D.C. Medical Marijuana Patient Registrations Surge Again In September With Self-Certification Law In
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D.C. Medical Marijuana Patient Registrations Surge Again In September With Self-Certification Law In

By Kyle Jaeger October 24, 2022


Washington, D.C. medical marijuana patient registrations continue to surge since the city started allowing residents to self-certify without a doctor’s recommendation—with the program adding about 1,500 more patients in September.


( Taken and grown by 7hillzgro )


At the end of last month, D.C. had 22,482

registered cannabis patients, which is nearly two times as large as the patient population around this time last year, representing a 90 percent increase compared to October 2021. The rapid increase in recent months appears directly linked to the self-certification policy that was signed into law on July 6.


That law allows people to fill out a simple form to register themselves as patients without needing a doctor’s recommendation.


In June, there were 14,468 medical marijuana patients registered in the District. That quickly rose to 15,730 in July and 21,051 in August before jumping another roughly 1,500 over the next month.


Overall, D.C.’s medical cannabis patient population grew 55 percent from June to September.

 

D.C. Medical Marijuana Patient Registrations


October 2021-September 2022:

October 11,856

November 12,041

December 12,368

January 12,661

February 13,034

March 13,445

April 13,848

May 14,211

June 14,468

July 15,730

August 21,051

September 22,482

 

This trend could expand significantly since D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) signed another bill last week that allows non-residents to self-certify as well. Regulators at the Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration (ABRA) can now provide visitors with a temporary, 30-day registration to buy cannabis from dispensaries under the emergency legislation.


What’s more, the emergency legislation that lets adult residents 21 and older to self-certify would be permanently codified under a bill that cleared the D.C. Council Judiciary & Public Safety Committee on Friday. That measure also contains provisions eliminating existing licensing caps for cannabis businesses, which could help meet increased demand from visitors and residents.

The effect of these reforms is that the District is effectively circumventing a congressional spending bill rider that blocks D.C. from using its local tax dollars to implement a system of regulated, adult-use cannabis sales.


The recently signed bill, which unanimously cleared the D.C. Council late last month, also makes it so patients from other states—or even other countries—can self-certify to buy medical marijuana like District residents can, even if they are not registered as patients in their home jurisdiction’s program. It further increases the amount that a patient can possess from four to eight ounces.


The emergency act took effect with the mayor’s signature and sunsets 90 days after enactment. A complementary measure that would last for 225 days has also passed the Council is currently under review by the mayor, who has until October 25 to act on the proposal.


D.C. lawmakers additionally passed a related resolution declaring an emergency that necessitates the reform.


It says that while ABRA recently instituted a policy providing temporary, 30-day patient registrations—which has resulted in more than 5,000 registrations since August—there “remains a need to expand upon patient access to medical cannabis for qualifying non-resident patients visiting the District of Columbia who are not enrolled in another jurisdiction’s medical cannabis program.”


The resolution points out that states like Hawaii and Oklahoma “already allow visiting patients from other jurisdictions to register and obtain temporary patient registrations cards from the jurisdiction being visited to purchase medical cannabis.”


While advocates have welcomed the legislative efforts to expand cannabis access in the District, many continue to push for an end to the federal blockade that’s prevented D.C. from establishing a regulated market, despite voters approving an initiative to legalize possession and personal cultivation in 2014.


After President Joe Biden issued a proclamation earlier this month pardoning Americans who’ve committed federal marijuana possession offenses, as well as people who’ve violated the law in D.C., U.S. Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) called on the president to go further by federally legalizing cannabis and letting the District establish a commercial cannabis market and grant clemency on its own.


The congresswoman said the ongoing local ban, which was maintained in Biden’s last two budget proposals, represents a “shocking violation of D.C. home rule by a Democratic administration.”

A poll released last month found that D.C. voters strongly support marijuana legalization and oppose a crackdown on the cannabis “gifting” market that’s emerged in the absence of regulated sales.


D.C. lawmakers also recently sent letters to House and Senate Appropriations Committees leadership, imploring them to remove the rider preventing local cannabis sales as part of Fiscal Year 2023 spending legislation.



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