The state of Minnesota is about to give Sam Poquette back two hours of his day.
For months, Poquette has been making the long round trip from his home in New Ulm to a clinic in Bloomington to fill his cannabis prescription.
This summer, medical cannabis is coming to him.
Big changes are coming to Minnesota, home to the most restrictive medical marijuana program in the nation.
The number of clinics is doubling, from eight to 16. One of those dispensaries is set to open in Mankato, just down the road from Poquette. Next year, the program will open to chronic pain patients for the first time. Since 20% of Americans live with chronic pain, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, that could open the program to a million Minnesotans, and possibly push prices lower for all of them.
For Poquette, one of 18,000 Minnesotans actively enrolled in the program right now, it could mean easier, cheaper, legal access to the cannabis he uses to get through the day and sleep through the night.
"I don't know if I'd be around today without it, honestly," said Poquette, who uses a cannabis vaporizer to ease symptoms of post-traumatic stress, anxiety and migraines.
Cannabis from a clinic costs double what he'd pay on the street, but it's worth it, he said, not to have to worry about tainted vapes or trouble with the law. He faced several possession charges during the years he was self-medicating.