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161 US WA: Column: Pot For PetsWed, 01 Apr 2015
Source:Seattle Weekly (WA) Author:Stusser, Michael A. Area:Washington Lines:93 Added:04/02/2015

Can weed give our furry companions happier lives and more peaceful deaths?

Remember the right-wing homophobes who claimed that if we allowed gays to get married, pretty soon people would begin marrying their pets? Well, now, the damn hippies who voted to legalize the wacky weed are indeed trying to get their dogs and cats stoned! Hooked on the hound hemp! The kitty chronic!?

Companies like Seattle-based Canna-Pet and Canna Companion sell cannabinoid treats for dogs and cats-not to get them high (the hemp biscuits and capsules have very low levels of THC), but to help with joint discomfort and inflammation, and hopefully to make that yappy poodle across the street calm the fuck down.

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162 US WA: Editorial: Update Marijuana LawFri, 27 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Times (WA)          Area:Washington Lines:71 Added:03/28/2015

WASHINGTON'S experiment with legal recreational marijuana is "teetering on the brink" of a market failure. That is the candid assessment of Hayden Woodard, a state-licensed grower in Dallesport who hasn't given himself a paycheck in a year.

It's not just him. A stream of state-licensed marijuana operators recently testified in Olympia about how overregulation and unequal competition from unregulated medical-marijuana dispensaries are jeopardizing Initiative 502, the landmark legalization measure passed in 2012.

The Washington CannaBusiness Association says I-502's unwieldy structure is forcing applicants to give up on licenses, or even close shop.

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163 US WA: Column: Christian Chronic, Killer Pot, and Some SuingWed, 25 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Weekly (WA) Author:Stusser, Michael A. Area:Washington Lines:123 Added:03/25/2015

Passing the Dutchie to the Right This Time.

The idea of Higher Ground is to "elevate the dialogue," and thus it's important to remain open-minded to individuals and organizations on all sides of the marijuana-legalization conversation. With that in mind, let's light the peace pipe and reach the roach across the aisle.

WHAT WOULD JESUS DOO-BIE? Strongly opposing marijuana legislation are activists Alan Gordon and Anne Armstrong, who made headlines by bum-rushing a press conference supporting a new state legalization bill in Rhode Island. The duo aren't against the notion of legal weed, but instead believe that taxing the plant is against the teachings of the Bible, and Satanic. They take issue with the language of the law, claiming medical use of cannabis (which they believe is the Biblical plant called "kaneh-bos") outweighs any laws, restrictions, or taxes.

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164 US WA: Column: Baby Steps For MarijuanaSat, 21 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Times (WA) Author:Harrop, Froma Area:Washington Lines:86 Added:03/22/2015

Give thanks for the little things, they say. A bill that would stop the feds from going after medical marijuana users in states that permit such activity is something for which we should give thanks. But it is little.

Let's not criticize the sponsoring senators - Rand Paul, R-Ky., Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and Cory Booker, D-N.J. - for such a small reprieve from the war on drugs. They've probably gone about as far as they could within the two-faced confines of our national politics.

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165 US WA: Bill Would Allow Home Pot GrowingSat, 21 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Times (WA) Author:Bush, Evan Area:Washington Lines:51 Added:03/22/2015

Two Washington lawmakers announced a bill Thursday that would allow anyone 21 years old or older to grow as many as six marijuana plants and share their pot.

Anyone growing their own marijuana, for recreational or medical purposes, would be allowed to possess eight ounces - seven more than the current recreational limit.

Senator Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, sponsored the bill in the Senate; Rep. Brian Blake, D-Aberdeen, introduced the bill in the house.

The home-grow provision was part of Senator Kohl-Welles' vision for overhauling the marijuana market earlier this year, but lawmakers turned their focus earlier this session to a competing bill championed by Ann Rivers, R-La Center.

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166 US WA: Column: The Stusser Omnibus Marijuana BillWed, 18 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Weekly (WA) Author:Stusser, Michael A. Area:Washington Lines:103 Added:03/19/2015

A modest proposal to head off the awful Senate Bill 5052.

Last week, three U.S. senators introduced a bill that attempts to amend many of the outdated medical-marijuana conundrums at the federal level. The bill would end the prohibition of medical marijuana, reclassify the plant from its current designation as a Schedule 1 narcotic (a status that suggests no medical value and high potential for abuse), and allow for more cannabis study and research. While the bipartisan bill doesn't have a snowball's chance in hell of passing, it's a great conversation starter.

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167 US WA: Why Is This Rogue Needle Exchange Handing Out MethWed, 18 Mar 2015
Source:Stranger, The (Seattle, WA) Author:Kiley, Brendan Area:Washington Lines:397 Added:03/19/2015

The People's Harm Reduction Alliance is one of the most daring and innovative needle exchanges in the country.

And it's run by users. Five years ago, they started giving out crack stems.

Now they're expanding services for methamphetamine users.

On a sunny afternoon the first week of March, in an alley behind the University District post office, volunteers for the People's Harm Reduction Alliance needle exchange open the doors, set up their outreach table, and begin another afternoon's work.

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168 US WA: Cornering The Pot MarketTue, 17 Mar 2015
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Frankel, Todd C. Area:Washington Lines:205 Added:03/17/2015

After Washington State Made It Legal, a Struggling Small Town Went into Business

North Bonneville, Wash. - Deep in the Columbia River Gorge, a short drive from the Bridge of the Gods, the nation's only government-run marijuana shop was running low on weed.

The store had been open for just a few days. Inside, manager Robyn Legun was frantically trying to restock. Outside, five customers stood waiting for the doors to open. Someone cracked a joke about this being a typical government operation, always running late.

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169 US WA: Column: Blunt Talk On MarijuanaSun, 15 Mar 2015
Source:Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA) Author:Crooks, Gary Area:Washington Lines:89 Added:03/17/2015

The views of many pot prohibitionists haven't advanced past "Dragnet," an ancient TV melodrama in which Sgt. Joe Friday lectured caricatures of hippies over the use of drugs. Here's an excerpt from a 1968 episode:

"Marijuana is the fuse, heroin the flame and LSD the bomb. So don't you try to equate liquor with marijuana with me, mister. You may sell that jazz to another pothead, but not to somebody who spends most of their time holding some sick kid's head while he vomits and retches sitting on a curbstone at four o'clock in the morning." He finishes with, "I'm the expert here!"

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170 US WA: High School Kids Say Pot Easy To Get, Not HarmfulFri, 13 Mar 2015
Source:Herald, The (Everett, WA)          Area:Washington Lines:51 Added:03/13/2015

SEATTLE (AP) - Washington high school students who participated in a statewide survey say marijuana is easy to get and they do not perceive any risk from smoking pot once or twice.

While high school smoking of tobacco continues to go down, marijuana use has remained stable since the last healthy youth survey was conducted two years ago, state health officials said Thursday.

More than 200,000 students in grades 6, 8, 10 and 12 in Washington public schools took the voluntary and anonymous survey in October. They answered questions about their health and behaviors.

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171 US WA: FDA Warns Seattle-Area Firms Selling Cannabis PetThu, 12 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Times (WA) Author:Bush, Evan Area:Washington Lines:139 Added:03/13/2015

Therapeutic Claims Made in Marketing Challenged

Agency Says Little If Any Cbd Found in Products

Let's say your dog has seizures or chronic pain from arthritis. Living in pot-friendly Western Washington, you figure he might benefit from medical cannabis.

You look around and find a handful of new companies offering cannabis-infused biscuits and capsules made for pets. That's quite a lucky find for Fido, right?

Not so fast, says the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The agency recently sent warning letters to such companies based in Seattle and Sultan.

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172 US WA: Eastern Washington Jurors See Through the FederalWed, 11 Mar 2015
Source:Stranger, The (Seattle, WA) Author:Groover, Heidi Area:Washington Lines:76 Added:03/11/2015

A Family of Medical Marijuana Growers, Facing 10 Years in Prison, Was Recently Acquitted on Almost All Charges Against Them

"You're not a cog in the machine of the federal government," attorney Phil Telfeyan told a jury drawn from self-reliant Eastern Washington on March 2. "You can stand up and say, 'No. The evidence isn't there.'" And that's exactly what they did.

The 12 jurors had been charged with weighing the case of the "Kettle Falls Five," a family of Eastern Washington medical marijuana growers we wrote about in last week's paper.

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173 US WA: Column: Weed In The Rose GardenWed, 11 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Weekly (WA) Author:Stusser, Michael A. Area:Washington Lines:101 Added:03/11/2015

Every single day there's breaking news in the marijuana movement. Alaska officially legalized weed on February 24, making it the fourth state in the Union to toss aside the chains of prohibition, and the next day, at the stroke of midnight, our nation's capital, Washington, D.C., followed suit. #CommanderInSpleef!

But if ya think the "Just Say No" Nancy Reagan types are gently stepping aside, and the taxation and regulation of cannabis are going along swimmingly, you've been smoking too much of the recently legalized chronic.

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174 US WA: LTE: Pot Not Worthy Of Front PageTue, 10 Mar 2015
Source:Columbian, The (WA) Author:Naten, Dot Area:Washington Lines:29 Added:03/11/2015

It is with "awwwww" that I read The Columbian newspaper. Pot stores have a strong impact on our news reporting. In the March 5 issue: a huge picture and story, "Gorge town gets into pot business," about a new city-owned pot store opening in North Bonneville; it's not only on most of the front page but continues on about two-thirds of the following page. Also, there's a March 4 story, "Main Street's 'marijuana traffic' packs the parking," about how parking in downtown Vancouver is causing problems because of the pot stores.

