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IONIC Self-Implements Higher Testing Standards

January 9, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

One concern with any ingestible product is always, “What’s in it?” And in some cases,onit. In the agriculture business, industry pesticides were developed to help increase food quality and supply by eliminating pests that were historically a nuisance. Whether this development was a good or a bad decision became debated shortly after pesticides gained widespread use.

Today, maximum residue limits (MRLs) of pesticides are allowed on the foods we eat every day. In 2016, USDA data showed that 85 percent of foods tested have pesticide residue. Now, with the emergence of cannabis as a legitimate agricultural industry with hundreds of consumable products, pesticides are once again at the forefront of discussion — and for good reason.

Back in the Day…

Before the cannabis industry came out of the black market, there was no way of knowing how your cannabis was grown. You didn’t know if it was organically sun-grown or greenhouse – grown with Eagle 20 fungicide. Now, with labs popping up throughout cannabis legal states, we have a better idea of what we’re getting.

Or Do We?

With little guidelines or consistency, each lab test may have a different result. For example, this phenomenon can be seen in the California market. As a medical cannabis company owner in Cali, I saw firsthand how easy it was to receive three different lab results from three different certified labs. If you’re using one lab and your results are clean, and the distributor tests your products with their preferred lab, the results could end up being dirty and pesticide residue may appear.

It’s a Pervasive Problem

In Washington state in 2018, test results for products from the IONIC vape company came back with above-legal limits of the pesticide myclobutanil. The independent test was done by one of their customers, Uncle Ike’s, a dispensary chain throughout Washington.

“Legal limits in the state of Washington [of myclobutanil] is 0.2 ppm. The crude oil processor who sold IONIC their material concentrated the legal limits up to higher levels, but still not testing above legal limits. The final process produced the above-legal amounts, for which there wasn’t strict testing prior to this incident,” explains Adrienne Airhart, IONIC’s director of social media. “Luckily, because we are small-batch, we were able to identify, isolate and administer a voluntary product withdrawal to replace the affected products. We’ve since scrubbed our machines clean, as well.”

What Can Be Done?

IONIC took everything off the shelves at Uncle Ike’s and immediately replaced it with a clean batch. Now, even though it’s not required by the state, IONIC tests every single batch leaving their facility.

IONIC is available in both California and Oregon, which have higher standards for testing than Washington, so they’ve implemented the same procedures, as well as some extra precautions, notes Airhart: “Testing every batch is expensive, but it’s worth it to provide clean product for our consumers and for ourselves. This is really important to us. Nothing is leaving our facility if it doesn’t meet our new standards, IONIC Certified Clean — which means it meets or exceeds legal state limits for all categories of testing. Everything moving out of our warehouse as of November 2018 is IONIC Certified Clean.”

For their IONIC Certified Clean standard, they’re sending out a sample of every batch they receive to be tested. If it fails, the batch is destroyed, they clean out the tank and start over. It’s another costly process, but for a company that puts quality first, it’s a true sign of their commitment to higher standards for superior products.

Moving forward, IONIC is encouraging producers, processors and retailers to join them in creating safer standards in the industry — exceeding state regulations to ensure the safety of all consumers. “We’re paving the way, but we are happy to be in good company in this movement towards safer testing standards,” says Airhart. “Check our website for the latest test results on all of our batches.”

 

 

The post IONIC Self-Implements Higher Testing Standards appeared first on DOPE Magazine.


IONIC Self-Implements Higher Testing Standards
Source: Dope Magazine

Filed Under: black market, cannabis pesticides, cannabis recall, Cannabis testing regulations, Grow, Ionic, IONIC brand, IONIC premium vape, News

Only Economics Can Defeat the Black Market

January 7, 2019 by Staff Writer Leave a Comment

only-economics-can-defeat-the-black-market

Before we begin, let’s make one thing clear: there will always be a black market for marijuana. Alcohol is legal, yet there are still those who make their own illegally. Cigarettes are legal, yet there are still places where you can buy them on the street and avoid the tax levied on legal tobacco products.

As long as some part of the cannabis industry remains illegal, someone will be there to take advantage of the inflated profits that come from selling an illegal substance. And as long as legal marijuana remains much more expensive than illegal marijuana, the black market for cannabis will remain and even thrive. No laws can change this, any more than the laws against marijuana have wiped out marijuana use.

“[A] recent story by the Southern California News Group highlights a more pressing issue,” The San Diego Union-Tribune Editorial Board said in a recent op-ed. “It cited evidence that ‘the illicit side of the weed business is only growing stronger’ in California because illegal sales and cultivation are so much cheaper and have so few hassles compared with legal sales and cultivation.”

Much has been made of the high taxes and burdensome regulations suffered by legal cannabis businesses in California. I’ve remarked on the subject several times, most recently in my review of the Netflix docuseries “Murder Mountain.”

California is a perfect example of how to fail at under-cutting the black market. Legal marijuana businesses are in competition with each other obviously, but their main competition are illegal dealers and unlicensed dispensaries who are free from costly compliance and whose products are free from high taxes. The result is much lower prices from those dealers and dispensaries.

No law will stop illegal dealers, as the histories of alcohol and drug prohibition have taught us. Only economics can do that. If legal cannabis businesses can offer better products at lower prices, they can crush the illegal market. All things being equal, cannabis consumers would rather buy from a legal shop.

I understand this may not be a popular thing to say in some quarters in this day and age, but here it goes anyway: the only way to drive illegal dealers out of business is to lower prices – and the only ways to lower prices are to increase supply and lower taxes. Restrictions and regulations must be stripped down so that the maximum amount of businesses the market will hold can come into being. Taxes that inflate the price of cannabis products must be lowered.

The greater variety and safer buying experience that legal businesses can offer are natural advantages over the black market, but unless legal businesses can compete when it comes to price, those other advantages will never be enough to shrink the illegal market.


Only Economics Can Defeat the Black Market
Source: Marijuana Times

Filed Under: black market, Business, Featured, legal marijuana

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