Three of Ohio’s four medical marijuana dispensaries reported ending Wednesday, the first day of legal sale, with the remaining product on the shelves.
Businessmen said the lines were long, but most of the people were happy to wait for medicine they hoped would help them. Some customers complained about prices, which is likely to decline in the coming months, as more supply comes to the market.
“I thanked them when they left and thanked them for being patient for the lines,” said Michael Petrella, owner of the Ohio Valley Natural Relief in Wintersville, near Steubenville. “And they said,” No thanks. We appreciate that you bring this to the Ohio Valley. “”
Ohio Valley Natural Relief was the only dispenser not to limit how much people could buy. The other three dispensers have limits ranging from 0.1 to one ounce.
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Although the sales limits at the Ohio Valley Natural Relief were missing, no one was out for a full 90-day purchase.
The four distributions in Ohio – two in Wintersville, one in Canton and one in Sandusky – sold their product for about $ 40 to $ 60 for a full day of unit of marijuana, one tenth of an ounce
At Cresco Labs CY + Dispensary in Wintersville was expected to end with about 130 patients on the first day of sale, said Jason Erkes, spokesman.
“We still have product,” he said. “When I left, we received another delivery tonight. I don’t think we will have any deficiencies in product.”
Brandon Lynaugh from The Forest Sandusky in Sandusky said the first customer was in line at 4 am
“We are pretty much had a line of 30 to 40 people at any time throughout the morning,” he said.
The store will evaluate whether customers need to be limited to 1 ounce of product every day at the beginning of the business, Lynaugh,
The botanist in Canton did not return a message at the end of the working day on Wednesday about his business.
Online and on Twitter Some complained that prices were too high, which would make it difficult to get medicine.
“Just to let everyone know. I was told that it will be like $ 60 for a day’s delivery …” a person wrote on a cannabis website. “It’s pretty $ 60 for 2.5 g. It’s insane. I say everyone joins (sic) together and doesn’t pay these crazy prices. Make them lower prices. Yes, it will suck (continue) to do Mich. Drive. ”
Lynaugh of the Forest Sandusky said that the forest’s parent company, Standard Wellness, has a cultivation facility about 40 minutes in Sandusky County and the first crop is tentatively scheduled for late February. The company also received a provisional process license to extract THC from marijuana and use it in food, oils, lotions and other products. It is hoped that it will receive a certificate for operation from the state later this year.
Lynaugh said the benefit of controlling different parts of medical marijuana business is that it will keep costs down.
“Because we are vertically integrated and can control every element of the supply chain, the plan should be competitive on price,” he says. “There is a confirmation on day 1 prices may be higher than expected. But we had a line out the door all day. ”
He said that in other states, medical marijuana has cost more in the beginning but went down as time went on.
People may also be disappointed because they are regulated, legal medical marijuana is often more expensive than the product purchased by the street. But Lynaugh noted that legal marijuana is guaranteed to be clean and the amount of pesticides is regulated by the state.
“We had a couple of patients wondering about the price and asked if it would change,” said Petrella of Ohio Valley Natural Relief. entering the market, prices will change. When the patient population goes up, the price also begins to go down. ”
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