Pubdate: Sun, 10 Apr 2016
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2016 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: Michael Elliott
Note: Michael Elliott is executive director of the Marijuana Industry Group.

Should We Limit Pot Potency?

NO: IT'S AN ATTEMPT TO MAKE MARIJUANA ILLEGAL

Since 55 percent of Colorado voters legalized recreational marijuana 
in 2012, Colorado has experienced record economic growth, record 
tourism, and record job creation. In addition, Denver was recently 
named the best city to live in the United States by U.S. News and 
World Report based on factors such as quality of life, low crime 
rate, and job prospects.

The doomsday predictions of the prohibitionists never came to pass. 
Colorado is experiencing near record low traffic fatalities, and teen 
marijuana usage has remained relatively stagnant.

In other words, Coloradans have enhanced their civil liberties and 
created a new, legal industry while maintaining public safety and 
boosting the economy.

Despite this good news, marijuana prohibitionists are trying to 
overturn the will of the voters. With some polls showing more than 60 
percent of Coloradans now support legalization, prohibitionists know 
that an overt effort to make marijuana illegal again would likely 
fail. So their plan is to undermine the program and make it 
impossible for legal businesses to operate.

Their proposal would ban all marijuana above 15 percent THC. And 
because most growers have spent years breeding strains that exceed 
this arbitrary threshold, growers would be forced to destroy their 
strains and start over, something that's not economically or 
practically feasible.

In addition, the ban would essentially destroy the market for 
concentrates, which are the distilled essential oils of the cannabis 
plants and are used to make many products such as tinctures, sprays, 
edibles, drinks, topicals and transdermal patches. Concentrates can 
be dosed and consumed without burning. Thus, the ban would also 
likely force people to smoke and could eliminate many products people 
use for chronic pain, skin conditions and more.

So most legal marijuana would be banned, legal businesses would be 
forced out and, in essence, Amendment 64 would be overturned.

It is important to remember that Colorado has more than 500 pages of 
marijuana law and rules that are regularly updated. These regulations 
created a closed-loop system that requires local and state licensing, 
establishes "good moral character" standards for ownership and 
employment, and mandates rules for security and surveillance aimed at 
eliminating illicit activity.

The regulations also require testing for potency and harmful 
contaminants, child-resistant packaging, potency dosing on edibles, 
and extensive labeling that identifies the THC percentage of the 
product. These regulations allow consumers to know exactly what they 
are purchasing.

According to a new study, 70 percent of marijuana sales in Colorado 
are done through licensed, regulated and taxed businesses instead of 
the black market. If this ban passes, marijuana sales would move back 
into the black market.

Unlike the licensed businesses, black market dealers don't pay taxes, 
test their products, or label. Outlandish restrictions of the 
regulated market only empower the black market dealers, who don't 
check IDs and have no qualms about selling to minors. The best way to 
prevent children from accessing marijuana is to continue to weaken 
the black market.

In addition, this ban will have a major negative effect on Colorado's 
record economic growth, and could mean that many of the more than 
20,000 people employed at licensed marijuana businesses lose their jobs.

Colorado created a program that is being replicated across the world. 
While there is still work to be done, every issue has a solution 
through thoughtful regulations and public education.

Don't be deceived by the prohibitionists. This initiative is simply 
their latest attempt to repeal marijuana legalization in Colorado.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom