Medical is not adult use
What is mandatory, what is advisory, and what OCP can do are not the same across both programs. Fire Watch keeps that visible on every item.
Fire Watch by EMB3R works alongside your POS and your existing tools. It tracks what changed, who it affects, what to verify next, and where the medical-vs-adult-use split actually changes the answer.
POS vendors already own checkout, ecommerce, menus, and payments. Fire Watch is narrower on purpose: Maine-specific guidance, recalls, municipal context, legislative movement, and the next operator action.
What is mandatory, what is advisory, and what OCP can do are not the same across both programs. Fire Watch keeps that visible on every item.
This is not just a breaking-news feed. It stays useful through archive, recurring digests, action checklists, and documentation prompts.
Start with Fire Watch and the self-audit. Move into Compliance Desk or a workflow call only when the gap is real.
Fire Watch should become the surface operators check when they need to understand what changed and what to verify before the problem grows teeth.
Get summaries of OCP releases, advisories, guidance, and bills that move the rules or the risk around Maine operators.
Every item should end with concrete next steps: verify, update, stop, or document.
Testing evidence, advisory visibility, documentation history, and eventually patient/provider trust workflows can sit on top of Fire Watch instead of living as a separate company idea.
Later, read-only POS signals can prioritize which regulatory changes matter most to that operator's actual product mix and locations.
Start with the watch layer and the worksheet. Take the workflow call only if the results show a real gap in labels, records, delivery, or staff follow-through.
This signs you up for the Fire Watch path and immediately opens the EMB3R self-audit.