In final drawing, Kentucky awards 12 more medical marijuana licenses
Dec 22, 2024
By Sarah LaddKentucky Lantern
Kentucky awarded 12 additional medical cannabis dispensary licenses through a final drawing held Monday at the Kentucky Lottery Corporation in Louisville.
Sam Flynn, executive director of the Kentucky Office of Medical Cannabis, said there were 4,075 applications for dispensary licenses.
In late November, the state awarded its first 36 medical cannabis dispensary licenses. Previous lottery winners were cultivators and processors.
While this is the final drawing for the program, Gov. Andy Beshear said that could change in the future.
“Our hope is that, certainly, there will be additional conditions added later in the future, whereby other Kentuckians will have access to treat chronic or difficult conditions,” he said. “If that’s the case and/or we see more people qualifying than the initial projection suggested, that will give us an opportunity to expand this medical cannabis program.”
The latest dispensary winners and their locations:
Canntucky Ventures LLC — Frankfort, Franklin County
Garry Kort — Richmond, Madison County
Robert Hoogendyk — Richmond, Madison County
Thriveblue LLC — Georgetown, Scott County
DHK KY LLC — Lexington, Fayette County
ZenLeaf, Inc. — Lexington, Fayette County
DNP-DH KY, LLC — Shepherdsville, Bullitt County
KY PRISTINE VISTAS LLC — Shepherdsville, Bullitt County
DJS KY LLC — Shelbyville, Shelby County
Pinnacle Path LLC — Shepherdsville, Bullitt County
Chung Woo Kim, LLC — Louisville, Jefferson County
Upward Innovations — Louisville, Jefferson County
As with past drawings, winners will have to pay a licensing fee within 15 days or forfeit their license. Winners will receive emails with instructions on the process.
Background and timelineIn 2023, the legislature legalized medical marijuana for Kentuckians suffering from chronic illnesses.
Then, the bipartisan House Bill 829 that became law during this year’s legislative session moved up the medical cannabis licensing timeline from January 2025 to July 1, 2024.
During the application period, which was July 1–Aug. 31, the state received 4,998 applications for medical cannabis business licenses, including 918 cultivator and processor applications.
Patients who qualify for medical cannabis are those with a history of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), cancer or other approved medical conditions.
Starting Dec. 1, the Office of Medical Cannabis launched a directory so qualifying patients can search for a provider near them who can write a certification for medical marijuana.
“It’s important to note that physicians and advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs) do not issue medical cannabis cards,” Flynn said. “Rather, they write certifications into our electronic monitoring system so when a patient applies for a card – which allows purchase of medical cannabis – their written certification will populate and the patient can click on it to associate the certification with his or her card application.”
So far, Flynn said, there are 230 registered practitioners in the state directory.
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