News & Blog

News & Blog

Ultra Health Partners with Edibles Council

NM’s largest medical cannabis company committed to patient education

Ultra Health, a national medical cannabis leader with a large New Mexico presence, becomes the first medical cannabis provider in New Mexico to partner with the Oregon Responsible Edibles Council, (OREC). OREC, formed in late 2015, is a non-profit trade association of Oregon edible cannabis processors, with a mission of educating the public regarding the safe and responsible usage of edible cannabis products for adults 21 and over.

Ultra Health will be joining other Oregon-based dispensaries and edible cannabis organizations in sponsoring the responsible use of edible cannabis products. Ultra Health believes patient education must become a priority, as the medical cannabis program in New Mexico has grown nearly 80% to 25,000 patients in the past year and will continue to grow.

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Cannabis company denied Balloon Fiesta sponsorship

By Marissa Higdon / Albuquerque Business First
Published on June 20, 2016

Ultra Health, a regional medical cannabis company with six locations in New Mexico, has been denied a sponsorship at the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta this year.

“We didn’t fit the profile of what they wanted in balloon sponsorship,” Duke Rodriguez, CEO and president of Ultra Health, told Business First. “They didn’t feel it’s appropriate for a family-style event.”

According to an official statement by the Balloon Fiesta, the Fiesta’s board and Ultra Health discussed sponsorship, and the company submitted an application to be a sponsor for the event. The board decided that Ultra Health “would not be a good fit,” the statement said.

The statement added that Balloon Fiesta would be willing to revisit having Ultra Health as a sponsor in the future — a sentiment echoed by Rodriguez, who says he hopes to work with the organization again.

Rodriguez says Ultra Health has 65 employees in the Southwest region, and brings in $5 million in revenue from its five New Mexican dispensaries and single cultivation site in the state. The company’s corporate headquarters are in Arizona, and it plans on opening new locations in Nevada sometime soon.

“It really surprised me,” he said of the Balloon Fiesta’s decision to deny sponsorship. “It’s not street marijuana.”

In a press release, Ultra Health cited a letter written by the board of the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta stating that the majority of board members believed medical cannabis “should be considered a mainstream pharmaceutical.”

Rodriguez says Ultra Health was hoping to give back to the community through the sponsorship and raise awareness about medical marijuana in the state. According to the New Mexico Health Department, there are almost 25,000 medical marijuana cardholders in the state, and Rodriguez says the industry has seen almost 70 percent growth in the last year.

According to the Albuquerque Journal, New Mexico’s medical marijuana industry brought in $10 million in total receipts from sales of medical cannabis in the first quarter of 2016, which is almost double the amount brought in during the first quarter of 2015.

Ultra Health had proposed a balloon design for this year’s Balloon Fiesta (see accompanying image). While that balloon won’t be taking off this year, perhaps you’ll see it in years to come.


Ultra Health Opens Sixth Location in New Mexico

NM’s largest medical cannabis company committed to opening additional rural locations

(Albuquerque) – Ultra Health, a national medical cannabis leader with a large New Mexico presence, is opening its sixth location on June 22, 2016 in Albuquerque, making it the largest medical cannabis operator in the state. The new Albuquerque Westside location is a 1,200 square foot facility located at 5515 Coors Blvd NW Suite A.

This location will be Ultra Health’s third dispensary in the metro Albuquerque area – with two others in Albuquerque’s Northeast and Nob Hill area. Three other Ultra Health dispensaries are located in the communities of Santa Fe, Bernalillo and Hobbs. The Albuquerque Westside dispensary would mark Ultra Health’s sixth New Mexico location.

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Cannabis Company Denied Sponsorship at Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta

Ultra Health, New Mexico’s largest medical cannabis company, denied balloon presence

(Albuquerque) – Ultra Health®, a national medical cannabis leader with a large New Mexico presence, is denied sponsorship for the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta® (AIBF), the largest balloon event and most photographed event in the world.

In a letter received on June 16th, 2016 from Paul Smith, Executive Director of the AIBF, “…several members of the Board related stories of how their patients or members of their family had received great results from medical cannabis. Most of the Board agreed that medical cannabis should be considered a mainstream pharmaceutical.” However, the Board declined Ultra Health’s sponsorship request.

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NM pot producer teams with Israeli firm on smokeless options

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Albuquerque Journal
Published on  March 30, 2016 

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A New Mexico medical marijuana producer announced a joint venture with an Israeli pharmaceutical firm to manufacture a line of smokeless cannabis products with measured dosages at a planned $1 million facility in Bernalillo.

Ultra Health LLC will manufacture what it calls pharmaceutical-grade cannabis products including tablets, rectal and vaginal suppositories, and oral spray inhalers under an agreement with Panaxia Ltd. of Tel Aviv, Ultra Health announced.

The products are intended to make cannabis more widely accepted as medicine by providing patients with a consistent dosage of cannabinoid extracts, said Duke Rodriguez, owner of Ultra Health.

“For cannabis to actually perform as real medicine — which in fact it is — these cannabinoids need to be delivered in very specific dosage,” Rodriguez said Tuesday. The products will be sold in 30 dose packets at five- and 10 milligram dosages.

“Everytime (patients) take a dose, they get the same dosage every single time,” he said. “Physicians will feel more confident about making recommendations for cannabis if they know that their patients are getting exact dosage.”

The 3,300-square-foot manufacturing facility should be in operation later this year, Rodriguez said. Each company will spend $500,000 to build the facility inside an existing building at Ultra Health’s Bernalillo plant, he said.

Panaxia owns a proprietary technology that extracts the active ingredients from cannabis using a noncombustible process, Rodriguez said. The oil extract then is crystallized, dehydrated and reconstituted into tablets and other products, he said.

Rodriguez said he is unaware of any company in the United States that uses a similar process to manufacture measured-dose products.

Last month, Ultra Health announced a joint venture with the Las Vegas Paiute tribe in Nevada to build a large growing facility and two dispensaries on tribal land, including one dispensary in downtown Las Vegas, Nev.

Ultra Health has an exclusive agreement with Panaxia to manufacture the products in New Mexico, California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington and Oregon, but has no immediate plans to build plants outside New Mexico, he said.

Under existing laws, marijuana products cannot be transported across state lines.


Ultra Health Announces Cannabis Joint Venture with Panaxia, an Israeli Pharmaceutical Company

(ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico) – Ultra Health, the largest and leading medical cannabis operator in New Mexico, has announced a joint venture with Panaxia Ltd, a pharmaceutical company based in Israel.  Israel is recognized as the global center for cannabis-related research.  The firms concluded an agreement after a 14-month negotiation and due diligence process.  Panaxia will be providing smokeless proprietary cannabinoid dosage and treatment protocols not readily available in the U.S. in order to manufacture state-of-the-art products to treat a number of illnesses.  The two companies will be building a production facility that implements Panaxia’s technology including advanced validated analytical systems and Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) production protocols.
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Ultra Health Announces Opening of Fifth Medical Cannabis Dispensary – Historic Route 66 Location

Albuquerque, New Mexico (March 25, 2016) – Today, Ultra Health specializing in medical grade cannabis, with cultivation, production, retail centers and operations in New Mexico, Arizona and Nevada has announced the grand opening of their fifth newest dispensary – formerly the Birdland – Hippie Store location in the beautiful Nob Hill neighborhood of Albuquerque, New Mexico and on the historic Route 66 trail.  The location is within walking distance of the University of New Mexico main campus.
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Las Vegas Paiute Tribe Breaks Ground for Medical Cannabis Dispensary in Downtown Las Vegas

(Las Vegas) – Today, the Las Vegas Paiute Tribe, a federally-recognized sovereign nation, announced plans for the development of a medical cannabis dispensary at the Las Vegas Paiute Indian Colony in downtown Las Vegas, with a complementary cultivation/production facility and satellite dispensary at the Snow Mountain Indian reservation in the northwest Las Vegas Valley.
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These Girl Scouts sold a lot of cookies to hungry stoners

KRQE-TV in Albuquerque reports a Junior Girl Scout and a Brownie set up shop Saturday outside medical marijuana dispensary Ultra Health and sold more than 60 boxes.

Ultra Health manager James Gambling says he invited the scouts and offered to donate $1 for every box the girls sold. He says “the munchies” is a stereotype that comes with marijuana, so it was fitting to have the Girl Scouts outside.

Phil Temer, a dad of one of the girls, says he saw nothing wrong with the girls selling near the dispensary.

Girl Scouts of New Mexico Trails spokeswoman Carol Ann Short says selling outside medical marijuana dispensaries is against scout rules.


Budding operation: NM’s nonprofit medical marijuana takes ‘big business’ turn

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Albuquerque Journal

Published on February 13, 2016

Copyright © 2016 Albuquerque Journal

Eric Howard takes great pride in his “ladies,” each of which can yield up to 16 ounces of medical cannabis in a 16-week life cycle.

“They get so heavy, they fall over right at the end,” said Howard, master grower at an 11-acre growing facility in Bernalillo owned by Ultra Health LLC. A trellis system is needed to support the heavy flowering branches of the mature plants.

Howard urges a visitor to feel one of the dense flowers, which leaves a sticky resin on the fingers.

“I’m very proud,” he said. “A lot of care goes into these ladies.”

Duke Rodriguez, the principal of Ultra Health, also expresses pride in the facility, where he grows 450 marijuana plants at a time, the maximum allowed under state Department of Health regulations.

But Ultra Health is not one of the state’s 35 licensed nonprofit producers authorized by the New Mexico Department of Health to grow and sell medical marijuana. Instead, Ultra Health owns and manages the growing operation and several dispensaries under an agreement with a licensed nonprofit producer.

Such management agreements between licensed nonprofit producers and for-profit management companies are becoming the norm in New Mexico, say some producers.

They say such agreements highlight the failure of the Department of Health’s nonprofit model, which requires that nonprofits produce and sell marijuana to sustain an industry that requires lots of cash to build and expand.

The nonprofit model has become “window dressing” for an industry that is fast becoming owned and managed by for-profit companies, said Rodriguez.

The state Department of Health says management agreements between nonprofit producers and for-profit companies are legal, subject to approval by the state.

“The regulations don’t prohibit management agreements,” said agency spokesman Kenny Vigil in a written statement. “Any time an LNPP (licensed nonprofit producer) proposes an amendment to their operational plan, the Department of Health carefully reviews and evaluates it based on the statute and regulations.”

The $7.4 million medical cannabis industry remains murky in New Mexico, in part because existing Department of Health regulations offer confidentiality for the LNPPs, which hides from public view their identities and other details of their business operations.

The department, which is considering new regulations that would disclose more information about LNPPs, declined to be interviewed further for this story.

But, in the meantime, several for-profit producers did agree to be interviewed – and provided tours of their facilities – shedding some light on the big business of growing medical marijuana in New Mexico.

‘We are the landlords’

Ultra Health’s operation in Bernalillo produces about 1,200 pounds of medical pot a year, Rodriguez estimated.

He has even larger ambitions for the Bernalillo facility – a former plant nursery that features a 68,000-square-foot greenhouse.

“We are probably using 10 percent of our capacity,” he said. He estimates that Ultra Health could produce up to 12,000 pounds of medical pot a year without adding capacity. “The ideal situation is to have an unlimited plant count to keep production up and cost down.”

Ultra Health’s ability to scale up production would position the company well for a day when New Mexico legalizes marijuana for adult use, which Rodriguez considers inevitable.

Rules adopted last year by the Department of Health allow for a maximum of 450 plants, up from the previous cap of 150. Ultra Health grows the maximum number allowed.

Ultra Health is unusual, if not unique, among the state’s marijuana producers in that it is not a New Mexico-based entity. Ultra Health is a limited liability corporation based in Scottsdale, Ariz., where Rodriguez said he maintains his business operations.

Though based in Arizona today, Rodriguez served as chief financial officer at Lovelace Medical Center in Albuquerque in the late 1980s and early 1990s. He also served as secretary of the state Human Services Department in 1996-97 under then-Gov. Gary Johnson.

Ultra Health owns and manages the growing operation and four dispensaries in Albuquerque, Bernalillo, Hobbs and Santa Fe under a 2014 agreement with New Mexico Top Organics, a licensed nonprofit producer.

“We are the landlords” for New Mexico Top Organics, Rodriguez said. “Top Organics doesn’t own the assets and they don’t take the risks.” Instead, Ultra Health “bears the risk of the cost of operations of the licensee,” he said.

New Mexico Top Organics itself has no employees and owns no property or equipment. The nonprofit has a five-member board, one of whom is Leonard Salgado, Ultra Health’s director of New Mexico operations.

The Ultra Health name is listed on all its properties and the products it sells

Sharing resources

“Essentially, the model we are working under is very similar” to Ultra Health’s, said Willie Ford, managing director of R. Greenleaf and Associates, a for-profit company that has management agreements with three licensed nonprofits. They are R. Greenleaf Organics and Medzen Services, both of Albuquerque, and G&G Genetics of Grants.

“We are a collection of licensees, utilizing a common management team,” Ford said. “The three nonprofits are sharing resources.”

Ford offered an example of how the three nonprofits share resources. When R. Greenleaf Organics built a new growing facility in Albuquerque, Medzen Services moved into Greenleaf Organic’s old facility in the North Valley.

Medzen is now building its own growing facility. Once completed, G&G Genetics will occupy the North Valley site.

The management firm, R. Greenleaf and Associates, will own all three facilities and lease them to the nonprofits – an arrangement often called a lease-back agreement, Ford said.

“Those resources are owned and managed by a for-profit, but they are utilized by the nonprofits to make them more efficient and effective,” he said. “We have a number of different facilities we see as assets and we can move our licensees around in them.”

R. Greenleaf and Associates’ largest growing facility in Albuquerque is not a greenhouse. The grow facility is housed in a concrete building with no natural lighting. About a dozen plants are grown in each of 27 rooms – a system intended to minimize the risk of cross-contamination by insects or plant diseases. Each room is equipped with 10,000 watts of high-pressure sodium vapor lights that fill the rooms with brilliant light. The facility’s electricity bill is $20,000 a month, Ford said.

R. Greenleaf Organics and Medzen are the state’s two largest cannabis producers, Ford said, together producing more than a quarter of the cannabis grown in New Mexico.

Not well thought out

Management agreements are attractive because LNPPs are ill equipped to start or expand costly cannabis operations, Ford and others say.

LNPPs are not recognized by the IRS as true nonprofits, because they are producing a product that remains illegal under federal law. As such, they can’t borrow money from a bank or deduct business expenses.

“We are required to have a state corporation that is a nonprofit,” Ford said of the state regulations. But the nonprofits lack federal 501(c)3 status, he said. “If you really get down to it, none of us are really nonprofits.”

Rodriguez said the industry is fast becoming owned and managed by for-profit companies.

“This is the norm in Arizona, and it’s clearly going to be the norm in New Mexico,” Rodriguez said of management agreements.

“The way the state agency created these nonprofits wasn’t well thought out.”

Nonprofits can’t raise capital, borrow money from a bank, or make the large investments required to grow and sell medical pot, he said.

“In reality, it comes down to making a calculated risk by business people to invest in very large operations and in people,” he said. “It’s nearly impossible to find a nonprofit that has asset resources to successfully launch one of these ventures.”

The nonprofit status of medical pot producers may soon be reviewed by a judge.

An association of LNPPs filed a lawsuit last year against the state Department of Health, asking a judge to eliminate the requirement that cannabis producers must be nonprofits.

“Right now, the producer that wants to raise capital as a nonprofit, can’t,” said Jason Marks, an attorney representing Cannabis Producers of New Mexico, an association of about 16 LNPPs.

“Cannabis producers are not able to get debt financing from commercial lenders. They can’t take equity financing as nonprofits.”

Marks acknowledged that management agreements between nonprofits and for-profit “affiliates” have become common.

“If we fix the regulation, that necessity will go away and producers would be able to raise capital themselves,” he said.

The suit, filed in March in the 1st Judicial District Court in Santa Fe against the Department of Health, contends that the regulation requiring that only nonprofits can be licensed as producers contradicts the state’s medical cannabis law.

The Department of Health denied the allegation in June, but did not elaborate. No trial date has been scheduled in the case.

Legalization inevitable

Rodriguez and Ford take differing views on the issue of legalization.

Rodriguez helped fund a recent survey that found that 61 percent of New Mexicans support legalizing, taxing and regulating cannabis for adults 21 and older. He contends that legalization is inevitable in New Mexico and that the state would benefit from legalizing sooner rather than later.

“New Mexico could become a leader in this industry,” he said. “This thing is destined to become a $400 million to $500 million industry in New Mexico in the next few years. There’s just no way to stop this train.”

Ford said he takes no position on the issue and contends that legalization poses potential hazards for cannabis patients.

“Our business is medical cannabis,” he said. In Colorado, legalization in 2012 initially caused a shortage for patients as cannabis was diverted to the recreational market. “If cannabis is being diverted to the recreational market – which is more lucrative – it could harm patients.”