CANNABIS EDUCATION PROJECT
DPBH
Continues to Stonewall Release of Complete MME Scores
By Chuck Muth
November 7, 2014
On
Monday, the Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health (DPBH) mailed out
the results of its three-month review of over 500 applications for Medical
Marijuana Establishment (MME) licenses.
That same day, it published the results on the Division’s website for
those applicants who signed a “consent to release” form.
The
problem is the Division only published partial scores.
The
ratings/rankings show only the total number of points each applicant for an MME
dispensary received without including the number of points awarded in each of
the seven categories that were evaluated.
As
such, the vast majority of dispensary applicants who did not receive a
provisional license from the State of Nevada have absolutely no idea why their
application was rejected.
On
Tuesday I sent an email to Pam Graber, the Education and Information Officer
for the Medical Marijuana Program, asking…
Ms.
Graber’s response was…
When
the Nevada Legislature approved the dispensary bill in the 2013 session, it was
clear the intent was to establish a world-class regulatory system for marijuana
every bit as exceptional and transparent and above special interest influence
as our gaming regulation system.
Unfortunately,
the DPBH decision to withhold the complete rating details - not only from the
public, but from the applicants themselves - is the exact opposite of an open
and transparent system; opening the process up to suspicion of corruption on
the part of some applicants.
As
such, on Wednesday afternoon I submitted an official “public records request”
asking for the release of the full point scores for those applicants who signed
a consent to release form. You can read
the letter by clicking
here.
Disappointingly,
I received a response later that afternoon from Pam Graber, the Education and
Information Officer for the Medical Marijuana Program, denying our request.
To
buttress her denial, Ms. Graber cited the following from NRS 453A.700…
But
that claim simply doesn’t hold water.
If
the DPBH is allowed, by law, to release and publish the total point score for
an MME applicant who signed a consent to release form, then there clearly can
be no reason whatsoever for not releasing the point scores by category that
added up to the total point score.
It’s
simply unacceptable that the DPBH can pick and choose, at its own discretion,
what scoring information will and will not be released to the public, let alone
the individual applicants.
If,
for example, the DPBH published a rating score for Applicant X of 150, there’s
no reason not to break down that score thusly…
These
are just numbers and scores, not confidential application information.
After
receiving Ms. Graber’s denial of our public records request, I made this exact
argument in a follow-up email…
Thursday
morning I received the following curt reply…
“Developing
a process”?
Come
on. This is nothing more than filling
out an elementary school report card and sending it home to mom and dad.
MME
applicants have spent tens, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars, securing
property, hiring experts and completing the official licensing
applications.
And
those applications weren’t the kind of one-page application you and I fill out
to get a new Visa or MasterCard. Some of
them were thousands of pages long and weighed as much as a brick.
There
are millions of dollars at stake for the applicants, not to mention the
reputation of Nevada’s new medical marijuana industry and regulatory apparatus.
We
all deserve better than this.
Only
by releasing the point scoring by category can the public, not to mention the
applicants themselves, know where a potential operator was strong and/or
weak.
Only
by releasing the point scoring by category can the public, not to mention the
applicants themselves, know where a potential operator needs to improve their
business plan to be a successful MME operator in Nevada.
Only
by releasing the point scoring by category can the public, not to mention the
applicants themselves, know that the evaluation process was fair and untainted
by special interest influence.
Only
by releasing the point scoring by category can the public, not to mention the
applicants themselves, judge Nevada’s new medical marijuana regulatory system as
world-class, just as our gaming regulatory system is.
Anything
short of full transparency in this regard will be embarrassing for the State of
Nevada, the Governor, the Legislature and the DPBH.
And
expensive litigation – which inevitably will cost Nevada taxpayers a bundle! –
is right around the corner.
DPBH
should release those total point scores by category today. Not this weekend. Not on Monday. Not next week.
Today.
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Friday, November 7, 2014
LAS VEGAS MEDICAL MARIJUANA DEBACLE
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