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Medical marijuana dispensary could be up and running by early summer in Ross

Courtesy of Organic Remedies Organic Remedies, which operates three medical marijuana dispensaries in South Central Pennsylvania, is hoping to open its fourth location early this summer in the former Rockler Woodworking and Hardware store along McKnight Road. Courtesy of Organic Remedies Organic Remedies, which plans to open a medical marijuana dispensary in Ross Township early this summer, has a 250,000 square foot cultivation and research center in Carlisle where high quality cannabis is grown and harvested while a pharmaceutical-grade laboratory extracts and manufactures various forms of medical marijuana. Courtesy of Organic Remedies In addition to offering dry leaf marijuana to treat a variety of ailments, Organic Remedies produces medical marijuana in capsules, oils, ointments, tinctures and liquids. The company plans to open its fourth Pennsylvania dispensary in Ross Township early this summer.

Resort, medical marijuana facility, theater, more: State awards projects in Cumberland County more than $4 million combined

State awards $4M in grants to Cumberland County projects, including Allenberry, West Shore Theatre Updated Dec 29, 2020; Posted Dec 28, 2020 An inside look at the West Shore Theatre in New Cumberland, January 7, 2019. Dan Gleiter | dgleiter@pennlive.comPENNLIVE.COM Facebook Share Eight large projects in Cumberland, Adams, Perry and Franklin Counties were awarded more than $8 million combined last week. The grants are part of a long of list of projects across the state that were awarded money for redevelopment though the Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program. The grant program is administered by the State of Pennsylvania’s Office of the Budget and is for the acquisition and construction of regional economic, cultural, civic, recreational, and historical improvement projects.

Lawsuit targets residency requirement for Missouri medical marijuana licenses

Lawsuit targets residency requirement for Missouri medical marijuana licenses By Jason Hancock A federal lawsuit filed last week seeks to strike down a Missouri requirement that medical marijuana licenses go to businesses owned by residents of the state.  A constitutional amendment approved by voters in 2018 that legalized medical marijuana requires facilities to be “majority owned by natural persons who have been citizens of the state of Missouri for at least one year prior to the application.”  Mark Toigo, a marijuana investor from Pennsylvania, is suing to overturn that requirement. According to state records, Toigo is a minority owner in Organic Remedies MO Inc., which was awarded three dispensary licenses, one cultivation license, and one marijuana-infused product manufacturer license.

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