COLLIER COUNTY
Anyone in Collier County with a prescription for medical marijuana will need to either get it filled by mail or drive to Lee County for their medication.
Commissioner Rick Locastro told WINK News, the board is not behind the medical dispensaries coming to the county. Rather than discuss changing land codes to allow them, they came to an agreement by voting unanimously to ban them.
The idea of medical marijuana dispensaries in Collier County was snuffed on Tuesday.
āThereās a liquor store in every corner, thereās a vape store, thereās a cover bar on every corner theyāre all selling synthetic cannabis. Weāre talking about medical dispensaries coming in and selling lab-tested medical products for people who are suffering from debilitating conditions,ā Nick Garulay, the founder and CEO of My Florida Green, said.
Patients can get medically certified at Garulayās company, My Florida Green.
Chad Taylor got referred to My Florida Green about four years ago.
āIt was a game changer. I sleep better than I ever have slept before, my anxiety is next to zero, and I just feel better,ā Taylor said.
Those, among other reasons, are why Taylor and other medical marijuana advocates have mixed feelings about the county commissioner scrapping an ordinance that would allow dispensaries to operate in unincorporated parts of the county under the same zoning as a pharmacy.
āWhen people are suffering from debilitating conditions and saying well, itās OK for you to go ahead and drive that extra 12 miles or whatever, well tell that to the person thatās putting their wheelchair in the back of their car, tell that to the dying cancer patient or some of the other people suffering from extreme anxiety or PTSD who canāt even leave the house,ā Taylor said.
Patients in Collier County said leaders arenāt making it easy, but that was something commissioners considered.
āThat little extra convenience wasnāt enough, and it certainly didnāt lock anybody out who has a prescription. They have multiple ways to get it even locally,ā Collier County commissioner, Rick LoCastro, said.
Medical marijuana advocates said the benefits are undeniable. Garulay and his team plan to address the board at the next meeting.
The commissioners will consider the ordinance ban in three weeks, on Feb. 14.
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