Pubdate: Thu, 13 Nov 2014
Source: Sacramento News & Review (CA)
Copyright: 2014 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://newsreview.com/sacto/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/540
Author: Ngaio Bealum

AMERICA PROVES ITS LOVE FOR MARIJUANA

Hey Ngaio. Is weed still winning?

- -Hank Hermit

Are you kidding? All weed do is win! Last week, Oregon, Alaska and 
Washington, D.C., all voted to legalize marijuana for adults. Florida 
came very close to passing a medical-marijuana law with 58 percent of 
the vote. You would think that would be enough, but Constitutional 
amendments in Florida need 60 percent to pass. I still count it as a 
moral victory.

First, I would like to congratulate and thank all of the activists 
that spent years and countless hours to get the Oregon law passed. 
Anthony Johnson, Lee Berger, Paul Stanford, Madeline Martinez, Anna 
Diaz, Russ Belville, and the hundreds of other activists, you all 
kick ass. Well done.

This is how the law will work: Adults 21 and older may legally 
possess up to an ounce of marijuana and have up to 8 ounces in the 
house. They can also grow four plants. They can also give (not sell!) 
up to an ounce of cannabis to another adult. That part of the law 
starts in July 2015, but I am pretty sure the police won't go on some 
sort of last-minute marijuana possession arrest spree between now and 
then. When legalization hit Washington, most of the people that had 
been arrested for marijuana had their charges dropped. The Oregon 
Liquor Control Commission has until January 2016 to come up with 
rules and regulations for the recreational cannabis industry. Cities 
can still decide to ban recreational pot shops, but some cities have 
already passed laws imposing a "sin" tax on weed sales (Oregon 
generally has no sales tax) in anticipation of Proposition 91's passing.

Way up in Alaska, home of the Matanuska Thunderfuck (a really great 
regional strain. I would put it up there with the Yeager from 
Southern Oregon and Three Kings from Humboldt County), voters passed 
Measure 2, and now they can possess an ounce and grow up to six 
plants (three adults). They are creating some sort of marijuana 
commission to oversee regulations. The tax is $50 per wholesale 
ounce. Eight hunnert dollars per pound sounds a little high to me, 
but maybe pot is cheaper in Alaska. I guess an extra $6 on an eighth 
of legal grass is a small price to pay.

Out in the Chocolate City of Washington, D.C., Measure 71 won with 
almost 65 percent of the vote. That's what's known as a landslide. 
Now residents and visitors to the nation's capital can possess up to 
2 ounces (I guess you need more weed in D.C. because politicians) and 
three plants. There is a caveat: The District of Columbia needs 
congressional approval on laws like this. Congress stalled D.C.'s 
medical-marijuana law for 10 years. So this is maybe not a great time 
to have the largest Republican majority in Congress.

Of course, this means that California must be next. We are currently 
in fifth place. Everyone start planning for 2016. It's not that far 
away, and you are probably stoned, so you should be more proactive.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom