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Canadian Company Acquires Two Vermont Dispensaries in $25 Million Deal

CeresMED, which owns medical cannabis vendors Champlain Valley Dispensary and Southern Vermont Wellness, will merge with the Toronto-based company Slang Worldwide in a $25 million.

Vermonter Tracey Medeiros Explores The Art of Cooking With Cannabis in New Cookbook

Chicken kale meatballs with CBD-infused cherry tomato and pesto sauces Alice B. Toklas gets misplaced credit for spreading the gospel of pot brownies. That s thanks largely to the 1968 movie I Love You, Alice B. Toklas, in which a young woman bakes up brownies liberally laced with an extra leafy ingredient. In fact, The Alice B. Toklas Cook Book does include a Haschich Fudge recipe, as well as vignettes of the author s life with her partner, Gertrude Stein. Toklas recipe, however, is not for brownies or even fudge, but for dried-fruit-and-nut balls spiced with nutmeg, cinnamon, black pepper and a bunch of canibus [

The burning question: Brattleboro prepares to vote on retail cannabis

1 of 5 Cassandra Holloway, director for Building a Positive Community in Brattleboro, holds a map that shows the youth rate of smoking marijuana.   Kristopher Radder, Brattleboro Reformer Kristopher Radder, Brattleboro Reformer On March 2, the town of Brattleboro will vote to allow or deny the retail sale of recreational marijuana. Kristopher Radder, Brattleboro Reformer On March 2, the town of Brattleboro will vote to allow or deny the retail sale of recreational marijuana. Kristopher Radder, Brattleboro Reformer On March 2, the town of Brattleboro will vote to allow or deny the retail sale of recreational marijuana. Kristopher Radder, Brattleboro Reformer Don t miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.  

Why Are Medical Cannabis Patients Charged a Fee on Every Purchase?

© Jose Luis Soriano De Vicente | dreamstime.com Back in the days of prohibition cannabis, not booze a half-gram nickel bag would cost you five bucks on the black market, usually leaving you uncertain of what you just bought. But now that approximately 4,600 Vermont patients can legally access one of the state s five medical marijuana dispensaries and safely purchase cannabis to treat chronic and debilitating conditions, such as AIDS, cancer, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson s disease, those financial transactions have become more complicated. Why? Essentially, because the federal government still considers them illicit drug deals. Last month, we received an email from a Chittenden County medical marijuana patient. The woman, who is registered with the Champlain Valley Dispensary, requested anonymity to protect her medical privacy. She was irked that, in addition to the state s $50 annual registration fee, she is also asses

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