Audit Suggests Utah Cannabis Licensing Board Serves as Oversight ‘Rubber Stamp’ 

Ganjapreneur
Wed, Nov 19
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An audit of Utah’s medical cannabis program suggests that the state’s cannabis licensing board serves as “a rubber stamp” on oversight issues, KSL reports. The audit report says the board “unanimously approved 99% of the actions brought before it” and that from 2021 to 2025, it never denied a license request.

The report suggests the “board establish a formal decision-making framework for all licensing determinations to ensure transparency and consistency” and that “the Legislature could consider reevaluating the roles and responsibilities of the Cannabis Production Establishment and Pharmacy Licensing Advisory Board to facilitate clearer expectations and effective duties.”

In his written response, Utah Department of Agriculture and Food Commissioner Kelly Pehrson agreed with the audit’s findings and said the agency is working to comply with the report’s recommendations.

“The Utah Department of Agriculture and Food is committed to ensuring the Medical Cannabis Program provides safe, regulated access to medical cannabis for qualifying patients while maintaining robust oversight to ensure public and patient safety.” — Pehrson, in the response, via KSL

Pehrson added that the agency has already reached out to lawmakers to amend the state’s medical cannabis laws, with an intent “to focus the board’s oversight on the most critical areas, which will facilitate clearer expectations and more effective duties as recommended by the audit.”

Currently, there are eight licensed medical cannabis cultivators, 16 licensed processors, and 14 pharmacies licensed to dispense medical cannabis in the state, which serve more than 104,685 registered medical cannabis patients.