It seems like a long time since Alabama passed legislation that set up the framework for a medical-marijuana industry that still hasn't come to be.
It's been so long, you could almost forget it's supposed to be a thing. Did it really pass? Was it a crazy dream?
No, it wasn't a dream (particularly to those whose REM sleep is repressed). The Compassion Act passed in the Spring of 2021. People have started college and earned degrees faster than the Alabama medical cannabis industry could germinate.
AL.com's Mike Cason reports that right now lawyers are in court-ordered mediation to try to get beyond a current legal impasse.
If you recall, conflict bloomed over the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission's issuing of business licenses to those who will cultivate, process and dispense the product.
Some companies that didn't make the cut for licenses are claiming that the Commission isn't following the law, and the courts have shut down the process while it's being litigated. Right now, some licenses have been issued, but they're hung up over dispensaries and integrated companies.
That's where we are after three efforts to issue licenses in 2023.
Specifics of the mediation are confidential, but Commission attorney Mark Wilkerson said he thinks progress is being made.