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Florida Joins States That Have OK'd Medical Marijuana. What's Next?

Abe Aboraya/WMFE
Dani Hall hopes her two children will be eligible for medical marijuana now that Florida has overwhelmingly approved Amendment 2.

Now that Florida voters have passed a medical marijuana constitutional amendment, some are already asking: Is recreational marijuana next?

John Morgan, the financial backer of the amendment, spoke to reporters today. He said he thinks recreational marijuana will come to Florida. But that won’t be his fight.

“I would never want my children to smoke marijuana recreationally because I’ve seen the stoner,” Morgan said. “So that’s not my fight.”

Now that Florida has approved medical marijuana, the next step will be implementation. The Florida Legislature is expected to pass a medical marijuana bill in the spring 2017 session. And then it heads to the Florida Department of Health for implementation.

(Editor's note: Medical marijuana also passed in North Dakota and Arkansas on Tuesday. In Montana, voters chose to roll back some restrictions on its already-passed medical marijuana law. Voters also approved recreational marijuana use in California, Massachusetts and Nevada. The Associated Press reports that a recreational marijuana ballot question in Maine is still too close to call.)

Morgan said it will be easier to ramp up production since Florida has implemented a low-THC medical marijuana bill and allows full-strength medical marijuana for the terminally ill.

This story comes from WMFE.

“The money is waiting at the door to get this stuff grown, marketed, so that’s gonna be different,” Morgan said. “Charlotte’s Web was a little bit of oil for a few kids with epilepsy. You did not have the wolves at the door.”

Even though voters overwhelmingly passed Amendment 2 last night, the campaign against medical marijuana in Florida isn’t quite over. The plan is to head to Tallahassee.

Jessica Spencer is an addiction specialist and the policy director for the No On 2 campaign. She questions rhetoric on the campaign trail by Morgan.

In particular, when Morgan said local governments could restrict where dispensaries go, and that the legislature could regulate whether or not the edibles are in candy form.

“I think it’s about time the state of Florida hold John Morgan responsible to that and hold him to his word that the legislature will be able to regulate this,” Spencer said.