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Phoenix - elle-cie.com · Master horticulturist Cassie Heneault (left) and Lisa Cadan, of Bristol,...

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VOL. 183, NO. 14 $1.00 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2019 eastbayri.com Phoenix Phoenix Bristol Super scientists! Kickemuit and Mt. Hope students among the state’s best scientists PAGE 13 A makeover for the town’s best, worst (and only) golf course With a $300,000 federal grant and local match, golf course will undergo a watershed-friendly redesign BY CHRISTY NADALIN [email protected] Long before the Bristol Golf Club gained national notoriety for being “of a worseness so extreme that you occa- sionally wonder if it’s not ironic,” (“When a Bad Golf Course Edges Into Goodness,” New York Times, May 22, 2011), it was the site of an important watershed for both the Warren River and Bristol Harbor. In fact, it still is. Regardless of the opinion of writer and course aficionado Charles McGrath, who claimed that whoever designed it “deserves credit for stub- bornness” for building a golf course “where nobody else would have thought it possible,” it is and will remain a recreational resource for its longtime fans and the people of Bris- tol. Town Administrator Steven Con- tente reports that residents like it and want to keep it; the town planning department agrees, and they are working to create a plan that will allow golf and environmental stewardship to work together on the property, into the future. Topographically, the golf club occu- pies a high point about where Tupelo Street runs between Hope Street and Metacom Avenue. To the north, water runs downhill to Oyster Point, ending up in the Warren River. To the south, it runs through much of Bristol until it reaches the harbor. Decades of abuse have left much of the watershed at death’s door, and concrete steps must (and are) being See REDESIGN Page 2 The lady growers Women forging a path in a medicinal cannabis industry that is dominated by men BY KRISTEN RAY [email protected] As Lisa Cadan took her seat at a recent Rhode Island Department of Business Reg- ulation meeting for cannabis cultivators, she could not help but take in the room before her: the audience was almost entire- ly men, a vast majority of them accompa- nied by their attorneys. The purpose of the discussion was to review Gov. Gina Raimondo’s recent pro- posed bill regarding recreational marijua- na, but for Ms. Cadan, of Bristol, and her business partner, Cassy Heneault, their company, Elle-Cie, had always represented PHOTOS BY RICHARD W. DIONNE JR. Master horticulturist Cassie Heneault (left) and Lisa Cadan, of Bristol, pose among their Vancouver Island Haze Sativa Dominant Hybrid plants inside their Providence warehouse. See GROWERS Page 7 Master horticulturist Cassie Heneault holds a clump of buds ready for packag- ing.
Transcript

VOL. 183, NO. 14 $1.00 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2019eastbayri.com

PhoenixPhoenixBristol

Super scientists! Kickemuit and Mt. Hope students among the state’s best scientists

PAGE 13

A makeoverfor the town’s

best, worst(and only)golf course

With a $300,000 federal grant and local match, golf

course will undergo a watershed-friendly redesign

BY C H RIST Y N A DA L I [email protected]

Long before the Bristol Golf Club gained national notoriety for being “of a worseness so extreme that you occa-sionally wonder if it’s not ironic,” (“When a Bad Golf Course Edges Into Goodness,” New York Times, May 22, 2011), it was the site of an important watershed for both the Warren River and Bristol Harbor. In fact, it still is.

Regardless of the opinion of writer and course aficionado Charles McGrath, who claimed that whoever designed it “deserves credit for stub-bornness” for building a golf course “where nobody else would have thought it possible,” it is and will remain a recreational resource for its longtime fans and the people of Bris-tol.

Town Administrator Steven Con-tente reports that residents like it and want to keep it; the town planning department agrees, and they are working to create a plan that will allow golf and environmental stewardship to work together on the property, into the future.

Topographically, the golf club occu-pies a high point about where Tupelo Street runs between Hope Street and Metacom Avenue. To the north, water runs downhill to Oyster Point, ending up in the Warren River. To the south, it runs through much of Bristol until it reaches the harbor.

Decades of abuse have left much of the watershed at death’s door, and concrete steps must (and are) being

See REDESIGN Page 2

The lady growersWomen forging a path in a

medicinal cannabis industry that is dominated by men

BY K RIST E N R [email protected]

As Lisa Cadan took her seat at a recent Rhode Island Department of Business Reg-ulation meeting for cannabis cultivators, she could not help but take in the room before her: the audience was almost entire-ly men, a vast majority of them accompa-nied by their attorneys.

The purpose of the discussion was to review Gov. Gina Raimondo’s recent pro-posed bill regarding recreational marijua-na, but for Ms. Cadan, of Bristol, and her business partner, Cassy Heneault, their company, Elle-Cie, had always represented

PHOTOS BY RICHARD W. DIONNE JR.

Master horticulturist Cassie Heneault (left) and Lisa Cadan, of Bristol, pose among their Vancouver Island Haze Sativa Dominant Hybrid plants inside their Providence warehouse.

See GROWERS Page 7

Master horticulturist Cassie Heneault holds a clump of buds ready for packag-ing.

Bristol Phoenix April 4, 2019 Page 7

much more than that; there was no way they were going to continue on through the industry ignoring their roots.

As far as they are concerned, Elle-Cie — Rhode Island’s first women-owned canna-bis cultivation team — will always be first and foremost focused on growing marijua-na for use as medicine — by doing so safely, legally and passionately. As Ms. Heneault puts it: “We are a different place in canna-bis.”

From patients to cultivatorsThough Ms. Cadan is now a proud advo-

cate for using marijuana as medicine, it was initially a treatment option she never seriously considered for her numerous health problems, including multiple scle-rosis, migraines and arthritis. It was not until she suffered an anaphylactic reac-tion to a prescription drug five years ago during her daughter’s birthday party that she decided to give it a try. Having never been a regular user of the drug, she was surprised to find that, in her case, it seemed to work.

The experience inspired her to begin testifying at the Statehouse where, eventu-ally, she met her future business partner. Similar to Ms. Cadan, Ms. Heneault also found cannabis to be beneficial in treating her severe back pain — an issue she has been dealing with since she was 16 — and, more recently, her PTSD from her moth-er’s death.

“For me, it was like, what can I do to get me out of bed and make sure that I can function?” she said.

As the pair became closer, conversa-tions about starting their own cultivation slowly began to emerge, with Ms. Heneault as the master horticulturist and Ms. Cadan as the brains behind operations. They began filling out their application, calling themselves Elle-Cie after the phonetic spelling of each other’s first initial (which, coincidentally, loosely translates to “her company” in French). In May of 2017, their application was approved; two months later, they were officially issued their cultivation license, the thirteenth in the state and the first fully-female team to do so.

Both women realize that in a number of ways, they do not fit the bill of what some people perceive as the “typical” marijuana user. Yet by sharing their own personal experience with cannabis, they hope that stereotype will begin to change. Said Ms. Heneault:

“There’s just so much more to today’s

pot smoker than there was back in, like, the ’70s.”

Nurturing growthWhen they first began cultivating out of

their Providence facility 18 months ago, the women had only growing medicinal mari-juana in mind, striving to create products they themselves would use.

“We are not looking to be super rich,” said Ms. Heneault. “We really care about what we grow.”

Today, she and Elle-Cie’s sole employee, Josh Benoit, are busy testing out ten differ-ent strains of the drug, utilizing virtually the same growing process that Ms. Heneault and her husband use at home. Starting from infancy, the plants are nurtured through their various life phases over the course of roughly 14 weeks: from child-hood, known as the seedling stage; through the teenage years, or the vegetative stage; and into the workforce, referred to as the flowering stage. All the while, their exposure to temperature and light is carefully moni-tored, and the use of pesticides is forbid-den.

By the time the buds have reached the drying stage, they have reached retirement; once placed in the locked safe, they are in what Ms. Cadan refers to as “the grave.”

From there, the buds can be sent to any of the three compassion centers located in the state — the Slater Center in Providence, Greenleaf in Portsmouth and Summit in Warwick. Nearly all of their product goes to the latter two, with the hybrid Vancouver Island Haze routinely ranking as their big-

gest seller. Most of what Elle-Cie grows, in fact, are hybrids — unique combinations of cannabis’ Sativa and Indica strains. Just as with any other type of medication, however, the overall impact each strain will have can be just as unique as the individual user behind it.

“It’s not like a written prescription, one size fits all,” said Ms. Heneault. “It’s com-pletely patient-specific.”

Taking the riskNo matter how much care and attention

they put into producing high-quality buds, however, Ms. Cadan

and Ms. Heneault realized early on that in order to sustain Elle-Cie long-term, relying solely on medical marijuana sales may not be possible. Though being patients helped clue them in to many of the industry’s rules and regulations before getting started, the women were unaware that they would not be the ones pricing out their products — it would be the com-passion centers.

With the demand for medicinal canna-bis simply not enough to keep their self-funded business going, having the option to additionally sell for recreational use has become critical in order to keep Elle-Cie afloat. Not knowing whether or not Gov. Raimondo’s bill to legalize, regulate and tax cannabis for 21+ use — potentially as early as 2020 will pass, has been stressful.

“There are so many things that are not up to us in our business, and that’s chal-lenging,” Ms. Heneault said.

All they can do in the meantime, then, is keep pushing forward. Establishing their brand and social media presence will be a major focus in the coming weeks as Elle-Cie strives to set itself apart from the other 75 approved cultivators within the state. They hope to be able to employ both their own artistic talents along with those of local designers to create an identity that is both unique and approachable.

Regardless of every up and down they have faced — from health concerns and personal loss to the perpetual uncertainty of their business — the women have come to realize that one of the most rewarding aspects of pursuing Elle-Cie has been the bond with each other.

“We’re business partners,” Ms. Heneault said, “but we’re friends, and we’re family.”

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GROWERS: Women building brand in a mostly-male local industry

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Master horticulturist Cassie Heneault dry-trims a dried female cannabis plant down to the finished bud.

From Page 7


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