New Approach Idaho
William Esbensen
PO Box 7684
Boise, ID 83707
Circulating.
AN INITIATIVE LEGALIZING MEDICAL MARIJUANA, DECRIMINALIZING POSSESSION OF THREE OUNCES OR LESS OF MARIJUANA; ESTABLISHING INDUSTRIAL HEMP PROGRAM.
AN INITIATIVE RELATING TO MEDICAL MARIJUANA; AMENDING TITLE 39, IDAHO CODE, BY ADDING A NEW CHAPTER 92, TO BE KNOWN AS THE "IDAHO MEDICAL MARIJUANA ACT" TO PROTECT FROM ARREST, PROSECUTION AND PROPERTY FORFEITURE, SERIOUSLY ILL AND TERMINALLY ILL PATIENTS WHO USE MEDICAL MARIJUANA, AS WELL AS THEIR CAREGIVERS WHO MAY CULTIVATE MARIJUANA FOR MEDICAL PURPOSES; TO ESTABLISH A REGISTRY OF QUALIFYING PATIENTS, AND PRIMARY CAREGIVERS, AND AGENTS OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA ORGANIZATIONS WHO SHALL BE ISSUED REGISTRY IDENTIFICATION CARDS, TO ESTABLISH THE MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF MARIJUANA A QUALIFYING PATIENT MAY POSSESS IS EIGHT (8) OUNCES; TO ESTABLISH REPORTING RULES AND PENALTIES FOR ABUSE OF THE ACT; TO PROVIDE THAT INFORMATION REGARDING NAMES OF PERSONS WHO HAVE BEEN ISSUED OR APPLIED FOR A CARD IS EXEMPT FROM DISCLOSURE; BY ADDING A NEW SUBSECTION 37-2732(c)(4) AMENDING THE LAW FOR POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA IN THE AMOUNT OF THREE (3) OUNCES OR LESS TO BE AN INFRACTION; BY ADDING A NEW SUBSECTION 37-2734, AMENDING THE LAW FOR POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA RELATED PARAPHERNALIA TO BE AN INFRACTION; AND BY THE AMENDING OF TITLE 22 BY ADDING A NEW CHAPTER 54 TO CREATE AND MAINTAIN A LICENSING SYSTEM AND RULES FOR AN INDUSTRIAL HEMP PROGRAM.
Can be viewed by following this link to the Attorney General's web site. This document is provided in PDF file format, you must have Acrobat Reader to view the file.
Be It Enacted by the Voters of the State of Idaho:
IDAHO’S NEW APPROACH TO CANNABIS
The People of Idaho find and declare the following;
WHEREAS, Idaho’s laws relating to the possession and cultivation of Cannabis/Hemp/Marijuana and related paraphernalia are outdated according to the will of the people and make criminals out of non-violent and responsible citizens; and
WHEREAS, science and history have shown that Cannabis is a nontoxic, beneficial plant that has been distorted through years of inaccurate information which has repeatedly been disproven through scientific research, all across the world; and
WHEREAS, America’s founding fathers promoted and encouraged the use of the Cannabis plant to help sustain the American people and societies. President George Washington stated “Make the most of the Indian Hemp (Cannabis) plant and sow it everywhere.”, President Thomas Jefferson stated that “Hemp (Cannabis) is of first necessity to the wealth and protection of the country.”, and President John Adams stated “We shall, by and by, want a world of hemp (Cannabis) more for our own consumption.”; and
WHEREAS, numerous National organizations have endorsed medical access to Marijuana, including but not limited to, the American College of Physicians, AIDS Action Council, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Nurses Association, American Academy of HIV Medicine, American Bar Association, American Medical Student Association, American Academy of Family Physicians, American Preventive Medical Association, American Public Health Association, American Osteopathic Association, Institute of Medicine, Lymphoma Foundation of America, National Association for Public Health Policy, National Association of People with AIDS, National Women’s Health Network, and the National Nurses Society on Addictions; and
WHEREAS, since 1978 the Food and Drug Administration has allowed fifteen (15) patients to use National Institute on Drug Abuse-provided Medical Marijuana grown at the University of Mississippi under the Compassionate Investigational New Drug program, of which four patients remain as of January 2013; and
WHEREAS, data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Uniform Crime Reports and the Compendium of Federal Justice Statistics show that approximately 99 out of every 100 Marijuana arrests in the U.S. are made under state law, rather than under federal law, changing state law will have the practical effect of protecting from arrest the majority of seriously ill patients who have a medical need to use Marijuana; and
WHEREAS, in 1988 DEA Administrative Judge Francis Young ruled with respect to whether there is "a lack of accepted safety for use of [Marijuana] under medical supervision” stating that “the record shows the facts to be uncontroverted that marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man. By any measure of rational analysis marijuana can be safely used within a supervised routine of medical care." (September 6, 1988, Docket No. 86-22, Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics, et al., vs. US Drug Enforcement Administration); and
WHEREAS, 23 States and the District of Columbia have legalized the compassionate medical use of Marijuana, including Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.
WHEREAS, citizens of Idaho should not be forced to flee their home state, disrupt the autonomy of their lives, and uproot their families, to become refugees in a Medical Marijuana state, in order to have the option to use Marijuana for their own medical conditions, or the medical conditions of their extremely ill child/ren; and
WHEREAS, seriously ill people should not be punished or fined for acting in accordance with the opinions of their physicians in an honest attempt to relieve suffering; and
WHEREAS, compassion dictates that a distinction is made between medical and non-medical uses of Marijuana;
WHEREAS, the taxpayers of Idaho declare that they should not be burdened with the costs of housing and maintaining the numerous non-violent consumers of Marijuana or those that possess Marijuana related drug paraphernalia within Idaho’s borders or those that travel over Idaho borders from Washington, Oregon, Montana, and Nevada; and
WHEREAS, Idaho law enforcement should not be distracted from real crime just because Oregon and Washington have passed recreational Marijuana laws, and Nevada and Montana have passed Medical Marijuana laws, and all four states have Marijuana and Marijuana related drug paraphernalia available in the retail market; and
WHEREAS, Marijuana and marijuana related paraphernalia possession are considered a misdemeanor and conviction negatively impacts the lives Idaho’s non-violent offenders by leaving them with a criminal record that can hinder education, employment, housing, medical and assistance programs.
WHEREAS, citizens of Idaho who qualify under the Idaho Medical Marijuana Act to possess Medical Marijuana should be free of prosecution for the devices used to ingest their medicine;
WHEREAS, Industrial Hemp is a suitable crop for Idaho, and its production will contribute to the future viability of Idaho agriculture; and
WHEREAS, allowing Industrial Hemp production will provide farmers opportunity to sell their products to a marketplace that pays them a reasonable rate of return for their labor and capital investments. Farmers in Canada report an $800.00 per-acre return for the crop; and
WHEREAS, the infrastructure needed to process industrial hemp will result in increased business opportunities and new jobs in our communities; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp seeds and oil produced from the seeds of the Cannabis Hemp plant, as a food crop, have high nutritional value, including healthy fats and protein; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp, as a fiber crop, can be used in the manufacture of products such as clothing, building supplies, and animal bedding; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp seeds, as a fuel crop, can be processed into biodiesel, and stalks can be pelletized or flaked for burning or processed for cellulosic ethanol. Industrial hemp also expands opportunities for on-farm renewable energy production; and
WHEREAS, the production of industrial hemp can play a useful agronomic role in farm land management as part of a crop rotation system; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp refers to varieties of the cannabis plant which have a low or zero content of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and that are cultivated for fiber and oil; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp should not be confused with varieties of cannabis which have a high content of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and which are commonly referred to as marijuana; and
WHEREAS, the commercial production and cultivation of industrial hemp is now permitted in Canada, under licenses and authorizations issued by Health Canada; and
WHEREAS, Health Canada controls, through rules, all activities relating to the importation, exportation, possession, production, sale, provision, transport, sending, delivering and offering for sale of industrial hemp; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp is grown legally throughout Europe and Asia; and
WHEREAS, many farmers facing uncertain times in the agricultural marketplace view the reintroduction of industrial hemp as another potential alternative crop that will have long term economic benefits to the farmers who produce the hemp and the person who utilizes the hemp in the production of textiles, paper products, fiberboard, concrete reinforcement, automobile parts, plastics, organic foods and natural body products; and
WHEREAS, similar industrial hemp statutes have been enacted in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, and West Virginia; and
WHEREAS, The United States Congress never originally intended to prohibit the production of hemp when restricting the production, possession and use of marijuana (House Joint Memorial No. 3, Idaho; 56th Legislative Assembly, North Dakota; SR0259, 91st General Assembly, Illinois)
THEREFORE, the purpose of the addition of a NEW CHAPTER, 92, Idaho Medical Marijuana Act is to protect from arrest, prosecution, property forfeiture, and criminal and other penalties, those patients who use marijuana to alleviate suffering from debilitating medical conditions, as well as their physicians, primary caregivers, and those who are authorized to produce marijuana for medical purposes and to facilitate the availability of marijuana in Idaho for legal medical use; and
THEREFORE, the purpose of amending Title 37, Idaho Code by the addition of thereto a NEW SUBSECTION of Chapter 27, § 37-2732(c), is to offset the costs of arrest and detainment, decrease law enforcement priority, and decrease the harms to society and Idaho citizens that are associated with small amount marijuana possession, and utilize the funds brought in through offenses to help aid Idaho’s budget and Idaho Public Schools; and
THEREFORE, the purpose of amending Title 37, Idaho Code, be amended by the addition of a NEW SUBSECTION Chapter 27 section § 37-2734, to offset the costs of arrest and detainment, decrease law enforcement priority, and decrease the harms to society and Idaho citizens that are associated with the possession of Marijuana related paraphernalia, utilize the funds brought in through offenses to help aid Idaho’s budget and Idaho public schools; and create an exclusion for qualifying patients under the Idaho Medical Marijuana Act.
THEREFORE, the purpose of the addition of a NEW CHAPTER Chapter 54, Title 22, Idaho Code, the Idaho Industrial Hemp Act, is to establish policy and procedures for growing industrial hemp in Idaho so that farmers and other businesses in the Idaho agricultural industry can take advantage of this market opportunity.
SECTION 1. IDAHO MEDICAL MARIJUANA PROGRAM
That Title 39, Idaho Code, be, and the same is hereby amended by the addition thereto of a NEW CHAPTER, to be known and designated as Chapter 92, Title 39, Idaho Code, and to read as follows:
CHAPTER 92, IDAHO MEDICAL MARIJUANA ACT
39-9201. SHORT TITLE. This act may be cited as the “Idaho Medical Marijuana Act.”
39-9202. FINDINGS. The people of Idaho find and declare the following;
WHEREAS, numerous organizations have endorsed medical access to marijuana, including but not limited to, the American College of Physicians, AIDS Action Council, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Nurses Association, American Academy of HIV Medicine, American Bar Association, American Medical Student Association, American Academy of Family Physicians, American Preventive Medical Association, American Public Health Association, American Osteopathic Association, Institute of Medicine, Lymphoma Foundation of America, National Association for Public Health Policy, National Association of People with AIDS, National Women’s Health Network, and the National Nurses Society on Addictions; and
WHEREAS, since 1978 the Food and Drug Administration has allowed fifteen (15) patients to use National Institute on Drug Abuse-provided medical marijuana grown at the University of Mississippi under the Compassionate Investigational New Drug program, of which four patients remain as of January 2013; and
WHEREAS, data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Uniform Crime Reports and the Compendium of Federal Justice Statistics show that approximately 99 out of every 100 marijuana arrests in the U.S. are made under state law, rather than under federal law, changing state law will have the practical effect of protecting from arrest the majority of seriously ill patients who have a medical need to use marijuana; and
WHEREAS, in 1988 DEA Administrative Judge Francis Young ruled with respect to whether there is "a lack of accepted safety for use of [marijuana] under medical supervision” stating that “the record shows the facts to be uncontroverted that marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man. By any measure of rational analysis marijuana can be safely used within a supervised routine of medical care." (September 6, 1988, Docket No. 86-22, Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics, et al., vs. US Drug Enforcement Administration); and
WHEREAS, 23 States and the District of Columbia have legalized the compassionate medical use of Marijuana, including Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.
WHEREAS, citizens of Idaho should not be forced to flee their home state, disrupt the autonomy of their lives, and uproot their families, to become refugees in a medical marijuana state, in order to have the option to use marijuana for their own medical conditions, or the medical conditions of their extremely ill child/ren; and
WHEREAS, seriously ill people should not be punished or fined for acting in accordance with the opinions of their physicians in an honest attempt to relieve suffering; and
WHEREAS, compassion dictates that a distinction is made between medical and non-medical uses of marijuana;
THEREFORE, the purpose of this chapter is to protect from arrest, prosecution, property forfeiture, and criminal and other penalties, those patients who use marijuana to alleviate suffering from debilitating medical conditions, as well as their physicians, primary caregivers, and those who are authorized to produce marijuana for medical purposes and to facilitate the availability of marijuana in Idaho for legal medical use."
39-9203. DEFINITIONS For purposes of this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:
(1) “Agent” includes a principal officer, board member, employee, or volunteer of a medical marijuana organization who is at least twenty-one years of age, who has not been convicted of a felony offense as defined, and who is working at the direction or on behalf of the medical marijuana organization.
(2) “Allowable amount of marijuana” means:
(a) With respect to a qualifying patient:
(i) Eight (8) ounces of usable marijuana; and
(ii) If the qualifying patient’s registry identification card states that the qualifying patient is exempt from criminal penalties for cultivating marijuana:
(b) With respect to a designated caregiver for each patient assisted by the designated caregiver under this chapter:
(i) Eight (8) ounces of usable marijuana; and
(ii) If the designated caregiver’s registry identification card provides that the designated caregiver is exempt from criminal penalties for cultivating marijuana:
1. Twelve (12) marijuana plants, provided that the total number of plants may not exceed thirty-six (36), contained in an enclosed, locked facility, except the plants are not required to be in an enclosed, locked facility if the plants are being transported because the designated caregiver is moving; and
2. Marijuana that is produced from allowable plants that is on the premises where the plants were grown.
(c) Marijuana that is incidental to medical use, but is not usable marijuana as defined in this chapter, may not be counted toward a qualifying patient’s or designated caregiver’s allowable amount of marijuana.
(3) “Cardholder” means a qualifying patient, a designated caregiver, or an agent of a medical marijuana organization who has been issued and possesses a valid registry identification card.
(4) “Debilitating medical condition” means:
(a) Cancer, glaucoma, positive status for human immunodeficiency virus, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, hepatitis C, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Crohn's disease, Alzheimer's disease, post-traumatic stress disorder; or
(b) A chronic or debilitating disease or medical condition or its treatment that produces cachexia or wasting syndrome, severe and chronic pain, severe nausea, seizures, including those characteristic of epilepsy, or severe and persistent muscle spasms, including those characteristic of multiple sclerosis;
(c) Any terminal illness with life expectancy of less than twelve (12) months as determined by a licensed medical physician; or
(d) Any other medical condition or its treatment added by the Department pursuant to section 39-9204.
(5) “Department” means the Department of Health and Welfare.
(6) “Designated caregiver” means a person who:
(a) Is at least twenty-one years (21) of age; and
(b) Has agreed to assist no more than three (3) qualifying patients with the medical use of marijuana.
(c) has not been convicted of a felony offense as defined by this chapter.
(7) “Enclosed, locked facility” means a closet, room, greenhouse, building, or other enclosed area equipped with locks or other security devices that permit access only by a cardholder.
(8) “Felony offense” means:
(a) An offense that was classified as a felony in the jurisdiction where the person was convicted and was: (i) A violent crime; or (ii) A violation of a state or federal controlled substance law.
(b) The term does not include an offense for which the sentence, including any term of probation, incarceration, or supervised release, was completed five or more years earlier.
(9) “Marijuana” means all parts of any plant of the genus cannabis whether growing or not, the seeds of the plant, the resinous product of the combustion of the plant cannabis, and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant or its seeds. The term does not include the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil, or cake made from the seeds of the plant, any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, preparation of mature stalks, fiber, oil, or cake, or the sterilized seed of the plant which is incapable of germination.
(10) “Medical marijuana dispensary” means an entity registered under section 39-9207 that acquires marijuana plants, marijuana seeds, or usable marijuana from medical marijuana production facilities and distributes marijuana plants, marijuana seeds, usable marijuana, or related supplies and educational materials to registered qualifying patients or registered designated caregivers.
(11) “Medical marijuana organization” means a medical marijuana dispensary, a medical marijuana production facility, or a safety compliance facility.
(12) “Medical marijuana production facility” means an entity registered under section 39-9207 that cultivates, harvests, processes, manufactures, prepares, packs, and stores marijuana and delivers, transfers, or sells the marijuana to medical marijuana dispensaries.
(13) “Medical use” means the acquisition, possession, planting, cultivation, propagation, harvest, production, processing, manufacture, testing, compounding, converting, use, administration, preparation, delivery, transfer, or transportation of marijuana and all related supplies and equipment to treat or alleviate a registered qualifying patient's debilitating medical condition or symptoms associated with the patient's debilitating medical condition.
(14) “Practitioner” means an individual who is authorized to prescribe drugs pursuant to chapter 18, Title 54, Idaho Code.
(15) “Qualifying patient” means a person who has been diagnosed by a practitioner as having a debilitating medical condition, or a minor under the age of 18 who has been diagnosed by two practitioners as having a debilitating medical condition.
(16) “Registration certificate” means a document issued by the Department that identifies an entity as a medical marijuana dispensary, medical marijuana production facility, or a safety compliance facility.
(17) “Registry identification card” means a document issued by the Department that identifies a person as a registered qualifying patient, registered designated caregiver, or an agent of a medical marijuana organization.
(18) “Safety compliance facility” means an entity registered under section 39-9207 by the Department to provide consumer protection services to the public by means of laboratory sampling and testing for potency and contaminants or public information and training services regarding:
(a) The safe and efficient cultivation, harvesting, packaging, labeling, and distribution of marijuana;
(b) Security and inventory accountability procedures; or
(c)Scientific and medical research findings related to medical marijuana.
