Cannabis Policy Archives - Compassionate Alternative Care https://compaltcare.com/category/compaltcare-media/cannabis-policy/ Medical Marijuana Card Jacksonville and West Palm Beach Thu, 23 Apr 2026 20:16:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://compaltcare.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/compaltcare-icon.png Cannabis Policy Archives - Compassionate Alternative Care https://compaltcare.com/category/compaltcare-media/cannabis-policy/ 32 32 What Schedule III Means for Florida Medical Cannabis Patients https://compaltcare.com/florida-medical-cannabis-schedule-3/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=florida-medical-cannabis-schedule-3 https://compaltcare.com/florida-medical-cannabis-schedule-3/#respond Thu, 23 Apr 2026 19:54:23 +0000 https://compaltcare.com/?p=7689 What Schedule III Means for Florida Medical Cannabis Patients The Department of Justice and DEA’s decision to place state-licensed medical marijuana products into Schedule III marks a significant shift for […]

The post What Schedule III Means for Florida Medical Cannabis Patients appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>

What Schedule III Means for Florida Medical Cannabis Patients

The Department of Justice and DEA’s decision to place state-licensed medical marijuana products into Schedule III marks a significant shift for patients, but what matters most is how this change improves access to safe, effective, and affordable medicine.  For years, Florida patients have lived under a contradiction: the state recognizes cannabis as medicine, while federal law has treated it as a Schedule I substance with “no accepted medical use.” This action begins to correct that conflict by recognizing the legitimacy of state-regulated medical cannabis programs.  For patients, that matters.

 

What This Could Mean for Patients:

More Research Using Real-World Medical Cannabis

One of the biggest opportunities created by Schedule III is expanded research using products patients are actually using, not products that fail to reflect real-world medical practice.  That could support better evidence on dosing, safety, formulations, and therapeutic outcomes, while helping physicians make more informed recommendations.  Better research should lead to better care.

Potential for Greater Access and Affordability

Schedule III also removes the federal tax burden imposed under Section 280E on state-licensed operators.  While tax relief for operators is often discussed as a business issue, patients should be asking a simple question:

Will those savings improve affordability and patient access?

That should be the expectation.  Reduced tax burdens, along with potential pathways for DEA registration, should help support a more stable and accessible medical supply system, but those benefits should reach patients, not stop at corporate balance sheets.

What Patients Should Watch Closely

This is where advocacy matters.  Rescheduling should not become a mechanism for consolidating power among large operators while pushing out legacy participants, smaller innovators, or patient-centered models of care.  Patients have long benefited from grassroots knowledge, traditional cannabis expertise, and innovation that often came from outside large commercial systems.  Those voices should not be erased in the name of reform.  Federal recognition should strengthen patient access, not narrow it.

What This Does Not Do

This does not legalize marijuana federally, and it does not solve every challenge overnight.  It does not automatically:

  • Lower prices for patients
  • Expand protections immediately
  • Guarantee broader product access
  • Prevent market consolidation
  • Replace the need for continued reform

And it does not conclude the broader rescheduling process, which continues through a DEA administrative hearing beginning June 29, 2026.

A Patient-First Standard

This change should be measured by one standard:  Does it improve patient access to safe, effective, and affordable medicine?

If Schedule III leads to better research, improved care, more affordability, and stronger protections for patients, it will represent meaningful progress.  If it primarily benefits large operators while patients continue facing high costs, limited options, or reduced access, more work remains.

The Bottom Line

Schedule III is an important first step.  It acknowledges medical value, supports research, and may help strengthen the foundation for long-overdue reforms.  But patients should not view this as a victory for industry.  It should be a call to ensure reform serves patients first.

