Pubdate: Fri, 07 Dec 2012 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Joel Millman SMOKERS CELEBRATE AS WASHINGTON STATE LEGALIZES POT VANCOUVER, Wash.-Pot smokers lit up in Washington state Thursday, when it became the first U.S. state to legalize possession of marijuana without a doctor's prescription, following the approval of a ballot measure in November. Washingtonians, gathering in public places like Seattle's Space Needle, counted down to midnight, after which they began to fire up joints, pipes and bongs. Under the new law, people 21 and older legally can hold up to an ounce of marijuana. But the state must still fashion rules for how pot is sold and regulated. Washington's Liquor Control Board now has 365 days to define standards for growing marijuana plants, processing the crop and selling the harvest in its smokeable form. "As of today, you are able to possess up to an ounce of marijuana," the Liquor Control Board spokesman Brian Smith said Thursday. "Establishing how you legally get that marijuana is what we will be working on for the next several months." Police, meanwhile, must decide how to enforce the existing laws. The smokers gathered under the Space Needle, for example, were breaking a state law by lighting up in public. People who smoke pot in public face a fine, just like those who drink alcohol in public. The Seattle Police Department announced in advance it would issue verbal warnings and not punish violators during the new law's inauguration. "People just started gathering, and we were, like, let's just grow with it," said Darby Hageman, a legalization activist who runs a Seattle store called Hemp Boutique. "There were about 40 of us there; it was a lot of fun. People smoked pot, we laughed, we cheered. Some people cried," the 31-year-old said. Marijuana possession is still a federal offense, and thus far efforts by Washington state and Colorado officials to learn how the U.S. Justice Department plans to treat potential offenders have yielded little clarification. Colorado voters approved a similar pot measure last month. Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler finalized November's election results Thursday, making the pot-legalizing measure a law. Colorado's governor has until Jan. 5, 2013, to add the law to the state Constitution. Although Gov. John Hickenlooper opposed legalization, he cannot veto a measure approved by voters. Washington plans a legal framework for buying and selling marijuana that partially hews to its liquor-sales regulations. It will allow only licensed growers to produce marijuana and only in the state of Washington. The law calls for the state to impose a 25% excise tax on growers when they sell to processors, another 25% excise tax when processors sell to retailers; and another 25% excise tax when customers buy from a store. Customers will also pay sales tax; retailers will pay a standard Washington state business and occupancy tax. "It's not the coffee-shop model they have in Amsterdam, and it's not the Home Grow Way they have elsewhere in Europe. It's the liquor store model, which hasn't yet been tried anywhere," said Rick Steves, the Seattle-based travel writer and a co-sponsor of the pot measure. Pot will be sold by independent businesses-not state-run stores-that must pay a licensing fee when they are first certified as a pot store, as well as annual renewal fees. The state won't limit the number of retailers. The goal, said Mr. Smith of the Liquor Control Board, is to make marijuana widely available so as to deter users from buying from criminals. "It's got to be easy enough to buy at a retail store rather than buy it illegally," he said. A spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Jenny Durkan in Seattle declined to comment, referring to a Wednesday statement in which Ms. Durkan said the department's responsibility to enforce the Controlled Substances Act was unchanged, and "neither states nor the executive branch can nullify a statute passed by Congress." Some local police say they don't expect surprises with the new law. "Possession of less than one ounce has always been a low-priority, misdemeanor citation," said Kim Kapp, spokeswoman for the Vancouver Police Department. "So with the legalization not much has really changed from a law enforcement perspective." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom