Medical cannabis in Alabama is coming closer. And some out-of-state firms want in.

  • The law’s stated goal of creating an exclusively Alabama industry may face challenges.
  • At least three out-of-state cannabis companies have set up business entities in Montgomery.
  • From the application process to securing facilities, getting into the business will be pricey.

All the promise and peril of medical cannabis in Alabama lies in a pound of a strain known as granddaddy purple. 

Tracy Reed, a Montgomery apartment building manager, gets about that much each month. He puts it in a boiler for two to three hours and makes it into a tea, which he then chills in a refrigerator. He drinks a cup of tea in the morning and a cup in the evening. It helps Reed manage chronic back pain, which developed from loading and unloading overhead bins as a California-based flight attendant for Southwest Airlines. 

“It’s like a smooth kick-in, and it lasts long,” Reed said in a recent interview. “I took a cup this morning. I’m able to get up, talk, move. But if I miss one day of taking my tea, I’m in trouble. Because my back’s killing me.” 

Tracy Reed, pictured in Montgomery on July 21, 2022, uses medical cannabis he buys in California for back pain. Before cannabis, doctors prescribed him opioids.

Reed has been drinking the tea since about 2009, when a doctor in California recommended cannabis to him. Pharmaceuticals gave him no relief. Ibuprofen gives him rashes. Before cannabis, doctors prescribed him opioids. Hydrocodone hurt his joints. One physician prescribed him methadone, which he promptly returned after a dose made him “scared and shaky.” 

The tea lets him function. But it’s a challenge to get it. A pound of grandaddy purple costs $400, all out of Reed’s pockets. Alabama does not recognize or protect medical cannabis patients from other states. In early June, police arrested Reed and charged him with 1st-degree marijuana possession after finding his marijuana during a traffic stop. A court date has not been set. 

Tracy Reed shows the wedding cake marijuana that he uses as medical cannabis to make tea.

“If you’ve got a condition in Alabama, it feels weird, because there’s nothing that you can do for your condition,” he said. “You don’t want to go illegal. So I have to go out of town to California and stuff like that. And I can’t really afford to keep traveling all the time. Because it can take me away from the benefit of raising my kids.” 

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*