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‘Potential product safety concerns’ prompt Missouri to suspend 3 marijuana facilities

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‘Potential product safety concerns’ prompt Missouri to suspend 3 marijuana facilities


JEFFERSON CITY — Missouri cannabis regulators have stopped three marijuana facilities from operating due to “potential product safety concerns.”

A spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Senior Services, which regulates Missouri’s medical and recreational marijuana programs, said Friday the agency had “suspended operations for three facilities to investigate potential product safety concerns.”

Sami Jo Freeman, spokeswoman for the state health department, said “all product related to these investigations will be placed on administrative hold until the product is deemed safe, remediated or destroyed.”

She didn’t immediately provide additional information, including which facilities were suspended.

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“Investigations are ongoing, so we cannot comment further at this time,” Freeman said.

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The Missouri cannabis industry publication Greenway Magazine reported Thursday hundreds of products had been placed on hold. 

Holds initially began Wednesday, the outlet reported.

Missouri as of late July had 67 licensed cultivators, 89 manufacturers, and 215 dispensaries, according to state records.

Missouri cannabis regulations don’t allow cannabis flower to be delivered to dispensaries until it passes mandatory testing, outlined in state regulations.

The testing is conducted by companies licensed by health department’s Division of Cannabis Regulation.

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Testing licensees aren’t allowed to be owned by an “entity or entities under substantially common control, ownership, or management” as a cultivator, manufacturer or dispensary, according to the regulations.

It’s not the first time the state has investigated product safety concerns.

Regulators in 2020 investigated a complaint of moldy medical marijuana sold at a St. Louis dispensary, the Springfield News-Leader reported at the time.

The grower that was subject to the complaint, Perryville-based Archimedes, told the News-Leader the product “passed all state-mandated testing” and that the company conducted further testing after a consumer complaint.

Archimedes, along with two other license-holders, in 2022 signed an agreement with the state forcing the owners to surrender their licenses and destroy their product, the Post-Dispatch reported last year.

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Missouri State leaving FCS for FBS

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Missouri State leaving FCS for FBS


SPRINGFIELD, MO (Dakota News Now) – Another round of college re-alignment is hitting the FCS and Missouri Valley Football Conference.

Missouri State announced today that they are leaving the Missouri Valley and Missouri Valley Football Conference to join FBS Conference USA effective in the 2025-26 season.

They are the second charter member of the Valley to leave the conference in the last two years after Western Illinois bolted following the end of last season for the Ohio Valley. They were effectively replaced by Murray State who joined last season.

As it stands the league will be down to ten teams after 2024 when Missouri State heads up to the FBS. The Bears will not be eligible for the FCS Playoffs this season.

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USPS representative shows embattled Missouri City facility in tour | Houston Public Media

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USPS representative shows embattled Missouri City facility in tour | Houston Public Media


Patricia Ortiz/Houston Public Media

USPS representatives provided a tour at the South Houston processing center in Missouri City.

The United States Postal Service provided a media tour Thursday of its new processing center in Missouri City after residents in the Houston area experienced mail delays earlier this year.

Medications, wedding dresses and other packages were often weeks late. And Houston-area representatives of Congress were mediating between residents and the postal service for most of the delays.

John DiPeri, the vice president for regional processing operations in USPS’ western processing region, led reporters throughout the South Houston Local Processing Center (LPC) in Missouri City. DiPeri said he wanted to be in town when the tour happened.

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“There’s been major construction going on, a lot of equipment going in, a lot of cement work going in, a lot of planning,” he said. “So we wanted to bring it in when it was safe enough to bring a crew in, it was organized to where we could bring in and show you a good tour.”

A press release from the postal service states the South Houston facility officially opened for operations in late March. An audit released last month found the same facility was opened in November with temporary staff for a “peak season annex.” The same audit found more than 380,000 delayed parcels during an inspection in January.

DiPeri said Houston-area residents saw mail delays earlier this year because of new technology and the construction happening at the facility.

“We learned that we need to be precise in our planning, have better communications, have well-trained people, and have better communications with our suppliers, and understand the supply chain better,” DiPeri said.

The Delivering for America plan is a 10-year initiative the postal service has been working on to increase efficiency. Part of the plan included replacing some of the machinery at the South Houston facility with newer mail sorters. Local leaders found out in a meeting with the National Association with Postal Supervisors that there were also staffing shortages and transportation issues.

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“I apologize for that poor service that we had in the beginning of the year,” DiPeri said. “Our jobs are to collect, process, and deliver the mail and we take that really seriously. So we have brought the right people, the right leaders, right leadership, right employees … to assure as we’re going through this modernization we’ll maintain a service and efficiency.”

DiPeri said since January, over 100 employees have been added to work at the processing center. Construction and modernization is expected to continue until mid-August, when 500 people will be working at the building.



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Missouri State leaving MVFC and moving to FBS, Conference USA

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Missouri State leaving MVFC and moving to FBS, Conference USA


FARGO — A Missouri Valley Football Conference program is set to leave the conference and join a Football Bowl Subdivision league.

Missouri State announced Friday, May 10, the it has accepted an invitation to join Conference USA as a full-league member starting July 1, 2025.

Missouri State is currently a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference and the Missouri Valley Conference, its primary league. Conference USA is an FBS league for football. North Dakota State and University of North Dakota football teams play in the Missouri Valley Football Conference.

“We are so excited for the opportunities that CUSA membership will bring to our university, our student-athletes, our coaches and our fans,” said Missouri State Director of Athletics Kyle Moats in a release. “This move represents a transition to a national brand and a platform that will help raise the profile of Missouri State University and the city of Springfield. The steps we have taken over the past 15 years to invest in a successful broad-based athletics program have prepared us for this long-awaited moment.”

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The MVFC, an FCS conference, will have 11 members for the 2024 season and 10 members in 2025 after Missouri State exits the league. Western Illinois is slated to move into the Ohio Valley Conference starting in 2024.

“This move will absolutely open doors for us,” Moats explained. “For our student-athletes, they will have less bus travel and more flights which will get them back to campus in a safer and more-timely manner. They will also have more financial resources at their disposal for cost of attendance, Alston funds, and a more strategic presence in the name, image and likeness (NIL) space.”

North Dakota State joined the Missouri Valley Football Conference in 2008. Missouri State had been a league member since 1985.

Check back for more updates on this story.

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Peterson covers college athletics for The Forum, including Concordia College and Minnesota State Moorhead. He also covers the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks independent baseball team and helps out with North Dakota State football coverage. Peterson has been working at the newspaper since 1996.





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