Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jul 2013
Source: Stranger, The (Seattle, WA)
Copyright: 2013 The Stranger
Contact:  http://www.thestranger.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2241
Author: Ben Livingston

STATE ISSUES NEW VERSION OF POT RULES

Most Are Improvements but Some Problems Remain

Last week, the Washington State Liquor Control Board filed updated 
draft rules with the state code reviser for the legal cultivation and 
sale of cannabis. The rules are more thorough than a previous draft 
released by the board in May, and here are some of the changes.

Outdoor Farms: Directly contradicting the first draft, the new rules 
allow for outdoor production, so expect Eastern Washington sun-grown 
cannabis to be cheaper than the high-end indoor varieties that 
require expensive artificial lighting and electricity.

Organic: The only fertilizers, nutrients, and pesticides allowed must 
be approved for use in organic production under federal standards. 
But those products may not be labeled organic unless federal rules allow it.

Landlords: The board nixed a controversial proposal that would have 
required landlords to sign an affidavit admitting to federal law violations.

Hash Ban Relaxed: Hash and hash oil would be sold in retail outlets, 
but only if first adulterated with a minute amount of non-pot 
additive, like glycerin, ethanol, or propylene glycol. This is due to 
the liquor board's quirky interpretation of the law-specifically the 
verb "contain"-so that extracts of marijuana do not "contain" 
marijuana unless they are mixed with something other than marijuana.

Hours: Legal pot may be purchased between 8 a.m. and midnight, four 
hours less than alcohol. Chris Marr, one of the liquor board's three 
members, said the decision bows to pressure from members of the 
drug-prevention community and will adversely affect cities with a 
thriving nightlife scene, such as Seattle. "Is the sale of marijuana 
at 1 a.m. as much of a public safety threat as the sale of alcohol at 
1 a.m.?" Marr asked.

Plant Destruction: All licensees who violate the rules will be fined. 
But pot growers who violate the rules a second or third time will 
have 25 to 50 percent of their crops destroyed. This is intended to 
affect small and large growers equally, where a seemingly steep 
monetary fine may be overlooked by large growers.

Zoning Definitions: Pot businesses must be 1,000 feet from eight 
types of property, such as recreation centers and game arcades, but 
the definitions of those terms were a bit murky. Following specific 
suggestions from Seattle city attorney Pete Holmes, the liquor board 
clarified these definitions.

On the whole, the rules are informed and thorough. The liquor board 
is accepting public comment through July 31-the easiest way to 
comment is to e-mail  The board is scheduled to 
adopt final rules on August 14, start accepting license applications 
on September 16, and launch the entire legal pot system on December 1.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom