Pubdate: Thu, 02 Jan 2014
Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Copyright: 2014 Washington Post
Contact:  http://www.mercurynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390
Author: Niraj Chokshi, Washington Post

COLORADO SPARKS UP CANNABIS REVOLUTION

Supporters Hope Ballots in California, Other States Will Include Issue by 2016

DENVER- At 8 a. m. on New Year's Day, in an industrial area a few 
miles from downtown Denver, a former Marine named Sean Azzariti 
walked into a giant store and bought a bag of weed. Legally. To smoke 
just for fun, if he's so inclined.

Azzariti's transaction - 3.5 grams of Bubba Kush for $ 40 and 50 
milligrams of Truffles for an additional $ 9.28 - was the first in 
the state's grand experiment in legalizing marijuana for recreational use.

The first-in-the-nation law was greeted with long lines at retailers 
and a lot of "Rocky Mountain High" jokes. But beyond the buzz, the 
measure represented the institution of a major new public policy in 
America - one opponents fear will turn the state into a dangerous 
land of debauchery and that backers hope sets a nationwide precedent.

If Colorado is able to successfully legalize marijuana without 
causing a social backlash, the tourism, tax and other considerations 
are likely to compel several other states to quickly follow suit.

Backers say enough signatures have been collected to put legalization 
before voters this year in Alaska. Oregon would probably come next, 
and by 2016, they hope to see measures on the ballot in California 
and five other states: Arizona, Maine, Massachusetts, Montana and 
Nevada. Supporters are also hopeful that lawmakers will push for 
legalization in Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, New Hampshire, Rhode 
Island and Vermont.

Although California voters in 2010 narrowly rejected a measure to 
legalize marijuana, a Field Poll in early December found that a 
majority of Californians now favor legalization. According to the 
poll, 55 percent support legalization. Eight percent of supporters 
say anyone should be able to buy it and 47 percent support legalizing 
it with age and other controls like those for alcohol.

An initiative targeted for California's November ballot is gathering 
signatures and also has majority support, the Field Poll found in the 
survey of 1,002 voters in the state.

Washington state has legalized pot, but sales there won't begin for 
at least a few months.

If problems arise in Colorado, whether that means residents get sick 
of stoner tourism or there are a rash of marijuana-related accidents 
or crimes, it could set back a decades-old movement that has gained 
substantial momentum in recent years.

Experts say there really is no way to know which way it will go. 
"Nobody on Earth has ever done this before," said Jonathan Caulkins, 
a drug policy expert and professor at Carnegie Mellon University.

Before Wednesday, the pro-marijuana movement's biggest breakthrough 
came in 1996, when California became the first state in modern 
history to allow marijuana use of any kind when it green-lit 
medicinal use. Now, 20 states and the District of Columbia allow it.

Colorado has approved 136 licenses for retail sales, three-fourths in 
the city and county of Denver and all at sites that have been legally 
selling marijuana for medical purposes. Eighteen city stores had 
completed the full process in time to open Wednesday. State officials 
expect dozens more to open across the state, and some have estimated 
that pot sales could add more than $ 200 million to Colorado's economy.

Colorado residents 21 and older are allowed to buy up to an ounce of 
marijuana per transaction, and out-ofstate customers are allowed to 
purchase up to a quarter ounce.

Azzariti's involvement was not by chance. He was active in the 
campaign to legalize recreational sales and, although he can use the 
pot however he pleases, the veteran of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars 
said he needs it to deal with posttraumatic stress disorder.

His purchase was the culmination of a large media event hosted by 
advocates and the industry. Dozens of reporters filled the 3D 
Cannabis Center for a 7: 30 a. m. news conference as customers waited 
in line outside, where a light snow was falling. News releases were 
distributed, and advocates were on hand for interviews. Other stores 
welcomed press, too, with media handlers in tow.

Toni Fox, the owner of the 3D Cannabis Center, where Azzariti made 
his purchase, said she expects her average monthly revenue of $ 
30,000 to grow more than eight-fold, to $ 250,000, once improvements are made.

Doors also opened 8 a. m. at Medicine Man, which boasts an even 
larger, 20,000- square-foot production space that the owners expect to double.

At Medicine Man, two nonresidents who bought the legal limit of a 
quarter-ounce of marijuana said it cost roughly $ 130. Prices are 
expected to remain high in the short term, with only a few retailers 
and a lot of demand. But over the long term, experts expect prices to 
fall with competition.

At Medicine Man, where the line Wednesday morning was as many as 75 
deep by 10 a. m., a security guard checking identification at the 
door estimated that well over half of the customers were from out of 
state. One customer, Kevin Schatz of Nebraska, said his 90- minute 
wait and the taxes paid were "well worth it."

Not everyone was celebrating Colorado's new marijuana reality Wednesday.

"Today, we're witnessing the dawn of Big Marijuana, in a similar way 
that we had Big Tobacco for over 80 years," said Kevin Sabet, who 
cofounded Project SAM ( Smart Approaches to Marijuana) with former 
Rhode Island representative Patrick Kennedy. "We're opening the doors 
to allowing a new, powerful industry to downplay the effects of a 
substance they will be profiting off of and to downplay the effects 
of addiction."

Sabet, who worked in the White House's Office of National Drug 
Control Policy during the first Obama administration and serves as 
director of the Drug Policy Institute at the University of Florida, 
said the negative consequences of marijuana legalization include 
advertising aimed at kids, an increase in drugged-driving incidents 
and a spillover of marijuana from Colorado into surrounding states, 
where the drug remains illegal.

Possession of marijuana remains a federal crime, but, for now, the 
federal government is taking a wait- and-see approach to 
legalization. Last summer, the Obama administration said it would not 
challenge laws legalizing marijuana in Colorado and Washington as 
long as those states maintain strict rules involving the sale and 
distribution of the drug.

The local police are taking a similar approach, stressing that 
compliance and education are the primary goals.

"For the police department, the concern is safety," said Cmdr. Les 
Perry, whose district includes the Medicine Man business.
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