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61 US CO: Numbers Of Teen Dope-Smokers FlatThu, 23 Jun 2016
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)          Area:Colorado Lines:65 Added:06/22/2016

Rates of cannabis use among Colorado's teenagers are essentially unchanged in the years since the state's voters legalised marijuana in 2012, new survey data from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment shows.

Last year, 21 per cent of Colorado youths had used marijuana in the past 30 days. That rate is slightly lower than the national average and down slightly from the 25 per cent who used marijuana in 2009, before legalisation. The survey was based on a random sample of 17,000 middle and high school students in Colorado.

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62 US CO: Colo.: No Rise In Youth Pot UseTue, 21 Jun 2016
Source:Albuquerque Journal (NM)          Area:Colorado Lines:30 Added:06/21/2016

21% Figure Just Below National Average

DENVER (AP) - Marijuana use among Colorado high schoolers has not increased since legalization. That's according to the state Health Department, which released a new batch of youth survey results Monday.

The 2015 survey of about 17,000 middle and high school students across the state showed that about 21 percent of high school students reported that they currently use pot. That's just a hair below the national average, which was almost 22 percent.

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63US CO: Survey: Pot Use Among Colo. Teens FlatTue, 21 Jun 2016
Source:Denver Post (CO) Author:Ingold, John Area:Colorado Lines:Excerpt Added:06/21/2016

One out of every five Colorado teens admits having used marijuana in the past month, but that rate has not increased since pot was legalized in the state and is in line with the national average, according to a new report from the state Health Department.

Among the other findings of the 2015 Healthy Kids Colorado Survey, released Monday:

The large majority of Colorado middle and high school students - 62 percent - say they have never used marijuana.

Alcohol is the drug of choice among Colorado teens, with 30 percent of kids surveyed saying they drank within the previous month.

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64 US CA: Column: Worldly WeedThu, 16 Jun 2016
Source:North Coast Journal (Arcata, CA) Author:Stansberry, Linda Area:California Lines:103 Added:06/16/2016

After Grant Scott-Goforth's parting shot last week debunking the racist connotations of the word "marijuana," it seemed only fitting to follow up with another column blatantly pandering to the etymology nerds in our readership. We were initially intrigued by the word "bong," which, according to an online etymology dictionary, comes from the Thai word "baung," meaning "cylindrical wooden tube," and came to the United States along with returning Vietnam War veterans.

As we dug deeper into the words that surround cannabis connoisseurship, a pattern developed.

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65US AR: Russell: Marijuana Legalization Impacts CommunitiesWed, 08 Jun 2016
Source:El Dorado News-Times (AR) Author:Stevens, Jessica Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:06/08/2016

Tremendous Opportunities for Union County Health

EL DORADO - Benton Police Capt. Kevin Russell told the audience at Tuesday's TOUCH Coalition meeting that the hazards of legalized marijuana outweigh the pro-ported benefits.

"I became involved in this issue about five years ago and have studied it extensively," said Russell, a 17-year veteran of Arkansas law enforcement.

A recent FBI Academy graduate and member of the Benton Police Department, Russell has made it his mission to inform and educate Arkansans on the effects seen in states following the legalization of marijuana on their youth and communities.

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66 US MA: New England Governors Point to Prescription Control toWed, 08 Jun 2016
Source:Boston Globe (MA) Author:Bernhard, Meg Area:Massachusetts Lines:97 Added:06/08/2016

Six New England governors called on health care professionals Tuesday to work with government officials to combat the opioid epidemic and control prescriptions, describing a grim reality of addiction across the region they govern.

"There is not an issue more pressing I know for all of us at this table," said Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin, addressing an audience at Harvard Medical School. "We are losing good people to the opioid crisis that is sweeping across America, and we need your help."

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67 US CA: Column: Marijuana And EquityWed, 08 Jun 2016
Source:East Bay Express (CA) Author:Downs, David Area:California Lines:159 Added:06/08/2016

Personal pot possession in California was reduced from an arrest to an infraction in 2010, but systemic racism around pot enforcement continues, a new study finds.

The American Civil Liberties Union of California, in conjunction with the Drug Policy Alliance, published a groundbreaking, heavily reported piece of research Monday that concludes that the Black community in California faces ticketing for pot at a rate four times as high as whites. Latinos have about double the rate of pot tickets as whites.

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68 US IL: Series: Addicts Aren't The Only Ones Who Need A HelpingTue, 07 Jun 2016
Source:Herald & Review (Decatur, IL) Author:Churchill, Theresa Area:Illinois Lines:121 Added:06/07/2016

Editor's note: This is day three of a four-day series that examines the impact heroin is having on the community through the eyes of the addicts, their families, law enforcement and the groups that provide treatment.

MOUNT ZION - Hearing a 35-year-old addict say things her son might have said made Kathy Burkham apprehensive.

That's because Tyler Yount's decision to use heroin "one more time" after staying clean 11 months and two weeks was the last one he ever made. He overdosed on June 14, 2009, dying at age 23.

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69 US NJ: Series: Public Health Effects Of Legalized Mariuana InMon, 06 Jun 2016
Source:New Jersey Herald (NJ) Author:Danzis, David Area:New Jersey Lines:346 Added:06/07/2016

EDITOR'S NOTE: Legalizing recreational marijuana is being seriously considered in New Jersey.

The most recent Rutgers-Eagleton poll shows public support for legalizing recreational marijuana in New Jersey is 58 percent -- the highest it's ever been -- with 39 percent opposed.

Although Gov. Chris Christie has said he would not sign a bill legalizing recreational marijuana, both the state Senate and Assembly are working on legislation.

This is the second in a three-part series that will explore the issue of legalizing recreational marijuana and its potential effects on Sussex County and the surrounding area. The series will look at the economic, public health and criminal justice impact legalization could have.

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70US OH: Father Says Son's Drug Suppliers 'Should Be Tried ForMon, 06 Jun 2016
Source:Plain Dealer, The (Cleveland, OH) Author:Wernowsky, Kris Area:Ohio Lines:Excerpt Added:06/06/2016

NORTH OLMSTED, Ohio - Nicholas DiMarco was 18 when he died from a dose or heroin laced with fentanyl.

He left behind a grief-stricken father tormented by questions.

"The biggest mistake that I made I looked at my son and I thought of it as a rational, normal person," Fred DiMarco said. "I was like, well he's going to quit. If he doesn't quit, he's going to go to prison for three years. Who would take that risk? He's going to quit. It's killing people. Who would take something that's going to kill them?"

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71 US CA: Marijuana For Catalina?Tue, 31 May 2016
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA) Author:Sahagun, Louis Area:California Lines:101 Added:05/31/2016

Businessman Seeks to Open Dispensaries, Share Revenue With Schools

From a veranda overlooking Avalon harbor, real estate broker Mark Malan gazed at oceanfront cottages, a curved promenade and passing sailboats with brightly colored pennants.

To tourists, it was a place to bask in sun and surf just an hour from the California coast. But that's not what the Long Beach businessman saw.

Malan aims to turn his real estate office here into the first medical marijuana dispensary on Santa Catalina Island, and he's trying to make the idea attractive by promising to share a small portion of the revenue with local schools and city government.

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72 US TN: OPED: There's Something Missing From Our Drug Laws:Sun, 22 May 2016
Source:Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) Author:Piper, Bill Area:Tennessee Lines:101 Added:05/23/2016

Congress and President Obama are under pressure to reschedule marijuana. While rescheduling makes sense, it doesn't solve the state/federal conflict over marijuana (descheduling would be better). But more important, it wouldn't fix the broken scheduling system. Ideally, marijuana reform should be part of a broader bill rewriting the Controlled Substances Act.

The Controlled Substances Act created a five-category scheduling system for most legal and illegal drugs (although alcohol and tobacco were notably omitted). Depending on what category a drug is in, the drug is either subject to varying degrees of regulation and control (Schedules II through V) - or prohibited, otherwise unregulated and left to criminals to manufacture and distribute (Schedule I). The scheduling of various drugs was decided largely by Congress and absent a scientific process - with some strange results.

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73 US CO: Column: Parents of MMJ Patients Celebrate Win in D49Wed, 18 May 2016
Source:Colorado Springs Independent (CO) Author:Stein, Nat Area:Colorado Lines:118 Added:05/18/2016

Home groan

Clint and Rebecca Lockwood rushed to City Hall when they heard Colorado Springs City Council was about to limit home grows to 12 plants, but Council had already adopted the ordinance. So they went home worried sick about their son, Calvin, who's severely autistic and relies on homemade CBD oil to keep his aggression under control.

Without it, their home is hell. The Lockwoods say that, unmedicated, Calvin won't sleep, sweats, shakes, eats furniture, attacks his younger brother and bashes his head into the wall until he bleeds.

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74US CO: Pot's Latest Payoff: College TuitionWed, 18 May 2016
Source:USA Today (US) Author:Hughes, Trevor Area:Colorado Lines:Excerpt Added:05/18/2016

Colorado pot smokers are helping send 25 students to college, the first scholarships in the U.S. funded with taxes on legal marijuana.

The awards offered by Pueblo County, in southern Colorado, are the latest windfall from legal Colorado marijuana sales that are also helping build schools and aid the homeless - and in one county, providing 8% raises to municipal workers.

Pueblo County is granting $1,000 each to the students; recipients will be announced later this month.

"It's incredible," said Beverly Duran, the executive director of the Pueblo Hispanic Education Foundation, which is overseeing the scholarships. "Every year we get a nice pool of students ... but we can always only award to a small percentage. This for us expands that to extraordinary lengths."

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75US CO: District Will Allow Medical Pot In SchoolFri, 13 May 2016
Source:Denver Post (CO) Author:Nicholson, Kieran Area:Colorado Lines:Excerpt Added:05/13/2016

A school district board in El Paso County approved Thursday a policy to allow therapeutic marijuana products at its schools.

The District 49 Board of Education, in Peyton, unanimously, in a five-to-zero vote, approved the "Compassionate Administration of Therapeutic Cannabinoid Products on District Property" policy, the district announced in a media release.

The policy, known as "Jaxs' policy," was approved as part of a regularly scheduled monthly meeting and is the first of its kind in the state, according to the district.

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76 US: Chasing Bigger High, Marijuana Users Turn to a YellowFri, 13 May 2016
Source:New York Times (NY) Author:Nir, Sarah Maslin Area:United States Lines:141 Added:05/13/2016

On a recent bright afternoon, two teenage boys in boat shoes and shorts strolled up Fifth Avenue in Manhattan in a crowd of passers-by. At 56th Street they paused as one pulled an electronic pipe out of his pocket and held it to his friend's lips. Inside was a potent and little-studied drug made from distilled marijuana; they were emboldened, they said, by the fact that the gooey wax hardly has a smell, and is so novel in New York that, even if discovered, parents, teachers or even the authorities hardly seem to know what it is.

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77 US CO: Column: A Hit and a Miss for Colorado MarijuanaThu, 12 May 2016
Source:Boulder Weekly (CO) Author:Haas, Sarah Area:Colorado Lines:93 Added:05/12/2016

In the week leading up to the end of the Second Regular Session of the State Legislature, two major pieces of marijuana legislation met their fates.

In the first week of May, a proposal to certify organic marijuana at the state level was rejected in a Senate committee by a vote of 4-3, while Jack's Law, a bill requiring Colorado schools to accommodate the use of non-smokeable medical marijuana by students, passed both the House and Senate.

These bills are small, but significant pieces of legislation. They were necessitated by conflicts between state and federal laws concerning the rights of cannabis patients and consumers.

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78 US MA: Voters Evenly Split On Legal Marijuana, Poll ShowsSun, 08 May 2016
Source:Boston Globe (MA) Author:Levenson, Michael Area:Massachusetts Lines:170 Added:05/08/2016

Massachusetts voters are evenly divided over a proposed ballot question that would legalize the recreational use of marijuana, but they strongly support another proposed referendum that would allow more charter schools in the state, according to a new Suffolk University/Boston Globe poll.

Voters also overwhelmingly back legislation that would protect transgender people from discrimination in malls, restaurants, and other public accommodations - and allow people to use the public restroom that matches their gender identity.

Even more popular was a proposed "millionaires' tax" that would raise rates on residents with annual incomes of $1 million or more. It garnered runaway support in the poll.

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79 US CA: North Bay Needle Exchanges Fill Need, Lack MoneySun, 08 May 2016
Source:Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA) Author:Warren, Christi Area:California Lines:127 Added:05/08/2016

UKIAH - Mendocino County's needle exchange is reached off Highway 101 after winding through verdant hills and past multimillion-dollar wineries. It's a simple two-story bungalow with white lace curtains on a Ukiah street where, on a recent sunny afternoon, several drug addicts waited to exchange used syringes.

Operated as part of the Mendocino County AIDS/Viral Hepatitis Network, it collected and redistributed about 127,000 needles last year over the course of 6,259 visits, said Libby Guthrie, the network's executive director.

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80 US AK: Burnout: The Rise And Fall Of A Pot ClubMon, 02 May 2016
Source:Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (AK) Author:Bohman, Amanda Area:Alaska Lines:167 Added:05/05/2016

FAIRBANKS - When Megan and Marcus Mooers started thinking about opening a private marijuana club, they knew they wanted the name to have the initials THC.

THC is short for tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient in marijuana.

"We kind of spitballed for names until we found one that worked," Megan Mooers said. "It had to be something clever, something we could brand."

They came up with The Higher Calling, opened their doors in November and attracted hundreds of members. But five months later, Fairbanks' first marijuana business closed because it lacked enough dues-paying members to continue. Now, under local law, marijuana clubs in the Fairbanks North Star Borough are illegal.

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