“Knowing that this activity can happen across the state, what are community members thinking?” said Dominique Mendiola, senior director of the Department of Revenue’s new Natural Medicine Division. (Mendiola also leads the Marijuana Enforcement Division.
The sessions are being hosted by DOR, which will set rules for the manufacture and cultivation of psychedelic drugs. DOR also will help train first responders, and it will keep track of law enforcement incidents, adverse health events, consumer protection claims, behavioral health impacts and effects on the health care system. The state’s public health department will also be involved in that work.
Another agency, the Department of Regulatory Agencies, will make rules for the healing centers themselves: Who can work there? How will they be trained? All the regulators are taking advice from the Natural Medicine Advisory Board.
Still, Mendiola said that people can raise questions and concerns on any topic at the upcoming listening sessions.
“We’re preparing to address any questions we can answer in those sessions, but even if we aren’t able to address a question on the spot during these sessions, it’s very helpful for us to understand what’s top of mind to any of our stakeholders,” she said.
The rise of the industry also creates questions for local governments. Unlike with cannabis, city leaders cannot completely ban psychedelic cultivators or practitioners from city limits. But they can set some basic rules about where and how they operate.
The first state licenses for manufacturers, healing centers and others are expected to be granted around the end of 2024.
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