The post What Schedule III Means for Florida Medical Cannabis Patients appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>
https://compaltcare.com/florida-medical-cannabis-schedule-3/feed/ 0
Industry Advocate Calls for Patient-Centered Reforms to Florida’s Medical Cannabis Program https://compaltcare.com/florida-medical-cannabis-access-reform-doh-ommu/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=florida-medical-cannabis-access-reform-doh-ommu https://compaltcare.com/florida-medical-cannabis-access-reform-doh-ommu/#respond Mon, 30 Mar 2026 13:37:16 +0000 https://compaltcare.com/?p=7567 Industry Advocate Calls for Patient-Centered Reforms to Florida’s Medical Cannabis Program FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  West Palm Beach, FL — March 30, 2026  A Florida-based industry professional and patient advocate is […]

The post Industry Advocate Calls for Patient-Centered Reforms to Florida’s Medical Cannabis Program appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>

Industry Advocate Calls for Patient-Centered Reforms to Florida’s Medical Cannabis Program

West Palm Beach, FL — March 30, 2026 

A Florida-based industry professional and patient advocate is urging the Florida Department of Health (DOH) and the Office of Medical Marijuana Use (OMMU) to reevaluate key regulatory policies that may be limiting patient access within the state’s medical cannabis program. The concerns are outlined in a formal submission to regulators,  which can be viewed in full here 

Established under Section 381.986 Florida Statutes, Florida’s program has grown into the largest medical cannabis market in the United States. However, concerns remain that its regulatory framework continues to prioritize restriction and market control over patient accessibility and physician-directed care.

The program’s origins under SB 1030 – Florida Compassionate Medical Cannabis Act (2014) –  set a precedent for limited licensing and vertical integration.  Today, Florida remains one of the most restrictive states in terms of market participation, despite significant patient enrollment.

Continued regulatory changes have intensified these concerns. The implementation of Rule 64ER22-8  standardized supply limits intended to support oversight and prevent diversion. However, data from the 2026 Physician Certification Pattern Review indicates a growing number of Requests for Exception (RFEs), suggesting that default dosing caps may not align with individualized patient needs. Critics argue that this framework shifts aspects of treatment decision-making away from physicians and toward administrative processes.

Additional barriers have emerged through Rule 64ER23-2 Florida, which narrows caregiver eligibility and imposes stricter requirements for non-family caregivers. Advocates warn that these changes disproportionately impact elderly patients, individuals with disabilities, and those without traditional family support systems.

Access challenges are particularly pronounced in long-term care settings. While Florida law permits medical cannabis use in facilities such as nursing homes and assisted living centers, the absence of clear operational guidelines has led many facilities to prohibit use altogether due to liability concerns. This gap leaves some of the state’s most vulnerable populations without viable access to physician-recommended treatments.

Further compounding the issue is a disconnect between statutory intent and market reality. Although Florida law includes provisions for low-THC cannabis products designed for medically vulnerable patients, the current marketplace is dominated by high-THC formulations, limiting access to balanced therapeutic options.

“Success should not be measured solely by enrollment or revenue,” the advocate stated. “A truly effective medical program must ensure consistent, safe, and affordable access, especially for patients who depend on it most.”

The release calls on regulators to evaluate whether current rules represent the least restrictive means of achieving public health objectives while remaining aligned with legislative intent. Key areas for consideration include long-term care access policies, caregiver participation barriers, supply limit frameworks, and product availability standards.

As Florida’s patient population continues to grow, particularly among older adults, stakeholders emphasize the need for a more patient-centered approach that reflects the realities of those relying on medical cannabis as part of their care.

 
 

The post Industry Advocate Calls for Patient-Centered Reforms to Florida’s Medical Cannabis Program appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>
https://compaltcare.com/florida-medical-cannabis-access-reform-doh-ommu/feed/ 0
CMS to Cover Hemp Products? What the New $500 Reimbursement Policy Means https://compaltcare.com/cms-hemp-product-coverage-500-reimbursement/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cms-hemp-product-coverage-500-reimbursement https://compaltcare.com/cms-hemp-product-coverage-500-reimbursement/#respond Tue, 24 Mar 2026 15:33:46 +0000 https://compaltcare.com/?p=7545 CMS to Cover Hemp Products? What the New $500 Reimbursement Policy Means CMS Signals Shift: Up to $500 in Approved Hemp Products May Be Covered A significant policy shift appears […]

The post CMS to Cover Hemp Products? What the New $500 Reimbursement Policy Means appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>

CMS to Cover Hemp Products? What the New $500 Reimbursement Policy Means

CMS Signals Shift: Up to $500 in Approved Hemp Products May Be Covered

A significant policy shift appears to be emerging at the federal level, with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) signaling potential reimbursement of up to $500 for certain approved hemp-derived products. While details are still developing, this move could represent one of the most meaningful federal acknowledgments of cannabinoid-based therapeutics to date.

What’s Changing?

CMS is reportedly exploring a framework that would allow limited reimbursement for hemp-derived products that meet specific criteria. While final rulemaking and implementation details are still pending, early indications suggest:

  • Coverage cap: Up to $500 per beneficiary
  • Product scope: Hemp-derived products, likely compliant with the <0.3% THC threshold under federal law
  • Approval pathway: Products may need to meet defined safety, labeling, and possibly clinical evidence standards
  • Use cases: Expected to focus on symptom management (e.g., pain, sleep, anxiety), though not yet explicitly defined

This is not full cannabinoid coverage—it’s a narrowly scoped pilot-style reimbursement concept that appears designed to balance access with regulatory caution.

Why This Matters

For years, federal healthcare programs have avoided cannabinoid coverage due to the legal status of cannabis under the Controlled Substances Act. However,  the 2018 Farm Bill created a regulatory opening.

If implemented, this CMS policy could:

  • Legitimize certain hemp-derived therapies within federal healthcare frameworks
  • Increase patient access for lower-income and elderly populations
  • Drive standardization in product quality, testing, and labeling
  • Encourage clinical research into cannabinoids that fall within the hemp category

It also signals a broader shift: cannabinoids are increasingly being viewed through a medical and pharmacoeconomic lens rather than purely a legal one.

What Counts as an “Approved” Hemp Product?

This is where things get nuanced. Not all hemp products will qualify.

Based on current regulatory trends, “approved” will likely mean:

  • Verified third-party lab testing (potency, contaminants)
  • Clear labeling and dosing standards
  • Compliance with federal hemp definitions
  • Potential alignment with FDA guidance (even if not formally FDA-approved drugs)

Products sold in unregulated or gray-market environments are unlikely to qualify. This could create a divide between clinically oriented cannabinoid products and general retail CBD offerings.

Implications for Providers and Patients

For healthcare providers, this introduces a new conversation:

  • How do you counsel patients on hemp-derived therapeutics?
  • Which products meet emerging federal standards?
  • How do you document medical necessity for reimbursement?

For patients, especially those on Medicare or Medicaid, this could mean:

  • Partial financial relief for cannabinoid-based symptom management
  • Increased confidence in product safety and consistency
  • More structured pathways to access non-pharmaceutical options

Important Limitation: This Does NOT Change State Medical Cannabis Programs

Despite how significant this sounds, it’s critical to understand what this policy does not do.

This CMS development does not alter state-regulated medical cannabis programs, including Florida’s medical marijuana system.

Key distinctions:

  • Hemp vs. Marijuana: Federal coverage applies only to hemp-derived products (<0.3% THC), not state-legal medical cannabis products that exceed this threshold.
  • State Authority Remains Intact: Programs governed under laws like Florida Medical Marijuana Legalization Initiative continue to operate independently.
  • No Impact on MMTCs: Licensed Medical Marijuana Treatment Centers (MMTCs) in Florida will not be able to bill CMS under this framework for cannabis products.
  • Patient Certification Still Required: Access to medical cannabis in Florida still requires physician certification and registry enrollment—this federal policy does not replace or modify that process.

