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Meet Me at the Fair

Medical cannabis grower faces stiff punishment for educational booth at Expo New Mexico

By Peter St. Cyr / Santa Fe Reporter

Published on November 3, 2016

The decision to exhibit a live cannabis plant at the State Fair earned New Mexico’s top-selling medical cannabis provider a hefty punishment from the Department of Health.

State officials ordered Ultra Health to suspend sales at all six of its dispensaries in New Mexico for five consecutive days and pay a $100 fine as punishment for displaying a single seedling at the New Mexico State Fair in early September.

Kenny Vigil, the director of New Mexico’s Medical Cannabis Program, issued the disciplinary action eight days after fair officials asked the firm to remove a 21-day old nonflowering marijuana plant from their preapproved visitor’s booth.

State Fair officials admit they overlooked a plan Ultra Health submitted describing their intention to display the plant to educate the public about medical cannabis before they signed an exhibit contract, which specifically prohibits displaying drug related merchandise or paraphernalia, with the firm.Public records show that on the first day of the event, Larry C Trujillo, a director of fair security, and New Mexico State Police Lieutenant David Ben Romero checked with then-medical cannabis program compliance manager Ken Groggel. He determined that Ultra Health violated a program rule that prohibits cannabis production to be in view of the public when it moved the plant from its greenhouse to the fairgrounds.

“The removal of a cannabis plant to an off-site location constituted both a change of location for the non-profit producer’s production and a substantial change to the entity’s production plan,” new program manager Kenny Vigil wrote in a Sept. 16 letter to Leigh Jenke, the president of the grower’s nonprofit organization.

Jenke insists that Ultra Health never intended for the booth display to be considered a new or alternative production facility and that the plant was “secured, guarded and controlled by our licensed personnel at all times.” In her October 12 response letter, Jenke writes that Ultra Health “acted in good faith with full disclosure,” adding that the company received a full refund from fair administrators. Jenke’s letter also reveals that Vigil never contacted the company to ask questions or inquire about the booth’s preapproved status before handing out the disciplinary action.That upsets Jenke. She says the proposed punishment is inconsistent with any sanctions ever imposed by the Medical Cannabis Program.In fact, documents obtained through a public records request show that other growers caught violating program rules have simply had to provide the regulators formal corrective action plans.

New MexiCann Natural Medicine, a Santa Fe dispensary, however, did receive a $13,000 fine from OSHA following a gas explosion that seriously injured two employees, but no monetary sanction from the health department and was prohibited from using gas extraction methods to manufacture cannabis products for 12 months.

Duke Rodriguez, the president of the Ultra Health’s shared management company, tells SFR he thinks the unprecedented punishment is retaliation for a lawsuit the company jointly filed in August with Nicole Sena, the mother of an infant patient, challenging the department’s 450-plant cap limitation. Rodriguez says the seedling taken to the fair from a greenhouse in Bernalillo amounted to less than one percent of the company’s 450-plant total.

“There is no way that this constituted a substantial change to Ultra Health’s production or distribution plans,” says Rodriguez. “The Department of Health has run roughshod over the cannabis program with rules detrimental to patient care, delaying cards, excessive taxes and fees, low plant counts, historical and continuous adequate supply issues and now threatened sanctions.”

If the department’s sanction sticks it could cost the provider substantially more than a $100 fine. Rodriguez estimates Ultra Health stands to lose around $100,000 in total sales by shutting down all six of its New Mexico dispensaries for nearly a week. The long-term impact could be even bigger as loyal customers seek alternative providers during the shutdown.

Roger Posey, a Hobbs resident, who uses cannabis to treat his post-traumatic stress disorder, tells SFR via a telephone interview that if Ultra Health is forced to shutter its dispensary he will probably turn to street dealers.

“I need the medical grade we get here at Ultra Health. On the street, you never know what people are putting into it,” says Posey, adding that driving 192 miles to the next closest dispensary in Ruidoso “is out of the question.” Another dispensary in Hobbs is only open a few hours a day.

Health department spokesman Paul Rhien contends “patients will not lose access to medicine because of this disciplinary action.”

The health department has retained Albuquerque attorney Craig Erickson to hear both sides of the issue at a closed-door meeting on Nov. 30. His recommendation is nonbinding. Instead, acting Secretary of Health Lynn Gallagher makes the final decision to uphold or deny the disciplinary action.

In the meantime, Ultra Health is planning to return to Expo New Mexico and Tingley Coliseum next spring as the title sponsor of the annual Gathering of Nations.


November brings high hopes for cannabis legalization

November is shaping up to be a very exciting time for cannabis advocates. Hundreds of millions of Americans will be casting their vote for President November 8, while over 25 percent of the country will be voting on social and medical cannabis propositions.

The most exciting part? Legalization is leading in nearly every state where it is on the ballot. Even more exciting? If all states with legalization on the ballot approve, a quarter of the United States will be free from cannabis prohibition and 62 percent will live in states with medical programs.

Here’s where each state stands on legalization this upcoming election.

 

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New Mexico Medical Cannabis Sales Up 56 Percent, Patients Up 74 Percent

Producer revenues increase, while total sales significantly lag behind patient growth

(Albuquerque) – Of the 23 Licensed Non-Profit Producers (LNPPs) who were operating throughout fiscal year 2016, over two-thirds experienced double-digit revenue growth.  Four producers experienced negative growth, and three others were essentially flat during the period.

Total industry revenues from fiscal year 2015 to 2016 increased by $14.1 million, resulting in a $39 million total and a growth of 56 percent. Sales lagged behind patient growth, as patient numbers increased from 15,265 to 26,568, by 74 percent, for the same period.

“The industry is doing as much as it can to keep providing patients with the medicine they need,” said Duke Rodriguez, CEO and President of Ultra Health®. “But, it has become clear as sales significantly lag behind patient growth, there is not an adequate supply of medicine. Patients may be forced to go outside the licensed program and look to the black market for their needs.”

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New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program Grows To 31,000 Patients

Senate passed bill to increase plant count, special session ended with no House vote

(Albuquerque) – Patients in New Mexico’s Medical Cannabis Program reached 30,877 at the end of the third calendar quarter, a 4,309 increase from June 30, 2016. This increase is twice the amount of patients that were added to the program in the same quarter in 2015. Additionally, the program has seen a 76 percent patient growth increase over the past year.

Bernalillo and Santa Fe remain the two largest counties by patient population with 11,396 and 4,070 enrolled patients, respectively. Every county, excluding Harding and Union counties, experienced a double-digit increase in patients in the third calendar quarter. Growth continues to accelerate particularly in the southern and southeastern parts of New Mexico including Dona Ana, Lea, Chaves, Grant and Eddy counties. Nearly 3,200 patients are living in rural counties without a full time dispensary.

“The gap between the growing number of patients and the amount of available medical grade cannabis is widening,” said Duke Rodriguez, CEO and President of Ultra Health®.

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Indigenous Endeavors In The Cannabis Market: Ultra Health’s Vision

By Megan Rubio / DOPE Magazine

Published on September 21, 2016

Native American tribes are often recognized for their success within the casino business and the tobacco industry. Over the past decade, as cannabis has become more accepted as a medical treatment, the industry has grown exponentially. In some places, where legal recreational cannabis use exists, there have been fears of the market flooding with all of the products being produced. The involvement of Native American tribes in the cannabis industry could very well allow legal cannabis to reach untapped markets and speed up the legalization movement.

One company, Ultra Health, is currently working with the Paiute Tribe in Las Vegas on two dispensaries and a cultivation facility. Ultra Health is headquartered in Arizona, providing business solutions in New Mexico and Nevada as well. One of the main goals of Ultra Health is to expand the influence of Native American tribes on the cannabis market.

Duke Rodriguez, the CEO of Ultra Health, explains that their company is looking to create business solutions and opportunities within the cannabis business from a healthcare perspective. Prior to entering the cannabis industry, Rodriguez gained experience with healthcare systems while operating as a cabinet member within the Human Services Department, as appointed by former Governor Gary Johnson of New Mexico. He explained that his motivations for pursuing collaboration with native tribes were due in part to the many interactions and services provided to tribal nations during his work with the healthcare systems in New Mexico.

Rodriguez can go into detail about the advantage that native tribes would have within the industry. The US government recognizes native tribes as their own sovereign nations. These sovereign nations have latitude when it comes to creating laws within their lands. Whether a state has legalized medical or recreational cannabis, those laws do not bind native tribes. They can create whatever laws suit them when they are on their land. All that the government asks is that the tribes come up with a regulatory model for production and sales. Ideally, the models would be based off of the systems within states that have legalized.

All things considered, Rodriguez confirmed that it would be possible for nations that live in states with no marijuana legislation to build regulations and markets within those states. Through meetings with a number of attorney generals, Rodriguez quickly realized that the attorney generals within the states were far more likely to be supportive of cannabis markets on tribal lands as long as markets existed within the state. It’s obvious that Rodriguez is excited about the future of native tribes and the cannabis business. He explained that since the tribes have certain independence, they will be able to pick and choose which parts of the cannabis industry in which they want to engage. In a way, they will have more freedom than any other businesses within the cannabis field.

As work progresses on the projects with the Paiute Tribe in Las Vegas, Rodriguez explained how reciprocity would be instrumental in the future success of the business. States with reciprocity recognize the legitimacy of out-of-state medical cards, allowing for a medical marijuana patient from New Mexico to buy medical marijuana in Nevada, for instance. While Nevada is not the only state that allows for reciprocity, they have the most expansive and user-friendly policies.

Rodriguez makes it clear that it’s Ultra Health’s goal to first empower tribal nations in states where medical or recreational marijuana exists. He believes that tribes have a unique amount of freedom to create a new network of cannabis businesses and revolutionize the industry as we currently know it. Ultra Health’s dedication to relationships with native tribes was only made more evident when they signed up to be the primary sponsor for the Gathering of Nations Powwow. Ultra Health is the first medical cannabis company to sponsor such an event. Rodriguez described the Gathering of Nations as the “Super Bowl of powwows,” where the main focus is participating in the spiritual and social celebrations. While expanding the influence of native tribes is one priority of the company, Ultra Health is also dedicated to a vision of providing professional, quality healthcare.

Rodriguez is clearly passionate about the work Ultra Health does. Describing himself as a “healthcare junkie,” the company is modeled to be heavily steeped in medicine. Even while pursuing opportunities with tribal nations, Ultra Health is always aspiring towards something new. They recently established a relationship with a pharmaceutical company based out of Israel. It’s another goal of Rodriguez’s to bring more products to the cannabis industry that are typically traditional in the pharmaceutical industry. In partnership with native tribes, he sees a vision for the future aimed at expanding and legitimizing the cannabis industry as a healthcare solution provider.


New Mexico Legalized Cannabis a Half Billion Dollar Industry

Legalized cannabis industry in New Mexico to create new jobs, unprecedented annual revenues

(Albuquerque) – A recent economic report produced by Kelly O’Donnell, Ph.D., of O’Donnell Economics and Strategy found the legalized cannabis industry in New Mexico would total $412.5 million in annual revenues after the first year of implementation and $677.7 million by 2021.

The report, commissioned by Ultra Health® with support from the Drug Policy Alliance, Rio Grande Foundation and a consortium of industry advocates, also found that legalized cannabis would create more than 11,400 jobs – 6,600 in the direct cannabis industry and 4,780 in ancillary positions.

“Legalizing cannabis could have a profound effect on New Mexico’s economy and help fill New Mexico’s yawning budget gap,” Dr. O’Donnell said. “But to achieve the benefits of a robust cannabis market, state policymakers must insist on common sense regulation and sound tax policy.”

Continue reading “New Mexico Legalized Cannabis a Half Billion Dollar Industry”


New report predicts high dollars if NM legalizes marijuana

By Marissa Higdon / Albuquerque Business First 

Published on September 21, 2016

A new report, commissioned by medical marijuana producer Ultra Health, found that, if marijuana is legalized for recreational use in New Mexico, the industry could bring in $412.5 million in annual revenue in the first year and $677.7 million five years after legalization.

The report estimates that more than 40 percent of this new revenue would come from out-of-state tourists who buy marijuana while visiting New Mexico, and the rest would mostly come from individuals who currently use cannabis illegally. Kelly O’Donnell, of O’Donnell Economics and Strategy, authored the report. According to the organization’s website, she worked in former Gov. Bill Richardson’s administration in a number of positions, including as director of state tax policy. Her report found that legalizing medical cannabis would create 11,400 new jobs in the state in the first year. The Drug Policy Alliance and the Rio Grande Foundation joined industry advocates in providing support for the report’s creation.

According to the New Mexico Department of Health, there are almost 27,000 patients with medical cannabis cards, meaning there are currently almost 27,000 people with the ability to consume cannabis legally, under restrictions. The report estimates that 138,000 people over 21 in New Mexico use cannabis illegally, and 48,000 of those people use it daily. If all of these people were able to legally obtain cannabis, the report estimates that they would consume 57.3 metric tons of it. The report says 6.3 metric tons is currently produced in the state.

A lot of the data O’Donnell points to comes from Washington and Colorado.

Forbes reports that Colorado’s cannabis industry brought in $996.2 million in revenue in 2015, but, since its inception, the Colorado cannabis industry has been larger than New Mexico’s. Right before legalization, which occurred in January 2014 , Colorado had 221 licensed medical cannabis dispensaries, 112,862 medical cannabis card holders and producers generated $185 million in revenue in 2012. In comparison, New Mexico has 35 licensed producers, 27,000 card holders and producers have brought in $21.5 million in revenue so far this year.

After the first year of recreational cannabis legalization, WIRED magazine reports cannabis in Colorado was a $700 million industry, and in the first half of 2014, the state brought in $30 million in tax revenue.A t first, growth in the industry was slower than expected.

Still, that kind of tax revenue could have a big impact on a state like New Mexico. According to Colorado’s department of revenue, cannabis taxes, licenses and fees have brought in $97.7 million for the state during fiscal year 2015/2016. Tax revenue for New Mexico would depend on the size of taxes levied on the industry.

Another question has to do with cannabis tourism. In her report, O’Donnell, based on Colorado’s experience, estimates that 40 percent of cannabis sales will come from out-of-state visitors. She cites 119,000 Texas residents who reported using marijuana in the last year who live only 200 miles from the New Mexico border as possible consumers. The question is, with Colorado’s cannabis industry so close, would people choose to come to the Land of Enchantment? The Santa Fe New Mexican reported a record 33 million visitors to the state in 2014, and t he Denver Post reports that 77.7 million people visited Colorado in 2015.

Still, O’Donnell isn’t estimating that New Mexico’s cannabis industry will match Colorado’s; she’s estimating much lower numbers than our neighbor is seeing, and she is quick to point out that the true success or failure of a recreational cannabis industry will be mostly decided by the regulators who make the rules and process business licenses.


Inside the Company Helping Native Americans Grow Cannabis

By Layla Halabian / VICE

Published on September 16, 2016

North of Las Vegas’s bustling, fluorescent strip sits the Paiute Nation tribe. Like many other Native American tribes across the United States, they’ve suffered from and struggled with poverty, depression, and alcoholism. With dwindling numbers—only 56 adult members currently remain as a result of blood quantum laws—the Paiutes are facing the reality of losing their culture forever.

As detailed on last week’s episode of VICELAND’s Weediquette, the Las Vegas Paiute Smoke Shop is the lifeblood of the Paiutes, providing the reservation with 85 to 90 percent of its revenue. With the tribe’s fragile economic stability threatening to buckle, tribal leaders are searching for new ways to utilize the smoke shop for a desperately needed revenue boost.

Enter Duke Rodriguez, founder and CEO of the Arizona-based medical cannabis company Ultra Health. Before founding the company, Rodriguez oscillated between positions in government and healthcare, making him the ideal candidate for the booming medical cannabis industry. “You need to have a medical background to communicate with the Department of Health Services,” he tells me over the phone. “You have to understand about dispensing and how clinics operate.”

Founded in Arizona in 2011, Ultra Health assisted those who won licenses for medical cannabis to establish the state’s first dispensaries and cultivation facilities. It didn’t take long for Rodriguez to realize that tribes like the Paiutes were ripe for the benefits—and astronomical profits—cannabis could provide. With the lofty goal of harvesting 18,000 plants every three months to generate more than $100 million in revenue, those numbers are exactly what the tribe needs to end the financial decay that threatens their existence—and traceability systems to monitor cannabis growth ensure that those profits stay within the tribe and out of the federal government’s hands.

We spoke to Rodriguez about Ultra Health, cannabis’s distorted history within the United States, and the plant’s potential to empower the country’s sovereign nations in operating their own forms of trade both with and separately from the United States government.

VICE: How did you establish yourself in the cannabis community?
Duke Rodriguez: Cannabis [use] in states like Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, and Colorado all started as medical programs. They weren’t recreational. So from day one, we’ve focused on medical cannabis.

Does Ultra Health work on legislative efforts toward wider cannabis legalization?
Without a question, yes. In New Mexico, we supported legislation that got to their senate floor earlier this year. We produced studies, did surveys, presented to legislators, and contributed to politicians. There’s no question that we’re actively and politically engaged.

What made you so passionate about cannabis?
We all had some exposure in college—we inhaled and experienced it. Once you begin to understand the pejorative nature of marijuana, though, you really understand the medical value of cannabis. Most Americans tend to believe marijuana and cannabis are the same, but that’s not true. It’s somewhat ignorant to call it marijuana—no offense, but it is.

How did the term “marijuana” come to be widely used?
Around the world, no one uses the word “marijuana.” It’s not a scientific term—there’s no plant in the world called “marijuana.” The genus is cannabis. In the 1930s, Harry Anslinger was the former deputy of the Department of Revenue for alcohol; prohibition had ended, and he faced an elimination of one-third of his entire agency, so they found a new boogeyman. Cannabis was 100 percent legal at the time, and they didn’t go after the other products that were legal at the time—opium, cocaine—because they didn’t want to target the majority white population. So they came for cannabis, which was actively and safely used by minorities—particularly Latinos, blacks, and Native Americans. Anslinger needed something to scare people, so he came up with the phrase “marijuana.” That’s all it is. There’s no science behind it. Understanding history makes you never want to use the word “marijuana” again. It’s very offensive.

What drew you to working with Native American tribes?
We recognized from day one that if anybody’s going to positively utilize cannabis in this country, it’s native people. They have many competitive advantages—they own land, they have water and access to power, and they have a historical and cultural tie to cannabis and natural healing. They also have a distribution network—smoke shops, reservations, and casinos across the country. It’s clear that cannabis will bring what casinos originally did for tribes to the next level. We started communicating with and educating tribes across the country. It’s a long process.

How long?
We worked with the Paiute for more than two years. You have to overcome 85 years of prohibition—of being told “just say no,” of the tribe not having economic independence, and of their sovereignty being violated. It’s not an easy process for them to overcome, and they’re doubtful sometimes. They wonder what’s really in it for them—is this going to be another venture taking advantage of the tribe?

How far have you come with the Paiute tribe’s medical cannabis effort?
We’ve successfully broken ground on their main street, and we’re actually building what is likely to be the single largest cultivation facility in the United States, as well as the single largest Native American venture into cannabis. It’s being watched by everyone from federal authorities, to other tribes, to the state of Nevada. By late fall of 2016, there will be plants cultivated on Native American land, and we hope to have a firm opening this coming January.

The Weediquette episode addresses how other tribes’ attempts at growing medical cannabis have failed. How are the Paiutes’ efforts different?
There’s always the potential of the feds coming in—they’ll never be able to seize the property because it belongs to the sovereign nation, but they could potentially arrest individuals, including myself. But the Department of Justice has been very clear: If you operate within the state’s rules, and your system is “robust and compliant,” you don’t have to anticipate that the feds will step in. The biggest problem is the potential for the product to end up in the black market—but we’ve been transparent. This is a relationship between the federal government and the tribe, not the tribe and the state. If we respect the rules of the federal government, the federal government will respect the role of the sovereign nation.

We’ll continue to invest ourselves and our efforts in partnering with tribes across this country. We’ve already made that model quite visible in Nevada—it’s brought the interest of many tribes across the country who have made the pilgrimage to Las Vegas to see what the Paiutes have done there. Most of them are walking away not only impressed, but also contemplating what it could do for their people.

Over time, a good majority of the 600 tribes across the country will at some point be actively engaged in cannabis. Whether tribes will be able to move projects from tribal nation to tribal nation unfettered will be the game changer. Imagine the powerful logistic system the tribes will have when that happens. These are separate governments, and their relationship is not with the state—their treaties are between that tribal nation and the United States government, and every one of these tribes has a right to enter into relationships with the United States government, and other tribes, and to have trade with those tribes uninterrupted by the United States government.


State Fair yanks grower for display of marijuana plant

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Albuquerque Journal

Published on September 10, 2016

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The brief appearance of a pot plant at the New Mexico State Fair on Thursday set off a kerfuffle that prompted officials to boot out a medical cannabis producer from the state’s big show.
State Fair officials acknowledged Friday that cannabis grower Ultra Health informed them in August that its display would include at least one live cannabis plant.

Event managers apparently hadn’t noticed the mention of a cannabis plant in the application materials until Ultra Health employees brought Dorothy – a 21-day-old female plant – into the Manuel Lujan Jr. exhibit complex.

Also Friday, New Mexico Department of Health officials questioned the legality of displaying a cannabis plant in public.

Duke Rodriguez, owner of Ultra Health, said he provided State Fair officials with a graphic representation of the display, including a “secure area where people can view cannabis plants.”

The graphic was among the materials Ultra Health submitted to the State Fair in August when the firm submitted its application for a exhibition booth, State Fair spokeswoman Erin Thompson said Friday.

But the graphic, and mention of the cannabis plant, “just got overlooked,” until this week, Thompson said. The State Fair intends to refund the $2,000 fee Ultra Health paid for the booth, she said.

State Fair managers decided late Thursday to bar the display after state Department of Health officials said that Ultra Health lacked authorization to display a cannabis plant in public, Thompson said.

The Department of Health, the state agency that oversees the medical cannabis program, said in a written statement Friday that Ultra Health may have violated the state’s medical cannabis law by displaying a plant outside a secured production facility.

“We are looking into the matter to determine what if any disciplinary action is appropriate,” DOH spokesman David Morgan said in a written statement.

The state’s Lynn and Erin Compassionate Use Act law calls for “cannabis production facilities within New Mexico housed on secured grounds and operated by licensed producers.”

Rodriguez responded that the cannabis plant on display at the State Fair was an immature plant that was not actively involved in the production medical cannabis. The site was securely controlled by Ultra Health employees, he said.

“There was no production occurring,” he said. “Medical cannabis production relates to the growing of plants, not to the displaying of plants.”


State questions medical marijuana company used as setting in music video

By Soyoung Kim / KRQE 

Published on September 9, 2016

 

 

BERNALILLO, N.M. (KRQE) – The Department of Health is not too thrilled that a state-licensed medical marijuana greenhouse was used as the setting for a music video.

There are concerns about security — and that it glamorizes smoking something that’s supposed to be used for medicine.

The medical marijuana company could be in big trouble now, however, they insist they did nothing wrong.

This music video shows one local artist talking about his love for his hometown of Albuquerque. But the primary location of the shoot, a state-licensed medical marijuana producer’s greenhouse in Bernalillo, is now under fire.

“We just said yes, we would love to be a part of it. We thought it was fun,” said Leonard Salgado, Ultra Health.

Ultra Health agreed to the request, no questions asked. However, the state’s Medical Cannabis Program did have questions. Ultra Health said they received an email last week from the Department of Health asking about the video shoot.

But insists they didn’t do anything wrong.

“There aren’t any rules of regulations that would prohibit us from shooting any kind of video,” said Salgado.

Ultra Health is one of 35 state-licensed producers in New Mexico. KRQE News 13 reached out to the Department of Health, and were sent this statement.

“Licensed producers are required to have security policies and procedures in place addressing personal safety and crime prevention techniques.” See NMAC 7.34.4.20  SECURITY REQUIREMENTS FOR LICENSED PRODUCERS

KRQE News 13 spoke to substance abuse counselors in town, and their main concern is that the video glamorizes marijuana.

“It’s very influential, we see it on television, we see it on movies and of course, friends and family have a serious impact on drug and alcohol abuse,” said David Lepori / A New Awakening, Substance Abuse Counselor.

Ultra Health said that wasn’t the point.

“It was really to promote New Mexico,” said Salgado.

Ultra Health has not responded to the email from the state yet, the company has until Sept. 16 to do so.

Like all the medical marijuana producers in the state – Ultra Health is required to have extensive security measures in place. The company said the video crew was supervised closely.