(19) “Usable marijuana” means the flowers of the marijuana plant, or any mixture or preparation thereof, but does not include the seeds, stalks, leaves, and roots of the plant and does not include the weight of any non-marijuana ingredients combined with marijuana and prepared for consumption as food or drink.
(20) “Verification system” means a secure phone or web-based system that is established and maintained by the Department and is available to law enforcement personnel and registered medical marijuana organization agents for verification of registry identification cards.
(21) “Visiting qualifying patient” means a person who was diagnosed with a debilitating medical condition by a person who is licensed with authority to prescribe drugs to humans in the state of the person’s residence, who possesses a registry identification card, or its equivalent, that was issued pursuant to the laws of another state, and:
(a) Is not a resident of Idaho; or
(b) Has been a resident of Idaho fewer than thirty (30) days.
(22) “Written recommendation” means a document dated and signed by a practitioner, stating that in the practitioner's professional opinion the patient is likely to receive therapeutic or palliative benefit from the medical use of marijuana to treat or alleviate the patient's debilitating medical condition or symptoms associated with the debilitating medical condition. The practitioner must:
(a) Specify the qualifying patient's debilitating medical condition in the written recommendation; and
(b) Sign and date the written recommendation only in the course of a practitioner-patient relationship after the practitioner has completed a full assessment of the qualifying patient's medical history and current medical condition.
39-9204. ADDITION OF DEBILITATING MEDICAL CONDITIONS
(1) The public may petition the Department to add debilitating medical conditions or treatments to the list of debilitating medical conditions set forth in section 39-9203(4).
(2) The Department shall provide notice to the public, host a public hearing, and request public comment to add a debilitating medical condition or treatment to the list of debilitating medical conditions set forth in 39-9203(4) upon receipt by the Department of a petition to add the proposed condition or treatment.
(3) The Department shall consider petitions in the manner required by Department rule. The Department shall approve or deny a petition within one hundred eighty (180) days of its submission. The approval or denial of a petition is subject to review pursuant to chapter 52, title 67, Idaho Code.
39-9205. LIMITATIONS
This chapter does not authorize any person to engage in, and does not prevent the imposition of any civil, criminal, or other penalties for:
(1) Undertaking any task under the influence of marijuana that would constitute negligence or professional malpractice.
(2) Possessing or engaging in the medical use of marijuana:
(a) On a school bus.
(b) On the grounds of any preschool or primary or secondary school.
(c) In any correctional facility.
(3) Smoking marijuana:
(a) On any form of public transportation.
(b) In any public place.
(4) Operating, navigating, or being in actual physical control of any motor vehicle, aircraft, or motorboat while under the influence of marijuana, except a registered qualifying patient or visiting qualifying patient may not be considered to be under the influence of marijuana solely because of the presence of metabolites or components of marijuana without noticeable actions of impairment including slurred speech and lethargic movements.
(5) Using marijuana except as authorized under this chapter.
39-9206. RULEMAKING
(1) The Department shall adopt rules that set forth the procedures and methods for implementing this chapter, including rules:
(a) Governing the manner it must consider petitions from the public to add debilitating medical conditions or treatments to the list of debilitating medical conditions set forth in section 39-9204, including public notice of, and an opportunity to comment in, a public hearing upon petitions.
(b) Establishing the form and content of registration and renewal applications submitted under this chapter.
(c) Establishing a system to numerically score competing medical marijuana dispensary applicants that must include analysis of: (i) The suitability of the proposed location and its accessibility for patients; (ii) The character, veracity, background, and relevant experience of principal officers and board members; and (iii)The business plan proposed by the applicant, including its ability to maintain an adequate supply of marijuana, plans to ensure safety and security of patrons and the community, procedures to be used to prevent diversion, and any plan for making marijuana available to low-income registered qualifying patients.
(d) Governing the manner it shall consider applications for and renewals of registry identification cards.
(e) Governing medical marijuana organizations to prevent diversion and theft without imposing an undue burden or compromising the confidentiality of cardholders, including:
(i) The manner it must consider applications for and renewals of registration certificates.
(ii) Oversight requirements.
(iii) Recordkeeping requirements.
(iv)Security requirements, including requirements for protection of each location by a fully operational security alarm system.
(v) Safety requirements.
(vi) Requirements for the dispensing of medical marijuana by use of an automated machine.
(vii) Requirements and procedures for the safe and accurate packaging and labeling of medical marijuana.
(f) Procedures for suspending or revoking the registration certificates or registry identification cards of medical marijuana organizations or cardholders who violate the provisions of this chapter or the rules adopted pursuant to this section.
(g) Establishing application and renewal fees for registry identification cards and registration certificates, according to the following:
(i) The total amount of all fees must generate revenues sufficient to implement and administer this chapter, except fee revenue may be offset or supplemented by private donations.
(ii) The fee for a registry identification card, a registration certificate, a renewal registry identification card, or a renewal of a registration certificate may be no greater than necessary.
(iii)The total amount of revenue from registration certificate application and renewal fees and registry identification card fees for the agents of medical marijuana organizations must be sufficient to implement and administer the provisions of this chapter relating to medical marijuana organizations, including the verification system, except fee revenue may be offset or supplemented by private donations.
(iv)The application or renewal fee for a qualifying patient shall not exceed one hundred dollars ($100), with this upper limit adjusted annually for inflation, unless the Department determines a reasonable greater fee is necessary to carry out its responsibilities under this chapter.
(v) The Department may establish a sliding scale of patient application and renewal fees based upon a qualifying patient's household income.
(vi)The Department may consider private donations under section 39-9228 to reduce application and renewal fees.
(2) The Department is authorized to adopt the rules set forth in subsection 1 and must adopt those rules pursuant to Chapter 52, Title 67, Idaho Code.
39-9207. REGISTRATION AND CERTIFICATION OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA ORGANIZATIONS
(1) Medical Marijuana Organizations that are dispensaries of Medical Marijuana to qualified patients shall be limited to 1 per 20,000 permanent residents in each county.
(2) Medical Marijuana organizations shall register with the Department.
(3) Not later than ninety (90) days after receiving an application for a Medical Marijuana organization, the Department shall register the prospective medical Marijuana organization and issue a registration certificate and a random twenty (20) digit Alphanumeric identification number if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) The prospective Medical Marijuana organization has submitted all of the following:
(i) The application fee.
(ii) An application, including:
1. The legal name of the prospective medical Marijuana organization;
2. The physical address of the prospective medical Marijuana organization that is not within one thousand (1,000) feet of a public or private school existing before the date of the medical Marijuana organization application;
3. The name and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of the proposed medical Marijuana organization;
4. The name and date of birth of each additional agent of the proposed medical Marijuana organization; and
5. Any additional information requested by the Department.
(iii) Operating procedures consistent with Department rules for oversight of the proposed medical Marijuana organization, including procedures to ensure accurate record keeping and adequate security measures.
(iv) If the city or county where the proposed Medical Marijuana organization would be located has enacted zoning restrictions, a sworn statement certifying that the proposed Medical Marijuana organization is in compliance with the restrictions.
(b) None of the principal officers or board members has served as a principal officer or board member for a Medical Marijuana organization that has had its registration certificate revoked if the principal officer or board member had knowledge of an ongoing violation of this chapter at the former medical marijuana organization.
(c) None of the principal officers or board members are under twenty-one (21) years of age at the time of application.
(d) At least one (1) principal officer is a resident of Idaho.
(e) If the proposed Medical Marijuana organization is a Medical Marijuana dispensary applicant, it is located in a county with more than twenty thousand (20,000) permanent residents and the county already contains the maximum number of Medical Marijuana dispensaries allowed for each 20,000 permanent residents.
(4) When competing applications are submitted for a proposed Medical Marijuana dispensary for each single county’s 20,000 permanent residents per dispensary limit, the Department shall use an impartial and numerically scored competitive bidding process to determine which application among those competing will be approved.
(5) The Department may conduct a background check of the principal officers and board members of the prospective Medical Marijuana dispensary to carry out this provision.
39-9208. REGISTRATION OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA ORGANIZATION AGENTS
(1) Any prospective agent of a Medical Marijuana organization shall be registered with the Department before volunteering or working at a Medical Marijuana organization.
(2) A Medical Marijuana organization may apply to the Department for a registry identification card for each prospective agent of the Medical Marijuana organization by submitting:
(a) The name, social security number, driver’s license number and date of birth of the prospective agent;
(b) A Medical Marijuana organization agent application; and
(c) The application fee.
39-9209. REGISTRATION OF QUALIFYING PATIENTS AND DESIGNATED CAREGIVERS
(1) A qualifying patient may apply to the Department for a registry identification card by submitting all of the following:
(a) Written recommendation issued by a practitioner within the ninety (90) days immediately preceding the date of application.
(b) The application fee.
(c) An application, including:
(i) Name, mailing address, social security number, driver’s license number, and date of birth of the qualifying patient;
(ii) Name, mailing address, and telephone number of the qualifying patient's practitioner;
(iii)Name, mailing address, social security number, driver’s license number, and date of birth of the qualifying patient’s designated caregiver, if any;
(iv) A signed statement from the designated caregiver, if any, agreeing to be the patient’s designated caregiver and certifying that if the application is approved he will not be a registered designated caregiver for more than three (3) registered qualifying patients; and
(v) A designation as to who will be allowed to cultivate Marijuana plants for the qualifying patient’s medical use if a Medical Marijuana dispensary is not operating within five (5) miles of the qualifying patient’s home and the address where the Marijuana plants will be cultivated.
