Pubdate: Thu, 13 Nov 2014
Source: Boulder Weekly (CO)
Copyright: 2014 Boulder Weekly
Contact:  http://www.boulderweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/57
Author: Leland Rucker

'DUDE, I THINK THIS WHOLE TOWN IS HIGH'

It was great to hear that Boulder City Council decided at its Nov. 6 
meeting to relook at some of the rules created to regulate the 
cannabis industry. Overall, council and staff did an admirable job 
under enormous time constraints after last year's floods, but as we 
approach the end of one year of legalization, it's not a bad time to 
take a second look at its own decision-making.

One of the rules to be reviewed currently doesn't allow retail shops 
to sell any marijuana-related merchandising. It's understandable that 
council would be wary at the beginning, especially after Boulder 
County Health recommended no dispensary merchandising, arguing that 
it might induce teenagers to try cannabis.

Admirable though that sentiment is - and I'm in complete agreement 
with BCH that cannabis needs to be kept away from teenagers - there 
are some things that render it a strange rule for a town whose voters 
overwhelmingly supported legalization and where there is not much 
evidence of a causal relationship between cannabis and teens. 
Although Lyons limits its merchandise, no other municipality has this 
rule. The county has no such rule. The state allows merchandising. 
Only the city of Boulder bans it.

Another interesting thing about this one is that there is no rule 
that disallows any other business in town to advertise and sell 
cannabis paraphernalia. I took the photos on this page during a 
recent stroll down the Pearl Street Mall. A cannabis shop on the mall 
couldn't sell these items, but tourists (and teenagers) can pick them 
up at Peppercorn or Where the Buffalo Roam.

Both downtown displays are discreet and tasteful, entirely proper and 
take up a small amount of inventory space. Peppercorn's is limited to 
books and a few other items. The Where the Buffalo Roam material is 
interspersed amongst the beer, football and official University of 
Colorado gear. But that's not the point, which is that anybody can 
buy a T-shirt, whether it advertises beer, the Buffs, Snoop Dogg or 
cannabis, in these places. But under current Boulder statutes, a 
dispensary can't sell a T-shirt or cap even with just its name and logo.

Since every other business can do this, not allowing dispensaries to 
offer merchandise people can buy elsewhere smacks of way-over-the-top 
government regulation. I've lived here long enough to recognize that 
Boulder is proud of its over-regulation, but when the city promotes 
its own "brand" with T-shirts and caps and they are an option for any 
other business that wants to print them, it seems hypocritical to 
single out dispensaries.

The latest numbers (all of which should be taken with a grain of 
salt) indicate no increase in use among teenagers since legalization. 
The state - and it has tried on many occasions -has found no instance 
of an underaged person buying from a dispensary, so whatever cannabis 
the underaged get comes from the black market (which doesn't check 
IDs), the small number of underaged medical patients or, more likely, 
their own or other teens' parents.

So when it comes to teens, legalization hasn't changed anything 
- -they're getting it from the same places they always have. Nobody, 
especially in the industry, wants to start a Joe Camel campaign 
touting cannabis to teenagers. Boulder County Health argues that 
T-shirts and caps with business names, addresses and phone numbers 
give teens easy access to that information. But any teen can Google 
"dispensaries in Boulder" and get a full list of retail shops in a 
second. And if they can't get in retails shops, what's the difference?

To continue to penalize cannabis businesses just doesn't make good 
sense or policy and feeds into the stigma that somehow cannabis 
businesses are less legitimate than others. But these are small 
businesses run by local people, perhaps your neighbors, and if they 
follow the law, they should at least have the same rights as any 
business in the city.

Kevin Sabet and the prohibitionists over at Smart Approaches to 
Marijuana argue that Big Marijuana is the future of cannabis. But the 
way to keep corporations from taking over is to let local businesses 
survive and thrive as we end the spending on the Drug War and finally 
get cannabis under control.

You can hear Leland discuss his most recent column and Colorado 
cannabis issues each Thursday morning on KGNU. 
http://news.kgnu/category/features/weedbetween-the-lines/
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom