University of Washington researchers spoke about recommending policies regarding high THC cannabis concentrates ahead of a legislatively mandated report on the subject.
Here are some observations from the Thursday November 18th Washington State House Commerce and Gaming Committee (WA House COG) Committee Meeting.
My top 3 takeaways:
- The University of Washington Addictions, Drug, and Alcohol Institute (UW ADAI) has acted as one of the top academic resources for legislators on cannabis policy since the plant was legalized.
- UW ADAI, formerly named the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute, was an original beneficiary of revenue under Initiative-502 in 2012, receiving $5,000 annually “for the creation, maintenance, and timely updating of web-based public education materials providing medically and scientifically accurate information about the health and safety risks posed by marijuana use.”
- At publication time, this remained among several standing appropriations in RCW 69.50.540 which also required UW ADAI to consult with officials “deciding which programs and practices to fund.”
- UW more broadly received “up to six-tenths of one percent” of cannabis revenue “for research on the short and long-term effects of marijuana use, to include but not be limited to formal and informal methods for estimating and measuring intoxication and impairment, and for the dissemination of such research.” Lawmakers prefixed “up to” the firm percentage through modifications to the law adopted in 2015.
- Cannabis Regulators Association (CANNRA) Executive Director Gillian Schauer worked as a UW ADAI research scientist, and was co-director of the university tobacco studies program.
- UW ADAI published a report in June 2018 on Marijuana Legalization in Washington State: Monitoring the Impact on Racial Disparities in Criminal Justice.
- Nephi Stella, a UW pharmacology professor, discussed UW ADAI with WA House COG in April 2019, mentioning an informational website created by the organization in addition to providing “small grants for research.” UW ADAI officials presented to the committee on “Cannabis-related scientific research” in September 2020.
- One cannabis-related appropriation in the 2021-23 biennium operating budget was a $500,000 proviso to UW ADAI from the general fund “to contract on a one-time basis...to develop policy solutions in response to the public health challenges of high tetrahydrocannabinol [THC] potency cannabis. The institute must use this funding to: Conduct individual interviews with stakeholders and experts representing different perspectives, facilitate joint meetings with stakeholders to identify areas of common ground and consensus, and develop recommendations for state policies related to cannabis potency and mitigating detrimental health impacts.” They were tasked with authoring two reports for the Washington State Office of Financial Management “and the appropriate committees of the legislature:
- (a) An initial report must be submitted by December 31, 2021, and…
- (b) A final report must be submitted by December 31, 2022, and shall summarize the analysis conducted by the institute, the process and stakeholders involved, an inventory of relevant cannabis policies in other states, and recommendations for policy changes to reduce the negative impacts of high potency cannabis in Washington state.”
- UW ADAI researchers were involved in a 2020 “consensus statement” on “Cannabis Concentration and Health Risks,” and published a High-Potency Cannabis website.
- UW ADAI, formerly named the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute, was an original beneficiary of revenue under Initiative-502 in 2012, receiving $5,000 annually “for the creation, maintenance, and timely updating of web-based public education materials providing medically and scientifically accurate information about the health and safety risks posed by marijuana use.”
- Two UW ADAI researchers discussed their upcoming report on potential policy responses to health risks associated with tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) concentrates.
- Committee Chair Shelley Kloba welcomed Susan Ferguson, a UW Associate Professor of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences and the UW ADAI Director, and Beatriz Carlini, an Affiliate Associate Professor of Public Health (audio - 2m, video). Ferguson said Carlini would lead the presentation but she remained “available for questions” (audio - 1m, video).
- Carlini represented UW ADAI on a WSLCB work group which considered the feasibility of “varying the marijuana excise tax rate based on product potency” in 2019 and spoke to WA House COG members in her personal capacity on legislation to limit cannabis concentrates on February 12th. The bill remained active through the 2022 legislative session.
- Ferguson and Carlini published an interim Marijuana Research Report in March 2021, following biennial reports for 2015-17 and 2017-19.
- See Carlini’s 2017 research around cannabis concentrates and use:
- Carlini told legislators she led the “cannabis research and education program at ADAI” and said she would give a “proviso update on the developing policy solutions in response to the public health challenges of high THC potency cannabis.” She promised to review the mandate given to the institute, the progress to date, and future steps in completing the contract (audio - 16m, video, presentation)
- A provision in Section 215(55) of the 2021-23 operating budget directed the creation of a contract with UW ADAI “through [the] Health Care Authority to...explore policy solutions in response to the public health challenges” posed by “high THC.” The contract required “an initial report summarizing the progress to date,” she noted, saying researchers were “40 days [out from] this report.”
- Carlini called attention to a decision by UW ADAI staff to “not include medicinal cannabis, we are talking here about non-medical, commercial cannabis.” As researchers “recognize medicinal users have specific needs,” she stated that health concerns around higher cannabinoid concentration products “[do] not apply in this case” and were left out of “our scope of work.” She then highlighted the research brief UW ADAI officials prepared.
- Carlini found the UW ADAI review of potential policy responses would be “a natural next step in terms of work [beginning] in 2020” with a consensus statement that represented “the initiative of Health Care Authority...through the Washington Prevention Research Subcommittee.” The statement was authored by UW and Washington State University (WSU) experts “with” Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (WSLCB), Washington State Department of Health (DOH), and Washington State Health Care Authority (WA HCA) staff; and Liz Wilhelm, formerly of Prevention Works in Seattle (Prevention WINS), a community-based alcohol and drug use prevention coalition.
- According to Carlini, over six months the group “analyzed the data in terms of cannabis concentration and health risks” before publishing the statement and the research brief. She said they’d concluded that “there was a clear, dose-response relationship where the highest the THC content was in cannabis products the higher the risk of encountering adverse health effects,” with impacts especially concerning “for young users and people with preexisting mental health conditions.”
- Additionally, Carlini relayed that researchers looking at data from Washington state claimed “that the harms seems to be more likely to” disproportionately affect “marginalized populations like low-income and minorities, in part, because [these] products tend to have a lower cost,” a more “discrete nature,” and because of “glamorization through social media and the effect of advertising.”
- She explained that the contract hadn’t funded new research, but the “evidence was documented previously” so researchers could “use our skills as scientists to develop policy solutions in response to the public health challenges.” Several policies “that were proposed and adopted in North America” were identified, she indicated, but had not been expressly recommended by UW ADAI staff yet.
- Carlini discussed the outreach conducted to “stakeholders and experts,” telling lawmakers her goal was finding “common ground and consensus” on which recommendations to forward. Carlini reported that stakeholders were being sorted into “different types” and received different engagement methods to “bring a fair assessment” of policy approaches before researchers determined final recommendations. They contacted 42 organizations and 120 individuals, she added, and “although not considered stakeholders because they are sovereign nations,” outreach had included leaders in tribal governments. Carlini said the interviews and surveys included “cannabis consumers---both medical and non-medical---mental health advocates, mental health patients, historical marginalized groups, health experts...health care agencies, prevention agencies” and cannabis sector “farmers, processors, retail, lobby organizations, and immediate, dedicated, and [ancillary businesses] funded by cannabis industry.”
- Carlini listed policy options being surveyed by UW ADAI:
- “Taxation based on THC Potency
- Prohibit certain product types
- Regulate or prohibit marketing
- Limit total THC in a single purchase
- Require serving size
- Cap on THC concentration
- Require minimum CBD content
- Regulate packaging or labeling”
- Carlini talked about how stakeholders were engaged in a “two-step approach, and the main common denominator of [these] two steps is that basically we are gonna listen, listen, and listen.” The listening would be done “first through interviews, about 35 to 40 people will be selected,” Carlini stated, specifically those “with lived experience, or representing collected interests of people with lived experience that may have experienced problems with high THC products.” From there, she said researchers would use “concept mapping” which featured individuals “having to choose policies,” a “participatory approach that is very equitable in the sense that everybody can give anonymous input and allows for ample participation.” At that point, researchers’ role was to be in “the background, synthesizing data that we collect and analyzing areas of convergence of possible consensus in terms of policy,” Carlini observed, as stakeholders rated “how important, feasible, and equitable are the different policies suggested.”
- The final phase involved organizing the ratings, said Carlini, so that “stakeholders [were] telling us what is important to them, what’s feasible to them, what’s equitable to them.” She promised that stakeholder work would continue as it was “the bulk of the work that we are doing” along with evaluating proposed or enacted policies on cannabis concentration “taking place in North America.” Moreover, Carlini said that UW ADAI researchers planned to “dive more into the local assessment of what is happening” in Washington, like “acute health events” as well as “a possibility of the informal market then start producing” unregulated cannabis concentrates, leading to “fires and explosions.” She indicated researchers would also look at “mental health events that happen in our community."
- Committee Chair Shelley Kloba welcomed Susan Ferguson, a UW Associate Professor of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences and the UW ADAI Director, and Beatriz Carlini, an Affiliate Associate Professor of Public Health (audio - 2m, video). Ferguson said Carlini would lead the presentation but she remained “available for questions” (audio - 1m, video).
- Two questions posed by committee members pertained to the impact of cannabis concentrate regulations on the legacy market and outreach UW ADAI staff were conducting.
- Kloba inquired whether the policies under consideration included “criteria” to weigh the “impact on the illicit market.” Neglecting to do so would be “antithetical to what you’re trying to do if any regulation we do on the legal market pushes people into the unregulated market,” she said (audio - 3m, video)
- Carlini agreed, saying “it's our hope that our...suggestions and recommendations are going to be made are really not as ADAI,” but instead “facilitating the voice and the considerations of Washington stakeholders.” She intended to “organize different opinions and find areas of consensus through analysis of data” to find “go zones,” or places of consensus, versus divisive policy options. Carlini acknowledged potential impacts on the “illicit market...has been a very common argument.” Though no one “can totally guess what will happen,” Carlini planned to look for “examples in other places and also see what experts and stakeholders consider in terms of possible effects.”
- Assistant Ranking Minority Member Kelly Chambers, also a legislative appointee to the Washington State Legislative Task Force on Social Equity in Cannabis (WA SECTF), asked if lawmakers “can help distribute...or participate in, or share with our constituents,” the research surveys. Carlini replied that researchers intended to use an “online survey process” and that Chambers could reach her by email for the purpose of “sending people our way” as prospective stakeholders (audio - 1m, video).
- Kloba looked forward to “partnering with” UW ADAI to “tackle this problem and come up with some good solutions.” She concluded cannabis concentrate regulation was “not an easy issue to resolve, but it’s absolutely necessary that we do” (audio - <1m, video).
- Kloba inquired whether the policies under consideration included “criteria” to weigh the “impact on the illicit market.” Neglecting to do so would be “antithetical to what you’re trying to do if any regulation we do on the legal market pushes people into the unregulated market,” she said (audio - 3m, video)
Information Set
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Announcement - v1 (Oct 27, 2021) [ Info ]
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Agenda - v1 (Nov 16, 2021) [ Info ]
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Agenda - v2 (Nov 17, 2021) [ Info ]
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Agenda - v3 (Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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WA SECTF - Presentation - v1 (Nov 17, 2021) [ Info ]
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DOE - Presentation - Cannabis Science Task Force - v1 (Nov 17, 2021) [ Info ]
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UW ADAI - Presentation - Proviso Update - v1 (Nov 17, 2021) [ Info ]
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UW ADAI - Handout - Cannabis Concentration and Health Risks - v1 (Dec 16, 2020) [ Info ]
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Complete Audio - Cannabis Observer
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 00 - Complete (1h 30m 14s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 01 - Welcome - Shelley Kloba (9s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 02 - Guidelines - Shelley Kloba (1m 40s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 03 - WA SECTF - Introduction - Shelley Kloba (53s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 04 - WA SECTF - Introduction - Melanie Morgan (1m 27s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 05 - WA SECTF - Anzhane Slaughter (30s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 06 - WA SECTF - Background - Anzhane Slaughter (4m 43s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 07 - WA SECTF - Public Meetings - Anzhane Slaughter (3m 34s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 08 - WA SECTF - Work Plan - Anzhane Slaughter (44s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 09 - WA SECTF - Recommendations - Anzhane Slaughter (7m 3s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 10 - WA SECTF - Question - Initial Licensing - Eric Robertson (1m 50s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 11 - WA SECTF - Comment - Melanie Morgan (1m 21s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 12 - WA SECTF - Question - Data Collection - Shelley Kloba (1m 46s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 13 - WA SECTF - Question - 50% - Eric Robertson (1m 17s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 14 - DOE - CSTF - Introduction - Shelley Kloba (33s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 15 - DOE - CSTF - Annette Hoffmann (38s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 16 - DOE - CSTF - Background - Annette Hoffmann (8m 13s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 17 - DOE - CSTF - First Report - Annette Hoffmann (1m 34s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 18 - DOE - CSTF - Second Report - Annette Hoffmann (3m 53s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 19 - DOE - CSTF - Next Steps - Annette Hoffmann (3m 43s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 20 - DOE - CSTF - Question - In-Matrix PTs - Shelley Kloba (4m 26s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 21 - WA Problem Gambling Task Force - Introduction - Shelley Kloba (50s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 22 - WA Problem Gambling Task Force - Julia Patterson (13m 8s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 24 - UW ADAI - Introduction - Shelley Kloba (2m 21s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 25 - UW ADAI - Introduction - Susan Ferguson (34s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 26 - UW ADAI - Bia Carlini (16m 29s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 27 - UW ADAI - Question - Illicit Market Impact - Shelley Kloba (2m 58s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 28 - UW ADAI - Question - Outreach - Kelly Chambers (1m 1s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 29 - UW ADAI - Comment - Shelley Kloba (27s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 30 - Wrapping Up - Shelley Kloba (13s; Nov 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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WA House COG - Committee Meeting - General Information
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WA Legislature - 2022 - General Information
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Accessing the Legislature Remotely (Dec 28, 2021) [ Info ]
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WA Legislature - 2022 - General Information
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