Pubdate: Sat, 02 May 2015
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2015 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122

CRACKING DOWN ON POT PESTICIDES

News that Denver regulators have put millions of dollars of marijuana 
on hold due to pesticide concerns ought to be welcome information.

This, folks, is exactly what should happen with pot tax revenue - 
making the product safer while ensuring that it is not illicitly 
diverted to juveniles or the black market.

The 21.5 percent combined state and Denver tax on retail products is 
high. For that additional expense, consumers should get peace of mind 
that the marijuana is clean and free of damaging pesticides.

They should also appreciate that plants grown in legitimate 
warehouses are likely safer than pot in the black market that was 
grown with who knows what.

However, there remains more than one glitch in the system.

The city may be flush with tax revenue to investigate claims that the 
wrong type of pesticides are being used, but the state's lab that 
examines the plants does not have commensurate funding.

The Colorado Department of Agriculture lab is funded out of pesticide 
application fees. The meager staff is about a month behind on testing 
pot for pesticides.

That means when the city puts thousands of plants on hold - as it did 
recently at a Denver retail operation - it may take weeks for those 
plants to be cleared for sale.

Thankfully, a portion of House Bill 1367 is designed to give the 
Colorado Department of Agriculture $300,000 to step up its pesticide 
enforcement, including lessening the load on the lab.

Another glitch is that no pesticide is federally approved for use on 
marijuana, which is still illegal under federal law. Pesticide 
regulations for every other crop start at the federal level. The lack 
of guidance creates confusion for the hundreds of pot growers.

The state has developed a list of recommended pesticides. But the 
state cannot do the same type of risk assessment as the U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency. Such are the problems of an industry 
trying to invent itself for a crop that is still not entirely legal.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom