MSANI will be co-hosting this course in St. Paul June 13-16, 2023
See attached flyer:
MSANI will be co-hosting this course in St. Paul June 13-16, 2023
See attached flyer:
Many factors are leading to a decrease in revenue for an industry that’s only a decade old, and it’s threatening the funding of public projects.
Author: Marc Sallinger (9 News)
Published: 7:54 PM MST November 30, 2022
Updated: 10:32 AM MST December 5, 2022
DENVER — Colorado’s marijuana industry knows what it’s like to feel the high, but now the buzz is wearing off. Marijuana sales have declined for more than a year in the state, threatening public programs funded by the tax revenue the sales produce.
In an industry that’s built on getting high, marijuana sales are now seeing record lows.
“Right now, the Colorado marijuana industry is going through the largest downturn that we’ve ever seen,” said Truman Bradley, executive director of the Wheat Ridge-based Marijuana Industry Group. “Our industry is going through big time layoffs. Thousands of people have lost their jobs and small business owners are going under. Unfortunately, I expect that to continue into the coming year.”
So why is this all happening now? It starts with supply and demand. When everyone was sent home in 2020, let’s just say there wasn’t much to do. That resulted in a big spike in marijuana sales during the pandemic. Now that people aren’t stuck at home, they aren’t buying as much weed.
“The medical market is down about 47% statewide and the recreational market is down about 20%. Those are huge, huge, numbers,” Bradley said. “To put that into perspective, that means there is a hundred million dollars less in marijuana tax revenue than there was a year ago. What that means is critical programs that are funded by marijuana tax revenue are at risk.”
But that’s just one problem.
In Colorado, the wholesale price of marijuana is at a record low. Today, it costs $658 per pound. That’s half the price compared with this time last year, when it was selling for $1,316.
“The price of marijuana is at the lowest since the recreational marijuana was legalized in Colorado,” said Alex Padilla, professor and chair of economics at Metropolitan State University of Denver. “I believe that the decrease in price is a result of the increase of supply of marijuana.”
Revenue is also down. In September of 2022, stores made nearly $147 million ($146,880,577) worth of marijuana sales. That’s down from more than $181 million ($181,130,791) in September of 2021 and $206 million ($206,488,268) in the same month of 2020.
“What that means is when the state’s joint budget committee gets together this year to look at marijuana tax revenue, they’re going to be looking at a $100 million shortfall of marijuana tax money,” Bradley said.
Inflation is yet another potential cause for the downturn.
“With the increase in inflation, people are going to have to make choices,” Padilla said. “If we haven’t seen an increase in wages corresponding to an increase in inflation, people are going to have to make sacrifices.”
When people buy less weed, schools see less money.
Andy Stine is the director of capital construction with the Colorado Department of Education. Last fiscal year, the department’s Building Excellent Schools Today program, or BEST, took in $97 million in marijuana tax money to fund grants for school construction and renovation.
“Marijuana revenue excise tax is a large portion of the revenue that comes into the program,” Stine said.
The amount of money it brings in from marijuana tax revenue will likely go down this year.
“We would have to decrease the amount of grants that we are able to offer in the next fiscal year,” Stine said.
Marijuana tax revenue funds about 100 different programs around the state. Last year Colorado collected a record $423 million in taxes from cannabis. Programs like BEST have several revenue streams funding them, but if they get less money from marijuana taxes, they won’t be able to fund all the grants.
May 25-27, 2022
Grandview Lodge, Nisswa MN
WEDNESDAY May 25, 2022 (Registration opens at 1000)
1000 – 1230 Conference registration open (GVL)
1100 – 1230 Lunch (provided)
1230 – 1300 MSANI Business meeting (all MSANI members encouraged to attend)
1300 – 1315 CONFERENCE OPENING
1315 – 1330 MOCIC / NNOAC
1330 – 1415 MN Forfeitures update – Marilyn Sinclair, Statewide Forfeiture Coordinator MSP
1415 – 1715 Criminal Justice Reform – Brian Surber
1715 – 1730 Introduction of vendors/nominations for board positions
1730 – 1830 Intelligence Exchange
1830 Dinner (Beach or inside, weather dependent)
THURSDAY May 26, 2022
0800 – 0945 BREAKOUT SESSION 1
0945 – 1000 Break
1000 – 1145 BREAKOUT SESSION 2
1200 – 1300 Lunch Provided
1300 – 1445 BREAKOUT SESSION 3
1445 – 1500 Break
1500 – 1645 BREAKOUT SESSION 4
1700 – 1800 Intelligence Exchange
1800 Banquet, board nominations, raffle and awards ceremony (Norwood)
BREAKOUT TOPICS
FRIDAY May 27, 2022
0800 Board Elections
0800 – 1100 Adam Davis – Live Unconquered
1100 – 1200 Closing remarks and raffle
1200 Conference Concluded
Section 2. Officers: (amended October 2008)
The Executive Board of the Minnesota State Association of Narcotics Investigators shall consist of seven (7) members as follows: President, Vice President, Executive Secretary, Treasurer and three board members. President, Vice President, Executive Secretary and Treasurer will be selected by the Executive Board after the annual elections. The current Office of Justice Programs (OJP) Statewide Gang and Drug Coordinator may hold a non-voting position on the board. The past President may serve as a non-voting ex-officio member of the Board at the Executive Boards discretion.
MSANI would like to thank the following sponsors for their help with the 2021 conference:
908 Devices
Alpha Training and Tactics LLC
APF Armory
CoverTrack Group Inc
DetectaChem Inc
FirstNet Built by AT&T
Lens Equipment Company
Metrohm USA
Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA)
National Narcotics Officers Association Coalition (NNOAC)
RJ Wagner Marketing Inc
SUR TEC
Thermo Fisher Scientific
September 27, 2021 – The Drug Enforcement Administration warns the American public of the alarming increase in the lethality and availability of fake prescription pills containing fentanyl and methamphetamine. International and domestic criminal drug networks are mass-producing fake pills, falsely marketing them as legitimate prescription pills, and killing unsuspecting Americans. These counterfeit pills are easy to purchase, widely available, and often contain deadly doses of fentanyl. Pills purchased outside of a licensed pharmacy are illegal, dangerous, and potentially lethal. This alert does not apply to legitimate pharmaceutical medications prescribed by medical professionals and dispensed by pharmacists.
DEA and its law enforcement partners are seizing deadly fake pills at record rates. More than 9.5 million counterfeit pills were seized so far this year, which is more than the last two years combined. Officials report a dramatic rise in the number of counterfeit pills containing at least two milligrams of fentanyl, which is considered a deadly dose. The number of DEA-seized counterfeit pills with fentanyl has jumped nearly 430 percent since 2019, a staggering increase. DEA laboratory testing further reveals that today, two out of every five pills with fentanyl contain a potentially lethal dose. Additionally, methamphetamine is increasingly being pressed into counterfeit pills.
Some of the most common counterfeit pills are made to look like prescription opioids such as oxycodone (Oxycontin®, Percocet®), hydrocodone (Vicodin®), and alprazolam (Xanax®); or stimulants like amphetamines (Adderall®). Fake prescription pills are widely accessible and often sold on social media and e-commerce platforms – making them available to anyone with a smartphone, including teens and young adults. These counterfeit pills have been seized by DEA in every U.S. state, and in unprecedented quantities.
Drug traffickers are using fake pills to exploit the opioid crisis and prescription drug misuse in the United States, bringing overdose deaths and violence to American communities. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, last year more than 93,000 people died of drug overdoses in the United States, marking the largest number of drug-related deaths ever recorded in a year. Fentanyl, the synthetic opioid most commonly found in counterfeit pills, is the primary driver of this alarming increase in overdose deaths. Drug trafficking is also inextricably linked with violence. This year alone, DEA seized more than 2700 firearms in connection with drug trafficking investigations – a 30 percent increase since 2019. DEA remains steadfast in its mission to protect our communities, enforce U.S. drug laws, and bring to justice the foreign and domestic criminals sourcing, producing, and distributing these deadly fake pills.
The only safe medications are ones prescribed by a trusted medical professional and dispensed by a licensed pharmacist. Any pills that do not meet this standard are unsafe and potentially deadly. DEA has launched the public awareness campaign, One Pill Can Kill, to educate the public on dangers of counterfeit pills and how to keep Americans safe. For more information, visit DEA.gov/onepill.
**The Drug Enforcement Administration ensures the safety and health of the American public by fighting against violent criminal drug networks and foreign cartels trafficking in illicit drugs. To accomplish that mission, the Drug Enforcement Administration employs approximately 10,000 men and women throughout the world – Special Agents, diversion investigators, intelligence analysts, and chemists – across 239 domestic offices in 23 U.S. divisions and 91 foreign offices in 68 countries.
MSANI Can Am Conference CLE code: 41452
Distributed via the CDC Health Alert Network
September 14, 2021, 10:00 AM ET
CDCHAN-00451
Summary
The purpose of this Health Alert Network (HAN) Health Advisory is to alert public health departments, healthcare professionals, first responders, poison control centers, laboratories, and the public to the increased availability of cannabis products containing delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and the potential for adverse events due to insufficient labeling of products containing THC and cannabidiol (CBD).
Background
Marijuana, which can also be called weed, pot, or dope, refers to all parts of the plant Cannabis sativa L., including flower, seeds, and extracts with more than 0.3% delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) by dry weight. Any part of the cannabis plant containing 0.3% or less THC by dry weight is defined as hemp.1 The cannabis plant contains more than 100 cannabinoids, including THC, which is psychoactive (i.e., impairing or mind-altering) and causes a “high”.2 CBD is another active cannabinoid found in the cannabis plant that is not psychoactive and does not cause a “high”.
The term THC most often refers to the delta-9 THC isomer, which is the most prominently occurring THC isomer in cannabis. However, THC has several other isomers that occur in the cannabis plant, including delta-8 THC. Delta-8 THC exists naturally in the cannabis plant in only small quantities and is estimated to be about 50-75% as psychoactive as delta-9 THC.3,4 CBD can be synthetically converted into delta-8 THC, as well as delta-9 THC and other THC isomers, with a solvent, acid, and heat to produce higher concentrations of delta-8 THC than those found naturally in the cannabis plant.5 This conversion process, used to produce some marketed products, may create harmful by-products that presently are not well-characterized.
Delta-8 THC products are increasingly appearing in both marijuana and hemp marketplaces, some of which operate legally under state, territorial, or tribal laws.6 Most states and territories permit full or restricted hemp marketplaces that sell hemp and hemp-derived CBD products.7 Products sold as concentrated delta-8 THC are also available online. Delta-8 THC products are sometimes marketed as “weed light” or “diet weed.”
The health effects of delta-8 THC have not yet been researched extensively and are not well-understood. However, delta-8 THC is psychoactive and may have similar risks of impairment as delta-9 THC.4 As such, products that contain delta-8 THC but are labeled with only delta-9 THC content rather than with total THC content likely underestimate the psychoactive potential of these products for consumers. In addition, the sale of delta-8 THC products is not limited to regulated marijuana dispensaries in states, territories, or tribal nations where marketplaces operate under law. Rather, delta-8 THC products are sold by a wide range of businesses that sell hemp. As a result, delta-8 THC products may also have the potential to be confused with hemp or CBD products that are not intoxicating. Consumers who use these products may therefore experience unexpected or increased THC intoxication.
A wide variety of delta-8 THC-containing products have entered the marketplace, including, but not limited to, vapes, smokable hemp sprayed with delta-8 THC extract, distillates, tinctures, gummies,
chocolates, and infused beverages. In addition, because testing methods for products like synthetically derived delta-8 THC are still being developed, delta-8 THC products may not be tested systematically for contaminants such as heavy metals, solvents, or pesticides that may have adverse health effects.8
Recent increases in delta-8 THC-involved adverse events
In March 2021, the West Virginia Poison Control Center9 reported two cases of adverse events related to use of delta-8 THC products in adults. In both instances, individuals mistook the products containing delta-8 THC for CBD-like products. These exposures led to symptoms consistent with cannabis intoxication. The Michigan Poison Control Center10 also reported two cases of severe adverse events to delta-8 THC in two children who ingested a parent’s delta-8 THC-infused gummies purchased from a vape shop. Both children experienced deep sedation and slowed breathing with initial increased heart rate progressing to slowed heart rate and decreased blood pressure. The children were admitted to the intensive care unit for further monitoring and oxygen supplementation.
In 2021, The American Association of Poison Control Centers (AAPCC) introduced a product code specific to delta-8 THC into its National Poison Data System (NPDS), allowing for the monitoring of delta-8 THC adverse events*. From January 1 to July 31, 2021, 660 delta-8 THC exposures were recorded with the new product code, and one additional case was recoded as a delta-8 THC exposure from October 2020. Eighteen percent of exposures (119 of 661 cases) required hospitalization, and 39% (258 of 661 cases) involved pediatric patients less than 18 years of age.
Syndromic surveillance data from emergency departments participating in the CDC’s National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP) show an increase in visits with a mention of delta-8 THC or some variation in the chief complaint text in recent months. More than 4,400 active emergency facilities that represent portions of 49 states and Washington, DC contribute data to NSSP, accounting for approximately 71% of all U.S. non-federal emergency departments. The first suspected visit associated with delta-8 THC in NSSP was observed in September 2020, with three additional visits observed through the end of 2020. Suspected visits have generally increased monthly in 2021 (three suspected visits were observed in January; six in February; 16 in March; 11 in April; 29 in May; 32 in June; and 48 in July 2021). The majority of these visits (73%, 109 of 149 visits) occurred in the Department of Health and Human Services’ Regions 4 and 6, which are composed primarily of Southern states that have not passed state laws to allow non-medical adult cannabis use.11 These numbers are likely an underestimate due to the potential for inaccurate and incomplete information about products used by consumers.
Several factors can influence both the type and severity of cannabis-related adverse events, including the type of cannabinoid ingested, concentration, route of exposure, and the individual characteristics of the person who consumed the cannabinoid such as their age, weight, and sex. Delta-8 THC intoxication can cause adverse effects similar to those observed during delta-9 THC intoxication10,12, and may include—
•Lethargy
•Uncoordinated movements and decreased psychomotor activity
•Slurred speech
•Increased heart rate progressing to slowed heart rate
•Low blood pressure
•Difficulty breathing
•Sedation
•Coma
Summary
The rise in delta-8 THC products in marijuana and hemp marketplaces has increased the availability of psychoactive cannabis products, even in states, territories, and tribal nations where non-medical adult cannabis use is not permitted under law. Variations in product content, manufacturing practices, labeling, and potential misunderstanding of the psychoactive properties of delta-8 THC may lead to unexpected effects among consumers. Adverse event reports involving products that contain delta-8 THC that resulted in consumers’ hospital or emergency department treatment have been described. Increased
reports of adverse events related to delta-8 THC, as well as preliminary reports of the emergence of other similarly produced products derived from cannabis warrant the continued monitoring and tracking of adverse events related to THC.
Recommendations for the Public and Consumers
•Consumers should be aware of possible limitations in the labeling of products containing THC and CBD even from approved marijuana and hemp retailers. Products reporting only delta-9 THC concentration, but not total THC may underestimate the psychoactive potential for consumers.
•Consumers should be aware that products labeled as hemp or CBD may contain delta-8 THC, and that products containing delta-8 THC can result in psychoactive effects. Delta-8 THC products are currently being sold in many states, territories, and tribal nations where non-medical adult cannabis use is not permitted by law. In addition, retailers may sell products outside of regulated dispensaries in states, territories, and tribal nations where cannabis use is permitted by law. This may provide consumers with a false sense of safety, as delta-8 THC products may be labeled as hemp or CBD, which consumers may not associate with psychoactive ingredients.
•Parents who consume edibles and other products that contain THC and CBD should store them safely away from children. Children may mistake some edibles that contain THC and CBD (e.g., fruit-flavored gummies containing delta-8 THC) as candy.
•If consumers experience adverse effects of THC- or CBD-containing products that are an immediate danger to their health, they should call their local or regional poison control center at 1-800-222-1222 or 911 or seek medical attention at their local emergency room and report the ingredients of ingested products to healthcare providers. Consumers are also encouraged to report adverse events to MedWatch.
•Consumers should be aware that the cannabis marketplace continues to evolve. Other cannabis-derived products of potential concern have emerged recently, such as those containing delta-10 THC and THC-O acetate. More research is needed to understand the health effects of products containing these compounds.
Recommendations for Public Health Departments and Poison Control Centers, including those in locations where laws only permit hemp marketplaces
•Release information to healthcare providers and the public about the psychoactive qualities andthe potential health implications of using products containing delta-8 THC and that productslabeled as hemp or CBD may contain delta-8 THC.
•Poison control centers have a new code available to identify delta-8 THC exposures. For patientsor providers reporting delta-8 THC consumption, poison control centers should use the AmericanAssociation of Poison Control Centers code 310146 or product code 8297130 to indicate delta-8THC exposure and aid in the continued surveillance of these exposures.
•States, territories, and tribal nations that have passed laws allowing non-medical use of adultcannabis or that may allow such use in the future may consider requiring the reporting of totalTHC content, including ingredients like delta-8 THC and other compounds that may besynthetically produced, on product labeling.
•Community-based organizations, such as Drug-Free Communities coalitions, can use informationfrom this report to raise awareness in their communities about the potential negative healtheffects associated with use of delta-8 THC-containing products, as well as the emergence ofother cannabis-derived products of potential concern.
Recommendations for Retailers Selling Cannabis Products
•Retailers selling cannabis products should provide information to consumers about thepsychoactive qualities of delta-8 THC.
•Retailers selling cannabis products should report total THC content on product labeling, includingingredients like delta-8 THC that may be synthetically produced to create a psychoactive effect.
Recommendations for Healthcare Providers
• Healthcare providers should be vigilant in observing patients presenting with THC-like intoxication symptoms who do not report an exposure to marijuana or history of use. Symptomatic patients should be questioned about their use of CBD or delta-8 THC products.
• There is no specific antidote for THC intoxication. Treatment is largely symptomatic and supportive care. The ability to detect delta-8 THC with laboratory tests that hospitals use to detect delta-9 THC currently is not fully characterized. Consult with your hospital’s medical toxicologist or local poison control center for toxicology consultations on treatment.
For More Information
• CDC Marijuana homepage: “Marijuana and Public Health”
• FDA Delta-8 THC Consumer Update: “5 Things to Know about Delta-8 Tetrahydrocannabinol”
• Visit CDC-INFO or call CDC-INFO at 1-800-232-4636
• CDC 24/7 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) 770-488-7100
References
1. Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018. H.R.2, 115th Cong. (2017-2018).
Categories of Health Alert Network messages:
Health Alert Requires immediate action or attention, highest level of importance
Health Advisory May not require immediate action; provides important information for a specific incident or situation
Health Update Unlikely to require immediate action; provides updated information regarding an incident or situation
HAN Info Service Does not require immediate action; provides general public health information
Join us for CanAm in October at the beautiful Grandview Resort in Nisswa, MN. Information here: Canam 2021