In short: this is a parallel pathway, not a replacement. Patients may gain limited access to reimbursable hemp products, but state medical cannabis programs remain unchanged.  If you are in need of a medical cannabis certification within the state of Florida, Compassionate Alternative Care is here for you!

The Bigger Picture

This move by CMS could be an early step toward broader cannabinoid integration into mainstream healthcare. While narrow in scope, it sets precedent:

  • Federal acknowledgment of cannabinoid therapeutic value
  • The beginning of reimbursement models
  • Pressure for clearer regulatory standards across agencies

For now, stakeholders should watch closely as details emerge—especially around product qualification, provider involvement, and documentation requirements.

The post CMS to Cover Hemp Products? What the New $500 Reimbursement Policy Means appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>
https://compaltcare.com/cms-hemp-product-coverage-500-reimbursement/feed/ 0
Schedule III or Smoke & Mirrors? The Cannabis Power Shift Nobody’s Explaining https://compaltcare.com/schedule-iii-cannabis-reform/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=schedule-iii-cannabis-reform https://compaltcare.com/schedule-iii-cannabis-reform/#respond Wed, 04 Mar 2026 18:57:22 +0000 https://compaltcare.com/?p=7498 Schedule III or Smoke & Mirrors? The Cannabis Power Shift Nobody’s Explaining Cannabis has been directed to be moved from Schedule I to Schedule III under President Donald Trump and […]

The post Schedule III or Smoke & Mirrors? The Cannabis Power Shift Nobody’s Explaining appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>

Cannabis has been directed to be moved from Schedule I to Schedule III under President Donald Trump and media outlets are calling it historic reform.

But is it?

In this episode, we break down what Schedule III cannabis rescheduling actually changes, including 280E tax relief and banking access to state-level rollbacks, hemp crackdowns, and the battle between corporate cannabis and small business operators.

This isn’t about getting high.

It’s about power, policy, and profit.

The post Schedule III or Smoke & Mirrors? The Cannabis Power Shift Nobody’s Explaining appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>
https://compaltcare.com/schedule-iii-cannabis-reform/feed/ 0
Weed in Florida: Legal, Local & Complicated w/ Cannabis Expert Daniel Locke https://compaltcare.com/florida-weed-laws-explained-daniel-locke/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=florida-weed-laws-explained-daniel-locke https://compaltcare.com/florida-weed-laws-explained-daniel-locke/#respond Tue, 02 Dec 2025 16:31:34 +0000 https://compaltcare.com/?p=6776 Weed in Florida: Legal, Local, and Complicated w/ Cannabis Expert Daniel Locke, M.S. Florida weed laws are wild right now.  Legal here, illegal there, medical this, felony that… it’s confusing […]

The post Weed in Florida: Legal, Local & Complicated w/ Cannabis Expert Daniel Locke appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>

Weed in Florida: Legal, Local, and Complicated w/ Cannabis Expert Daniel Locke, M.S.

Florida weed laws are wild right now.  Legal here, illegal there, medical this, felony that… it’s confusing on purpose.  In this episode, “Weed in Florida: Legal, Local & Complicated,” we sit down with Cannabis Expert Daniel Locke to break it all down in plain language:  What’s actually legal in Florida right now, and what can still get you jammed up.  The difference between medical marijuana, recreational use, and “just a little bit”.  How local counties and cities can change the rules on you without you even knowing.  The business side of cannabis in Florida: licenses, dispensaries, and who’s really making money.  Where Florida might be headed next: full legalization or more red tape?  If you live in Florida, visit Florida, or just care about how cannabis laws really work on the ground, this episode is a must-hear. Real talk. No legal jargon. Just facts, game, and clarity.  Endless Topics First Episode Weed Talk.

The post Weed in Florida: Legal, Local & Complicated w/ Cannabis Expert Daniel Locke appeared first on Compassionate Alternative Care.

]]>
https://compaltcare.com/florida-weed-laws-explained-daniel-locke/feed/ 0