(2) The application for a qualifying patient’s registry identification card must ask whether the patient would like the Department to notify him of any clinical studies needing human subjects for research on the medical use of Marijuana. The Department shall notify interested patients if it is notified of studies that will be conducted in the United States.
39-9210. ISSUANCE OF REGISTRY IDENTIFICATION CARDS
(1) Except as provided in subsection (2) and in section 39-9212, the Department shall:
(a) Verify the information contained in an application or renewal submitted pursuant to this chapter and approve or deny an application or renewal within ten (10) days of receiving a completed application or renewal.
(b) Issue a registry identification card to a qualifying patient and his designated 11 caregiver, if any, within five (5) days of approving the application or renewal. A designated caregiver must have a registry identification card for each of his qualifying patients.
(c) Issue each Medical Marijuana organization agent a registry identification card and log-in information for the verification system within five (5) days of approving the application or renewal.
(2) The Department may not issue a registry identification card to a qualifying patient who is under the age of eighteen (18) unless:
(a) The qualifying patient's practitioner has explained the potential risks and benefits of the medical use of Marijuana to the custodial parent or legal guardian responsible for health care decisions for the qualifying patient;
(b) A custodial parent or legal guardian responsible for health care decisions for the qualifying patient submits a written recommendation from two (2) practitioners; and
(c) The custodial parent or legal guardian with responsibility for health care decisions for the qualifying patient consents in writing to allow the qualifying patient's medical use of Marijuana, to serve as the qualifying patient's designated caregiver, and to control the acquisition of the Marijuana, the dosage, and the frequency of the medical use of Marijuana by the qualifying patient.
(3) If the registry identification card of either a qualifying patient or the patient’s designated caregiver does not state that the cardholder is authorized to cultivate Marijuana plants, the Department must give written notice to the registered qualifying patient, when the qualifying patient’s registry identification card is issued, of the names and addresses of all registered medical Marijuana dispensaries.
(4) The Department may conduct a criminal background check of any prospective Medical Marijuana organization agent to carry out this provision.
39-9211. CONTENTS OF REGISTRY IDENTIFICATION CARDS
(1) Registry identification cards for qualifying patients and designated caregivers must contain all of the following:
(a) Name and date of birth of the cardholder;
(b) A statement of whether the cardholder is a qualifying patient or a designated caregiver;
(c) The date of issuance and expiration date of the registry identification card;
(d) A random twenty (20) digit alphanumeric identification number that is unique to the cardholder and contains at least four (4) numbers and at least four (4) letters;
(e) If the cardholder is a designated caregiver, the random identification number of the registered qualifying patient the designated caregiver is assisting;
(f) A photograph of the cardholder; and
(g) A clear indication of whether the cardholder has been authorized by this chapter to cultivate Marijuana plants for the qualifying patient’s medical use.
(2) Registry identification cards for Medical Marijuana organization agents must contain the following:
(a) The name and date of birth of the agent;
(b) A statement that the cardholder is an agent of a Medical Marijuana dispensary, a Medical Marijuana production facility, or a safety compliance facility;
(c) The legal name and the registration certificate number of the Medical Marijuana organization that the agent is affiliated with;
(d) A random twenty (20) digit alphanumeric identification number that is unique to the cardholder;
(e) The date of issuance and expiration date of the registry identification card; and
(f) A photograph of the cardholder, if the Department decides to require one.
39-9112. DENIAL OF REGISTRY IDENTIFICATION CARDS
(1) The Department may deny an application or renewal of a qualifying patient’s registry identification card only if the applicant:
(a) Does not meet the requirements of section 39-9203(14);
(b) Does not provide the information required;
(c) Previously had a registry identification card revoked for violating this chapter; or
(d) Provides false information.
(2) The Department may deny an application or renewal of a designated caregiver’s registry identification card only if the applicant:
(a) Does not meet the requirements of section 39-9203(6);
(b) Does not provide the information required;
(c) Previously had a registry identification card revoked for violating this chapter; or
(d) Provides false information.
(3) The Department may deny a registry identification card to a prospective agent of a Medical Marijuana organization only if:
(a) The applicant does not meet the requirements of section 39-9203(1);
(b) The applicant or Medical Marijuana organization does not provide the required information;
(c) The applicant previously had a registry identification card revoked for violating this chapter; or
(d) The applicant or Medical Marijuana organization provides false information.
(4) At the time the Department denies a registry identification card to a prospective agent of a Medical Marijuana organization, it shall give written notice to the Medical Marijuana organization of the reason for denying a registry identification card to the prospective agent.
(5) At the time the Department denies a registry identification card to a patient or to a designated caregiver, it shall give written notice to the qualifying patient of the reason for denying a registry identification card to the qualifying patient or to the qualifying patient’s designated caregiver.
(6) Denial of an application or renewal is subject to review pursuant to Chapter 52, Title 67, Idaho Code.
39-9213. EXPIRATION AND RENEWAL OF REGISTRY IDENTIFICATION CARDS AND REGISTRATION CERTIFICATES – REPLACEMENT
(1) All registry identification cards and registration certificates expire at least one (1) year after the date of issue.
(2) The Department shall immediately cancel the registry identification card of a registered Medical Marijuana organization agent and shall immediately deactivate a registered medical Marijuana dispensary agent’s access to the verification system upon notification to the Department by a Medical Marijuana organization that the agent is no longer employed by or no longer volunteers at the Medical Marijuana organization.
(3) The Department shall issue a renewal registration certificate within ten (10) days of receipt of the prescribed renewal application and renewal fee from a Medical Marijuana organization if its registration certificate is not under suspension and has not been revoked.
(4) If a cardholder loses his registry identification card, he shall promptly notify the Department. Within five (5) days of the notification, and upon payment of a ten dollar ($10) fee, the Department shall issue a new registry identification card with a new random identification number to the cardholder and, if the cardholder is a registered qualifying patient, to the registered qualifying patient’s registered designated caregiver, if any.
39-9214. FACILITY RESTRICTIONS
(1) Any nursing facility, intermediate care facility, hospice house, hospital, or other type of residential care or assisted living facility may adopt reasonable restrictions on the use of Marijuana by their residents or a person receiving inpatient services, including:
(a) That the facility will not store or maintain the patient's supply of Marijuana;
(b) That the facility, caregivers, or hospice agencies serving the facility’s residents are not responsible for providing the Marijuana for qualifying patients;
(c) That Marijuana is consumed by a method other than smoking; or
(d) That Marijuana is consumed only in a place specified by the facility.
(2) Nothing in this section requires a facility listed in subsection (1) to adopt restrictions on the medical use of Marijuana.
(3) A facility listed in subsection (1) may not unreasonably limit a registered qualifying patient's access to or use of Marijuana authorized under this chapter unless failing to do so would cause the facility to lose a monetary or licensing-related benefit under federal law or rule.
39-9215. REQUIREMENTS FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA ORGANIZATIONS
(1) The operating documents of a Medical Marijuana organization must include procedures for the oversight of the Medical Marijuana organization and procedures to ensure accurate recordkeeping.
(2) A Medical Marijuana organization shall implement appropriate security measures to deter and prevent the theft of Marijuana and unauthorized entrance into areas containing Marijuana.
(3) All cultivation, harvesting, manufacture, and packaging of Marijuana by a Medical Marijuana production facility must take place in an enclosed, locked facility at a physical address provided to the Department during the registration process. The enclosed, locked facility may only be accessed by registered agents of the Medical Marijuana production facility.
(4) A Medical Marijuana dispensary or Medical Marijuana production facility may acquire usable Marijuana or Marijuana plants from a registered qualifying patient or a registered designated caregiver only if the registered qualifying patient or registered designated caregiver receives no compensation for the Marijuana.
(5) A Medical Marijuana dispensary shall not share office space with or refer patients to a practitioner.
(6) A Medical Marijuana organization may not permit any person to consume Marijuana on the property of a Medical Marijuana organization.
(7) Medical Marijuana organizations are subject to reasonable inspection by the Department. The Department shall give reasonable notice of an inspection under this subsection.
39-9216. MEDICAL MARIJUANA ORGANIZATION LOCATIONS
(1) A city and county may enact reasonable zoning rules that limit the use of land for medical Marijuana dispensaries, Medical Marijuana production facilities, or safety compliance facilities to specified areas pursuant to chapter 65, Title 67, Idaho Code.
(2) Medical Marijuana Organization dispensaries are limited to one (1) per twenty thousand (20,000) permanent residents within one county.
39-9217. DISPENSING MARIJUANA FOR MEDICAL USE
(1) Before Marijuana may be dispensed to a registered qualifying patient or a registered designated caregiver, a registered Medical Marijuana dispensary agent must not believe that the amount dispensed would cause the cardholder to possess more than the allowable amount of Marijuana.
(2) Usable Marijuana may be dispensed to a registered qualifying patient or to a registered designated caregiver by an automated machine located in a restricted access area of the Medical Marijuana dispensary if the machine complies with the rules promulgated by the Department and the requirements of this section.
39-9218. VERIFICATION SYSTEM
(1) The Department shall establish and maintain a verification system for use by law enforcement personnel and registered medical Marijuana organization agents to verify registry identification cards.
(2) The verification system must allow law enforcement personnel and registered Medical Marijuana dispensary agents to enter a registry identification number and verify whether the number corresponds with a current, valid identification card at all times.
(3) The system may disclose only whether the identification card is valid, the name of the cardholder, whether the cardholder is a qualifying patient, a designated caregiver, or a Medical Marijuana organization agent, whether the cardholder is permitted to cultivate Marijuana plants and the location where the plants are cultivated, the registration certificate number of any affiliated Medical Marijuana organization, and the registry identification number of any affiliated registered qualifying patient.
(4) At the cardholder’s request, the Department may confirm the cardholder’s status as a registered qualifying patient or a registered designated caregiver to a third party, such as a landlord, school, medical professional, or court.
39-9219. NOTIFICATIONS TO DEPARTMENT
(1) A registered qualifying patient shall notify the Department within ten (10) days of any change in the registered qualifying patient’s name, mailing address, designated caregiver, preference regarding who may cultivate Marijuana for the registered qualifying patient, address where Marijuana plants are cultivated, or if the registered qualifying patient ceases to have his debilitating medical condition.
(2) A registered designated caregiver shall notify the Department within ten (10) days of any change in his name or mailing address.
(3) A registered Medical Marijuana organization agent shall notify the Department within ten (10) days of any change in his/her name.
(4) If a cardholder notifies the Department of any changes listed in this section but remains eligible under this chapter, the Department shall issue the cardholder a new registry identification card with new random twenty (20) digit alphanumeric identification numbers within ten (10) days of receiving the updated information and a ten ($10) dollar fee. If the person notifying the Department is a registered qualifying patient, the Department shall also issue his registered designated caregiver, if any, a new registry identification card within ten (10) days of receiving the updated information.
(5) If the registered qualifying patient's certifying practitioner notifies the Department in writing that either the registered qualifying patient has ceased to suffer from a debilitating medical condition or that the practitioner no longer believes the patient would receive therapeutic or palliative benefit from the medical use of Marijuana and that the certifying practitioner has notified the qualifying patient of this belief, the card is void upon notification by the Department to the qualifying patient.
(6) If a registered qualifying patient ceases to be a registered qualifying patient or changes the registered designated caregiver, the Department shall promptly notify the former designated caregiver that his/her duties and rights under this chapter for the qualifying patient expire fifteen (15) days after the Department sends notification.
(7) A Medical Marijuana organization shall notify the Department within one (1) business day after an agent is no longer employed by or volunteers at the Medical Marijuana organization.
(8) A Medical Marijuana organization shall notify the Department within one (1) business day of any theft or significant loss of Marijuana.
39-9220. ANNUAL REPORT
The Department shall submit to the legislature an annual public report that does not disclose any identifying information about cardholders, Medical Marijuana organizations, or practitioners but contains all of the following information:
(1) The number of registry identification card applications and renewals;
(2) The number of qualifying patients and designated caregivers approved;
(3) The nature of the debilitating medical conditions of the qualifying patients;
(4) The number of registry identification cards revoked;
(5) The number of practitioners providing written recommendations for qualifying patients;
(6) The number of Medical Marijuana dispensaries, Medical Marijuana production facilities, and safety compliance facilities; and
(7) The number of medical Marijuana dispensary agents, Medical Marijuana production facility agents, and safety compliance facility agents.
(8) Financial information regarding the implementation and/or/ maintenance of the Act’s provisions.
39-9221. CONFIDENTIALITY
(1) Information received and records kept by the Department for purposes of administering this chapter are confidential and may be disclosed only as authorized by this chapter, including:
(a) Applications or renewals, their contents, and supporting information submitted by qualifying patients and designated caregivers, including information regarding their designated caregivers and practitioners.
(b) Applications or renewals, their contents, and supporting information submitted by agents of Medical Marijuana organizations.
(c) Applications or renewals, their contents, and supporting information submitted by or on behalf of Medical Marijuana organizations operating in compliance with this chapter, including the physical addresses of Medical Marijuana organizations.
(d) The individual names and other information identifying persons to whom the Department has issued registry identification cards.
(2) Any dispensing information kept or maintained by Medical Marijuana organizations or by the Department must identify cardholders and Medical Marijuana organizations by their registry identification numbers and not contain names or other personally identifying information.
(3) Any Department hard drives or other data recording media that are no longer in use and that contain cardholder information must be destroyed. The Department shall retain a signed statement from a Department employee confirming the destruction.
(4) Data subject to this section must not be combined or linked in any manner with any other list or database, and it may not be used for any purpose not provided for in this chapter.
(5) Confidential information may be disclosed as necessary for authorized Department employees to perform official duties of the Department pursuant to this chapter, including the verification of registration certificates and registry identification cards pursuant to section 39-9218 or submission of the section 39-9220 report to the legislature.
(6) Nothing in this section precludes the following notifications:
(a) Department employees may notify state or local law enforcement about falsified or fraudulent information submitted to the Department if the employee who suspects falsified or fraudulent information was submitted has conferred with his supervisor and both agree the circumstances warrant reporting.
(b) The Department may notify state or local law enforcement about apparent criminal violations of this chapter if the employee who suspects the offense has conferred with his supervisor and both agree the circumstances warrant reporting.
(c) Department employees may notify the board of medical examiners if they have reason to believe that a practitioner provided a written recommendation without completing a full assessment of the qualifying patient’s medical history and current medical condition, or if the Department has reason to believe the practitioner violated the standard of care, or for other suspected violations of this chapter.
39-9222. PRESUMPTION OF MEDICAL USE OF MARIJUANA – PROTECTIONS – CIVIL PENALTIES
(1) There is a presumption in criminal, civil, and administrative court proceedings that a qualifying patient or designated caregiver is engaged in the medical use of Marijuana pursuant to this chapter.
(a) The presumption exists if the qualifying patient or designated caregiver:
(i) Is in possession of a registry identification card; and
(ii) Is in possession of an amount of Marijuana that does not exceed the allowable amount of Marijuana.
(b) The presumption may be rebutted by evidence in any case that conduct related to Marijuana was not for the purpose of treating or alleviating the qualifying patient's debilitating medical condition or symptoms associated with the qualifying patient’s debilitating medical condition pursuant to this chapter.
(2) A registered qualifying patient or registered designated caregiver is not subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denial of any right or privilege, including any civil penalty or disciplinary action by a court, or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau, for:
(a) The registered qualifying patient’s medical use of Marijuana pursuant to this chapter, if the registered qualifying patient does not possess more than the allowable amount of Marijuana;
(b) The registered designated caregiver assisting a registered qualifying patient to whom he/she is connected through the Department's registration process with the registered qualifying patient’s medical use of Marijuana pursuant to this chapter if the registered designated caregiver does not possess more than the allowable amount of Marijuana;
(c) Payment by a registered qualifying patient and receipt by the patient’s registered designated caregiver for goods or services provided in assisting with the registered qualifying patient's medical use of Marijuana;
(d) Transferring Marijuana to a safety compliance facility for testing;
(e) Compensating a Medical Marijuana dispensary or a safety compliance facility for goods or services provided; or
(f) Offering or providing Marijuana to a registered qualifying patient, to a registered designated caregiver for a registered qualifying patient’s medical use, to a visiting qualifying patient, or to a medical Marijuana dispensary if nothing of value is transferred in return and the person giving the Marijuana does not knowingly cause the recipient to possess more than the allowable amount of Marijuana.
(3) A visiting qualifying patient is not subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denial of any right or privilege, including any civil penalty or disciplinary action by a court or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau for the medical use of Marijuana pursuant to this chapter, if the visiting qualifying patient does not possess more than the allowable amount of Marijuana.
(4) A practitioner may not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied any right or privilege, including civil penalty or disciplinary action by the state board of medicine or by any other business, occupational, or professional licensing board or bureau, based solely on providing written recommendations or for otherwise stating that, in the practitioner's professional opinion, a patient is likely to receive therapeutic or palliative benefit from the medical use of Marijuana to treat or alleviate the patient's debilitating medical condition or symptoms associated with the debilitating medical condition, but nothing in this chapter prevents a professional licensing board from sanctioning a practitioner for failing to properly evaluate a patient's medical condition or otherwise violating the standard of care for evaluating medical conditions.
(5) No person may be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied any right or privilege, including any civil penalty or disciplinary action by a court or occupational or professional licensing board or bureau, for:
(a) Providing or selling Marijuana paraphernalia to a cardholder or to a medical marijuana organization upon presentation of a valid registry identification card or registration certificate;
(b) Being in the presence or vicinity of the medical use of Marijuana authorized under this chapter; or
(c) Assisting a registered qualifying patient with administering Marijuana as authorized by this chapter.
(6) A Medical Marijuana dispensary or a Medical Marijuana dispensary agent is not subject to prosecution, search, or inspection, except by the Department pursuant to 39-9215(7), seizure, or penalty in any manner, and may not be denied any right or privilege, including civil penalty or disciplinary action by a court or business licensing board or entity, for acting pursuant to this chapter and Department rule to:
(a) Purchase or otherwise acquire Marijuana from Medical Marijuana production facilities or from other Medical Marijuana dispensaries;
(b) Acquire, possess, or purchase any Marijuana related supplies or equipment;
(c) Possess, deliver, transfer, or transport Marijuana or related supplies and educational materials to or from other Medical Marijuana organizations;
(d) Provide or otherwise transfer Marijuana to a safety compliance facility or to compensate a safety compliance facility for services or goods provided;
(e) Accept Marijuana offered by a registered qualifying patient or a registered designated caregiver if nothing of value is transferred in return; or
(f) Dispense, supply, or sell Marijuana or related supplies and educational materials to registered qualifying patients, to registered designated caregivers on behalf of registered qualifying patients, or to other Medical Marijuana dispensaries.
(7) A Medical Marijuana production facility or a Medical Marijuana production facility agent is not subject to prosecution, search, or inspection, except by the Department pursuant to 39-9215(7), seizure, or penalty in any manner, and may not be denied any right or privilege, including civil penalty or disciplinary action by a court or business licensing board or entity, for acting pursuant to this chapter and Department rule to:
(a) Acquire, possess, plant, propagate, cultivate, grow, harvest, produce, process, manufacture, compound, convert, prepare, pack, repack, or store Marijuana;
(b) Acquire, possess, or purchase any Marijuana related supplies or equipment.
(c) Purchase or otherwise acquire Marijuana from another Medical Marijuana production facility or from a Medical Marijuana dispensary;
(d) Deliver, transfer, transport, supply, or sell Marijuana to a Medical Marijuana dispensary; or
(e) Provide or otherwise transfer Marijuana to a safety compliance facility or to compensate a safety compliance facility for services or goods provided.
(8) A safety compliance facility or a safety compliance facility agent is not subject to prosecution, search, or inspection, except by the Department pursuant to 39-9215(7), seizure, or penalty in any manner, and may not be denied any right or privilege, including civil penalty or disciplinary action by a court or business licensing board or entity, for acting pursuant to this chapter and Department rule to provide the following services:
(a) Acquiring, possessing, or transporting usable Marijuana obtained from registered cardholders or Medical Marijuana organizations;
(b) Returning the usable Marijuana to the registered cardholder or Medical Marijuana organization from whom it was obtained;
(c) Producing or selling educational materials related to Medical Marijuana;
(d) Possessing, producing, selling, or transporting equipment or materials other than Marijuana to Medical Marijuana organizations or to cardholders, including lab equipment and packaging materials;
(e) Testing usable Marijuana, including for potency, pesticides, mold, or contaminants; (f) Providing training to cardholders; or
(g) Receiving compensation for services or goods provided under this chapter.
(9) Property, including all interests in the property, otherwise subject to forfeiture under Title 37, Idaho Code that is possessed, owned, or used in connection with the Medical use of Marijuana authorized under this chapter or acts incidental to the Medical use of Marijuana authorized under this chapter, is not subject to seizure or forfeiture. This subsection does not prevent civil forfeiture if the basis for the forfeiture is unrelated to the Medical use of Marijuana.
(10) Mere possession of, or application for, a registry identification card may not constitute probable cause or reasonable suspicion, nor may it be used to support the search of the person or property of the person possessing or applying for the registry identification card. The possession of, or application for, a registry identification card does not preclude the existence of probable cause if probable cause exists on other grounds.
(11) No school, landlord, or employer may be penalized or denied any benefit under state law for enrolling, leasing to, or employing a cardholder, and no landlord may be penalized or denied any benefit under state law for leasing to a registered Medical Marijuana organization.
(12) An attorney may not be subject to disciplinary action by the state bar association or other professional licensing association for providing legal assistance to a person related to activity that is not subject to criminal penalties under state law pursuant to this chapter.
(13) A qualifying patient or designated caregiver may not be subject to criminal penalty, or have his or her parental rights and/or residential time with a child restricted due to his or her medical use of Marijuana, or his or her child/ren’s medical use of Marijuana, in compliance with the terms of this chapter, absent written findings supported by substantial evidence that such use has resulted in an impairment that interferes with the performance of parenting functions.
39-9223. AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSE
(1) Except as provided in section 39-9205, a qualifying patient, a visiting qualifying patient, or a caregiver may assert the medical purpose for using Marijuana as a defense to any prosecution of an offense involving Marijuana intended for a qualifying patient’s or visiting qualifying patient’s medical use, and this defense must be presumed valid if the evidence shows that:
(a) A person who is licensed with authority to prescribe drugs to humans in the state of the patient’s residence states that, in his professional opinion, after having completed a full assessment of the patient’s medical history and current medical condition made in the course of a bona fide practitioner-patient relationship, the patient is likely to receive therapeutic or palliative benefit from the medical use of Marijuana to treat or alleviate the patient’s debilitating medical condition or symptoms associated with the patient’s debilitating medical condition;
(b) The patient and the patient’s caregiver, if any, were collectively in possession of a quantity of Marijuana that was not more than was reasonably necessary to ensure the uninterrupted availability of Marijuana for the purpose of treating or alleviating the patient’s debilitating medical condition or symptoms associated with the patient’s debilitating medical condition;
(c) All Marijuana plants were contained in an enclosed locked facility; and
(d) The patient and the patient’s caregiver, if any, were engaged in the acquisition, possession, cultivation, manufacture, use, or transportation of Marijuana, paraphernalia, or both, relating to the administration of Marijuana solely to treat or alleviate the patient’s debilitating medical condition or symptoms associated with the patient’s debilitating medical condition.
(2) A person may assert the medical purpose for using Marijuana in a motion to dismiss, and the charges must be dismissed following an evidentiary hearing if the person shows the elements listed in subsection (1).
(3) If a patient or a patient’s caregiver demonstrates the patient’s medical purpose for using Marijuana pursuant to this section, the patient and the patient’s caregiver must not be subject to disciplinary action by a court or occupational or professional licensing board or forfeiture of any interest in or right to non-Marijuana licit property for the patient’s medical use of Marijuana.
39-9224. DISCRIMINATION PROHIBITED
(1) No school, landlord, nursing facility, intermediate care facility, hospice house, hospital, or other type of residential care of assisted living facility may refuse to enroll, admit, or lease to and may not otherwise penalize a person solely for his status as a cardholder, unless failing to do so would violate federal law or cause the school, landlord, nursing facility, intermediate care facility, hospice house, hospital, or other type of residential care or assisted living facility to lose a monetary or licensing-related benefit under federal law.
(2) Except as provided in this chapter, a registered qualifying patient who uses Marijuana for medical purposes is afforded all the same rights and privileges under state and local law as the individual would have been afforded if he were solely prescribed pharmaceutical medications, including those guaranteed pursuant to Chapter 59, Title 67, Idaho Statutes and those relating to:
(a) Any interaction with the person’s employer;
(b) Drug testing by the person’s employer; or
(c) Drug testing required by a state or local law enforcement agency or government official.
(3) The rights provided by subsection (2) do not apply to the extent that they conflict with an employer’s obligations under federal law or rule or to the extent that they would disqualify an employer from a monetary or licensing-related benefit under federal law or rule.
(4) For the purposes of medical care, including organ transplants, a registered qualifying patient’s authorized use of Marijuana is the equivalent of the authorized use of any other medication used as directed by a practitioner and does not constitute the use of an illicit substance or otherwise disqualify a registered qualifying patient from medical care.
(5) In any criminal, child protection, and family law proceedings, allegations of neglect or child endangerment by a qualified patient or qualified caregiver for conduct allowed under this chapter are not admissible to the court, without substantial evidence that the person's behavior creates an unreasonable danger to the safety of the minor(s) as established by written findings of clear and convincing evidence that such neglect or child endangerment is a direct outcome of a qualifying patient or caregiver’s medical use or cultivation of Marijuana.
39-9225. ACTS NOT REQUIRED – ACTS NOT PROHIBITED
(1) Nothing in this chapter requires:
(a) A government medical assistance program or private health insurer to reimburse a person for costs associated with the medical use of Marijuana;
(b) Any person or establishment in lawful possession of property to allow a guest, client, customer, or other visitor to use Marijuana on or in that property; or
(c) An employer to allow the ingestion of Marijuana in any workplace or any employee to work while under the influence of Marijuana, except a registered qualifying patient may not be considered to be under the influence of Marijuana solely because of the presence of metabolites or components of marijuana without written findings of substantial impairment.
(2) Nothing in this chapter prohibits an employer from disciplining an employee for ingesting Marijuana in the workplace or working while impaired by Marijuana.
39-9226. REVOCATION
(1) The Department shall immediately revoke the registry identification card of a medical Marijuana dispensary agent who violates section 39-9227(2).
(2) The Department shall immediately revoke the registry identification card of a medical Marijuana production facility agent who violates section 39-9227(3).
(3) The Department shall immediately revoke the registry identification card of a safety compliance facility agent who violates section 39-9227(4).
(4) The Department shall revoke the registry identification card of a Medical Marijuana dispensary agent who willfully provides marijuana to a registered qualifying patient or a registered designated caregiver if there is reason to believe that the patient is attempting to acquire an amount of marijuana that exceeds the patient’s personal need.
(5) The Department may suspend or revoke the registry identification card of a Medical Marijuana organization agent for other violations of this chapter.
(6) The Department shall immediately revoke the registration certificate of a Medical Marijuana dispensary that violates section 39-9227(2), and its board members and principal officers may not serve as board members or principal officers for any other Medical Marijuana dispensary.
(7) The Department shall immediately revoke the registration certificate of a Medical Marijuana production facility that violates section 39-9227(3), and its board members and principal officers may not serve as board members or principal officers for any other Medical Marijuana dispensary.
(8) The Department shall immediately revoke the registration certificate of a safety compliance facility that violates section 39-9227(4), and its board members and principal officers may not serve as board members or principal officers for any other Medical Marijuana dispensary.
(9) The Department shall immediately revoke the registry identification card of any cardholder who sells Marijuana to a person who is not allowed to possess Marijuana for medical purposes under this chapter.
(10) The Department may revoke the registry identification card of any cardholder who knowingly violates this chapter.
(11) Revocation is subject to review pursuant to Chapter 52, Title 67, Idaho Code.
39-9227. VIOLATIONS – CIVIL PENALTY – CLASSIFICATION
(1) A registered qualifying patient, designated caregiver, or Medical Marijuana organization agent who willfully fails to comply with subsection 39-9219 (1), (2), (3), (7), or (8) is guilty of an infraction.
(2) A Medical Marijuana dispensary or its agent may not willfully dispense, deliver, or otherwise transfer Marijuana to a person other than another Medical Marijuana organization or its agent, a registered qualifying patient, or a registered qualifying patient's registered designated caregiver.
(3) A Medical Marijuana production facility or its agent may not willfully deliver or otherwise transfer marijuana to a person other than a Medical Marijuana dispensary or its agent or a safety compliance facility or its agent.
(4) A safety compliance facility or its agent may not willfully deliver or otherwise transfer Marijuana to any person other than the registered qualifying patient, visiting qualifying patient, registered designated caregiver, Medical Marijuana dispensary or its agent, or Medical Marijuana production facility or its agent that provided the Marijuana to the safety compliance facility for laboratory sampling or testing.
(5) A practitioner may not refer patients to a Medical Marijuana organization or to a registered designated caregiver and shall not advertise in a Medical Marijuana organization. A person who willfully violates this subsection is guilty of an infraction.
(6) A practitioner who holds a financial interest in a Medical Marijuana organization may not issue written recommendations. A person who violates this subsection is guilty of an infraction.
(7) It is a misdemeanor for any person, including an employee or official of the Department or another state agency or local government, to breach the confidentiality of information obtained pursuant to this chapter.
(8) A person who intentionally makes a false statement to a law enforcement official about any fact or circumstance relating to the medical use of Marijuana to avoid arrest or prosecution is guilty of an infraction in addition to any other penalties that may apply for making a false statement or for the possession, cultivation, or sale of marijuana not protected by this chapter.
39-9228. MEDICAL MARIJUANA FUND – PRIVATE DONATIONS
(1) The Medical Marijuana fund is established consisting of fees collected, civil penalties imposed, and private donations received under this chapter. The Department shall administer the fund. Monies in the fund are continuously appropriated.
(2) The Director of the Department may accept and spend private grants, gifts, donations, contributions, and devices to assist in carrying out the provisions of this chapter.
(3) Monies in the Medical Marijuana fund do not revert to the state general fund at the end of a fiscal year.
39-9229. ENFORCEMENT OF THIS ACT – MANDAMUS
(1) If the Department fails to adopt rules to implement this chapter within one hundred twenty (120) days of the effective date of this chapter, any citizen may commence a mandamus action in the district court to compel the Department to perform the actions mandated under this chapter.
(2) If the Department fails to establish the verification system required by section 39-9218 within one hundred twenty (120) days of the effective date of this chapter, any citizen may commence a mandamus action in the district court to compel the Department to perform the actions mandated by this chapter.
(3) If the Department fails to issue a registry identification card or a notice of denial within forty-five (45) days of submission of an application or renewal, the registry identification card is deemed issued, and a copy of the registry identification card application or renewal is deemed a valid registry identification card.
(4) If at any time after one hundred forty (140) days following the effective date of this chapter the Department is not accepting applications or has not adopted rules allowing qualifying patients to submit applications, a notarized statement by a qualifying patient containing the information required in an application pursuant to section 39-9209, together with a written recommendation issued by a practitioner within the ninety (90) days immediately preceding the notarized statement, are deemed a valid registry identification card.
SECTION 2. SMALL AMOUNT MARIJUANA DECRIMINALIZATION
That Title 37, Idaho Code, be, and the same is hereby amended by the addition of thereto a new subsection of Chapter 27, § 37-2732(c), to be enacted upon passage of this act and to be read as follows: 37-2732(c)(4):
The People of Idaho find and declare the following;
WHEREAS, the taxpayers of Idaho declare that they should not be burdened with the costs of housing and maintaining the numerous consumers of Marijuana who travel over Idaho borders from Washington, Oregon, Montana, and Nevada; and
WHEREAS, Idaho law enforcement should not be distracted from fighting real crime just because Oregon and Washington have passed recreational Marijuana laws, and Nevada and Montana have passed Medical Marijuana laws;
WHEREAS, Marijuana possession is considered a misdemeanor and conviction negatively impacts the lives Idaho’s non-violent offenders by leaving them with a criminal record that can hinder education, employment, housing, medical and assistance programs.
THEREFORE, the purpose of amending Title 37, Idaho Code, be amended by the addition of an exclusion for Marijuana related paraphernalia in Chapter 27 section § 37-2734A, subsection a(1); and
Amended by the addition of a new subsection Chapter 27 section § 37-2734A(4) to offset the costs of arrest and detainment, decrease law enforcement priority, and decrease the harms to society and Idaho citizens, and utilize the funds brought in through offenses to help aid Idaho’s budget and Idaho public schools; to be read as follows:
(4) Any person who is found to possess Marijuana, which for the purposes of this subsection “Marijuana” means all parts of any plant of the genus cannabis whether growing or not, the seeds of the plant, the resinous product of the combustion of the plant cannabis, and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant or its seeds, (the term does not include the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil, or cake made from the seeds of the plant, any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, preparation of mature stalks, fiber, oil, or cake, or the sterilized seed of the plant which is incapable of germination), in an amount of three (3) ounces net weight or less, it shall be an infraction, and upon conviction may be fined not more than one hundred dollars ($100) for the first offense, not more than five hundred dollars ($500) for the second offense, and not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) for the third and any subsequent offense.
Fifty percent (50%) of all funds received through Marijuana possession tickets will be placed into a secure fund through the Idaho Department of Education. The funds may be drawn upon yearly through application by any Idaho Public School to a grant program created and maintained by the Department of Education.
The remainder of the funds is to be used in accordance with the legally prescribed methods and procedures governing the disbursement of such funds by local courts.
SECTION 3. DECRIMINALIZATION & MEDICAL EXCLUSION OF MARIJUANA RELATED PARAPHERNALIA
That Title 37, Idaho Code, be, and the same is hereby amended by the addition of a new subsection Chapter 27 section § 37-2734, to be enacted upon passage of this act and to be read as follows: 37-2734A(4)
The People of Idaho find and declare the following:
WHEREAS, the taxpayers of Idaho declare that they should not be burdened with the costs of housing and maintaining the numerous consumers of Marijuana who possess Marijuana related drug paraphernalia and travel over Idaho borders from Washington, Oregon, Montana, and Nevada; and
WHEREAS, Idaho law enforcement should not be distracted from real crime just because Oregon and Washington have passed recreational Marijuana laws, and Nevada and Montana have passed Medical Marijuana laws, and all four states have Marijuana related drug paraphernalia available in the retail market; and
WHEREAS, Marijuana related paraphernalia possession is considered a misdemeanor and conviction negatively impacts the lives Idaho’s non-violent offenders by leaving them with a criminal record that can hinder education, employment, housing, medical and assistance programs.
WHEREAS, citizens of Idaho who qualify under the Idaho Medical Marijuana Act to possess Medical Marijuana should be free of prosecution for the devices used to ingest their medicine;
THEREFORE, the purpose of amending Title 37, Idaho Code, be amended by the addition of a new subsection Chapter 27 section § 37-2734, to offset the costs of arrest and detainment, decrease law enforcement priority, and decrease the harms to society and Idaho citizens that are associated with the possession of Marijuana related paraphernalia, and utilize the funds brought in through offenses to help aid Idaho’s budget and Idaho public schools; and create an exclusion for qualifying patients under the Idaho Medical Marijuana Act.
Any person who is in found to possess Marijuana related drug paraphernalia is guilty of an infraction and upon conviction may be fined not more than three hundred dollars ($300) per infraction, with the exception - any person who provides adequate recommendation to show their qualification and participation in the Idaho Medical Marijuana Program, or another State’s medical Marijuana program, is excluded from prosecution under this law.
Fifty percent (50%) of all funds received through Marijuana-related paraphernalia tickets will be placed into a secure fund through the Idaho Department of Education. The funds may be drawn upon yearly through application by any Idaho Public School to a grant program created by the Idaho Department of Education. The remainder of the funds is to be used in accordance with the legally prescribed methods and procedures governing the disbursement of such funds by local courts.
SECTION 4. IDAHO INDUSTRIAL HEMP PROGRAM
That Title 22, Idaho Code, be, and the same is hereby amended by the addition thereto of a NEW CHAPTER, to be known and designated as Chapter 54, Title 22, Idaho Code, and to read as follows:
CHAPTER 54, IDAHO INDUSTRIAL HEMP ACT
22-5401 SHORT TITLE.
This act may be cited as the "Idaho Industrial Hemp Act."
22-5402. FINDINGS. The people of Idaho find and declare the following:
WHEREAS, Industrial Hemp is a suitable crop for Idaho, and its production will contribute to the future viability of Idaho agriculture; and
WHEREAS, allowing Industrial Hemp production will provide farmers opportunity to sell their products to a marketplace that pays them a reasonable rate of return for their labor and capital investments. Farmers in Canada report an $800.00 per-acre return for the crop; and
WHEREAS, the infrastructure needed to process industrial hemp will result in increased business opportunities and new jobs in our communities; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp seeds and oil produced from the seeds of the Cannabis Hemp plant, as a food crop, have high nutritional value, including healthy fats and protein; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp, as a fiber crop, can be used in the manufacture of products such as clothing, building supplies, and animal bedding; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp seeds, as a fuel crop, can be processed into biodiesel, and stalks can be pelletized or flaked for burning or processed for cellulosic ethanol. Industrial hemp also expands opportunities for on-farm renewable energy production; and
WHEREAS, the production of industrial hemp can play a useful agronomic role in farm land management as part of a crop rotation system; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp refers to varieties of the cannabis plant which have a low or zero content of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and that are cultivated for fiber and oil; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp should not be confused with varieties of cannabis which have a high content of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and which are commonly referred to as Marijuana; and
WHEREAS, the commercial production and cultivation of industrial hemp is now permitted in Canada, under licenses and authorizations issued by Health Canada; and
WHEREAS, Health Canada controls, through rules, all activities relating to the importation, exportation, possession, production, sale, provision, transport, sending, delivering and offering for sale of industrial hemp; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp is grown legally throughout Europe and Asia; and
WHEREAS, many farmers facing uncertain times in the agricultural marketplace view the reintroduction of industrial hemp as another potential alternative crop that will have long term economic benefits to the farmers who produce the hemp and the person who utilizes the hemp in the production of textiles, paper products, fiberboard, concrete reinforcement, automobile parts, plastics, organic foods and natural body products; and
WHEREAS, similar industrial hemp statutes have been enacted in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, and West Virginia; and
WHEREAS, The United States Congress never originally intended to prohibit the production of hemp when restricting the production, possession and use of Marijuana (House Joint Memorial No. 3, Idaho; 56th Legislative Assembly, North Dakota; SR0259, 91st General Assembly, Illinois)
THEREFORE, the purpose of this act is to establish policy and procedures for growing industrial hemp in Idaho so that farmers and other businesses in the Idaho agricultural industry can take advantage of this market opportunity.
22-5404. DEFINITIONS
As used in this chapter:
(1) “Grower” means any person or business entity licensed under this chapter by the secretary as an industrial hemp grower.
(2) “Hemp products” means all products made from industrial hemp, including but not limited to cloth, cordage, fiber, food, fuel, paint, paper, particle board, plastics, seed, seed meal, seed oil, and certified seed for cultivation if such seeds originate from industrial hemp varieties.
(3) “Industrial hemp” means varieties of the plant cannabis sativa having no more than 0.3 percent tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), whether growing or not, that are cultivated or possessed by a licensed grower in compliance with this chapter.
(4) “Director” means the Director of the Department of Agriculture for the State of Idaho.
(5) "Department" means the Idaho Department of Agriculture
22-5405. INDUSTRIAL HEMP: AN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT
Industrial hemp is an agricultural product which may be grown, produced, possessed, and commercially traded in Idaho pursuant to the provisions of this chapter.
22-5406. LICENSING: APPLICATION
(1) Any person or business entity wishing to engage in the production of industrial hemp must be licensed as an industrial hemp grower by the Director. A license from the Director shall authorize industrial hemp production only at a site or sites specified by the license.
(2) A license from the Director shall be valid for 24 months from the date of issuance and may be renewed but shall not be transferable.
(3) The Director shall obtain a record of convictions in Idaho and other jurisdictions for any applicant for a license who has given written authorization on the application form. The Director shall file a user's agreement with the center. The user's agreement shall require the Director to comply with all statutes, rules, and policies regulating the release of criminal conviction records and the protection of individual privacy. Conviction records provided to the Director under this section are confidential and shall be used only to determine the applicant’s eligibility for licensure.
(4) A person who has been convicted in Idaho of a felony offense or a comparable offense in another jurisdiction within the last five years shall not be eligible for a license under this chapter.
(5) When applying for a license from the Director, an applicant shall provide information sufficient to demonstrate to the Director that the applicant intends to grow and is capable of growing industrial hemp in accordance with this chapter, which at a minimum shall include:
(a) Filing with the Director a set of classifiable fingerprints and written authorization permitting the Idaho criminal information center to generate a record of convictions as required by subsection (30 of this section.
(b) Filing with the Director documentation certifying that the seeds obtained for planting are of a type and variety compliant with the maximum concentration of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) set forth in subdivision 22-5404 of this chapter.
(c) Filing with the Director the location and acreage of all parcels sown and other field reference information as may be required by the secretary.
(6) To qualify for a license from the Director, an applicant shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Director that the applicant has adopted methods to ensure the legal production of industrial hemp, which at a minimum shall include:
(a) Ensuring that all parts of the industrial hemp plant that do not enter the stream of commerce as hemp products are destroyed, incorporated into the soil, or otherwise properly disposed of.
(b) Maintaining records that reflect compliance with the provisions of this chapter and with all other state laws regulating the planting and cultivation of industrial hemp.
(7) Every grower shall maintain all production and sales records for at least three years.
(8) Every grower shall allow industrial hemp crops, throughout sowing, growing season, harvest, storage, and processing, to be inspected by and at the discretion of the Director or his or her designee.
22-5407. REVOCATION AND SUSPENSION OF LICENSE - ENFORCEMENT
(1) The director may deny, suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew the license of any grower who:
(a) Makes a false statement or misrepresentation on an application for a license or renewal of a license.
(b) Fails to comply with or violates any provision of this chapter or any rule adopted under it.
(2) Revocation or suspension of a license may be in addition to any civil or criminal penalties imposed on a grower for a violation of any other state law.
22-5408. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY
The director shall adopt rules to provide for the implementation of this chapter, which shall include rules to allow for the industrial hemp to be tested during growth for tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) levels and to allow for supervision of the industrial hemp during sowing, growing season, harvest, storage, and processing.
22-5409. ANNUAL REPORT
(1) The Department shall submit to the legislature an annual public report that does not disclose any identifying information about licensed growers of industrial hemp, but contains all of the following information:
(a) The number of industrial hemp licenses and renewals;
(b) The number of revocation and suspensions of licenses;
(c) The number of industrial hemp producers and earnings in fees.
30 22-5410. INDUSTRIAL HEMP FUND – PRIVATE DONATIONS
(1) The Industrial Hemp fund is established consisting of fees collected, civil penalties imposed, and private donations received under this chapter. The Department shall administer the fund. Monies in the fund are continuously appropriated.
(2) The Director of the Department may accept and spend private grants, gifts, donations, contributions, and devices to assist in carrying out the provisions of this chapter.
(3) Monies in the Industrial Hemp fund do not revert to the state general fund at the end of a fiscal year.
22-5411. EFFECTIVE DATE
This act shall take effect upon passage.
22-5412. ENFORCEMENT OF THIS ACT – MANDAMUS
(1) If the Department fails to adopt rules to implement this chapter within one hundred twenty (120) days of the effective date of this chapter, any citizen may commence a mandamus action in the district court to compel the Department to perform the actions mandated under this chapter.
(2) If the Department fails to establish the licensing system required by section 22-5406 within one hundred twenty (120) days of the effective date of this chapter, any citizen may commence a mandamus action in the district court to compel the Department to perform the actions mandated by this chapter.
(3) If the Department fails to issue an industrial hemp license or a notice of denial within forty-five (45) days of submission of an application or renewal, the license is deemed issued, and a copy of the license application or renewal is deemed a valid industrial hemp license.
(4) If at any time after one hundred forty (140) days following the effective date of this chapter the Department is not accepting applications or has not adopted rules allowing Idaho farmers to submit applications, a notarized statement by an applicant containing the information required in an application pursuant to section 22-5406, is deemed an industrial hemp license.
22-5413 EXEMPTION FROM PROSECUTION
(1) Any approved applicant in accordance with this act shall be protected and exempt from prosecution under criminal laws for the cultivation and possession of industrial hemp and growing materials or supplies, as defined by this chapter.
SECTION 5. SEVERABILITY
The provisions of these acts are hereby declared to be severable and if any provision of this acts or the application of such provision to any person or circumstance is declared invalid for any reason, such declaration shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this act.