihuana for the qualifying patient, 12 marihuana plants
8 kept in an enclosed, locked facility;
Hmmm, given my experience with The Green Market in Okemos I was struck by their repeated statement, within their sales pitch/legal advice, that we could continue growing even after designating their "associate grower" as our caregiver?It's a Yes or No on card. If Patient card says yes, then CG card says No, and cannot possess plants at CG grow and therefore is not protected at CG grow. An either or thang, not both.