Gquebed
Well-Known Member
To new applications, starting from what date?Fairly certain it applies to new applications, I haven't read or heard anything about it being retroactive.
To new applications, starting from what date?Fairly certain it applies to new applications, I haven't read or heard anything about it being retroactive.
the Section 56 that was issued Mar 8 says it's a year from the date of registration. we won that point!I think it is the opposite. You still expire a year after the doc signs, but you are only allowed to grow the date health Canada approves. Look in the thread "ACMPR wait times" .
No one can be approved to grow past the date your prescription expires. Renew twice a year.
good to see you back, dishesthe Section 56 that was issued Mar 8 says it's a year from the date of registration. we won that point!
I don't think so, if your prescription is expired, what reason would you legally have to be growing medical?the Section 56 that was issued Mar 8 says it's a year from the date of registration. we won that point!
just cause ya feel like thats what you need.....explain it to yer DOc like that .I don't think so, if your prescription is expired, what reason would you legally have to be growing medical?
so what was the sec 56 issued March 8 about? you Dr signs for a period of time...you got that time in the MMAR days but get short changed with the ACMPR due to processing delays. now you get your full amount of time.I don't think so, if your prescription is expired, what reason would you legally have to be growing medical?