I realize I am old and boring and these are different times than when I grew up ... but, really? I just do not understand the concept of "front page news."

Dot Naten

La Center

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175US WA: Washington Town Opens Pot Shop Operated by GovernmentSun, 08 Mar 2015
Source:San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Author:Cavaliere, Victoria Area:Washington Lines:Excerpt Added:03/08/2015

SEATTLE - A small town in southern Washington on Saturday opened the state's first recreational marijuana store that is both owned and operated by the local government, officials said.

Cannabis Corner in North Bonneville, home to about 1,000 people on the Columbia River Gorge, will sell a range of marijuana products with all profits going back to the local community, city leaders said.

"It's a really great solution for these small, rural communities that need to raise a little bit of revenue," said Robyn Legun, general manager of Cannabis Corner.

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176 US WA: A First: City-Owned Pot Shop OpeningFri, 06 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Times (WA) Author:Bush, Evan Area:Washington Lines:127 Added:03/06/2015

North Bonneville, Wash.

Entrepreneurial Endeavor Could Be Lucrative for Town of 1,000

Of all the steps taken since Washington legalized marijuana, North Bonneville's might be boldest.

The town of about 1,000 in Skamania County, which sits on the Columbia River about 40 miles northeast of Portland, is becoming the first government in the nation, and perhaps the world, to own a recreational marijuana store.

The Cannabis Corner, a renovated pole barn off Highway 14, opens Saturday. It will be the first marijuana store in the county.

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177 US WA: Patients Fear Medical Pot May Suffer With New RulesThu, 05 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Times (WA) Author:O'Sullivan, Joseph Area:Washington Lines:207 Added:03/05/2015

Legislature 2015

Not All Wrinkles Worked Out As Lawmakers Try to to Combine Medical, Recreational Systems

OLYMPIA - Just outside the room with jars full of cannabis, Rainier Xpress owner Patrick Seifert points out the photos of veterans on the walls of the medical-marijuana dispensary's waiting area.

They're all customers, says Seifert, who added that he gives every veteran customer a joint a day to cope with PTSD, traumatic brain injury or other medical problems.

But Rainier Xpress, which Siefert says serves up to 120 patients daily, may not be long for this world. Preoccupied with a thriving black market and medical products that aren't subject to state-mandated testing, lawmakers want to fold the state's medical-marijuana patients into the highly regulated recreational system.

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178 US WA: A Stunning Overreach From the DEA Is Playing Out inWed, 04 Mar 2015
Source:Stranger, The (Seattle, WA) Author:Groover, Heidi Area:Washington Lines:271 Added:03/04/2015

In Federal Court, There's No Such Thing as Medical Marijuana-So a Rural Family of Medical Marijuana Patients Is Being Treated Like Drug Traffickers

Before Rhonda Firestack-Harvey was part of a nationally watched court case that could change the course of the federal drug war, she lived quietly with her husband in their modest double-wide mobile home two hours northwest of Spokane.

Rhonda suffers from carpal tunnel and osteoarthritis. In 2011, she got a doctor's recommendation to use marijuana for her achy joints. Her husband, Larry, also got medical authorization to use marijuana to treat pain caused by gout. Washington State was one of the very first states to approve medical marijuana, way back in 1998, and under state law, medical marijuana patients are allowed to grow their own medicine. When Rhonda and Larry started a grow on their property, Larry posted a sign with a green cross on it near the plants, hoping it would communicate to anyone flying over that this was a medical grow, not a criminal operation.

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179 US WA: Column: Tommy Chong, ReconsideredWed, 04 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Weekly (WA) Author:Stusser, Michael A. Area:Washington Lines:98 Added:03/04/2015

At 76, the pater familias of the legalization movement won't slow down.

I'll be honest. My expectations about a press conference with Tommy Chong, of the famous stoner duo Cheech & Chong, were that there would be some cliched humor, some pantomimed puffing, and photo ops galore for hippies of a bygone era. And there was some of that. But there was also something I didn't expect: a fresh perspective on the new pot movement.

The reason Tommy Chong matters-and the reason I'm writing about his recent visit to Seattle's CannaCon-is that each and every time there's a mention of legalization or the counterculture or pot smoking, there's inevitably a reference to Cheech & Chong. Even if the name is never spoken, a haze of Cheech & Chong wafts through the mind. (See?!)

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180 US WA: Column: State Should Partner With Tribes on LegalizedWed, 04 Mar 2015
Source:Seattle Times (WA) Author:Higgins, Mark Area:Washington Lines:103 Added:03/04/2015

When it comes to marijuana, Washington comes off as the granny state of recreational pot when compared with Colorado. Let's face it, the rollout here has been glacial.

As of last week, Seattle had just nine state-licensed stores. Nine.

But change is coming to this state's nascent marijuana experiment. A major player is poised to enter the market.

Some of this state's most business-savvy Native American tribes are evaluating the risks and opportunity to grow or sell marijuana, as well as the relatively untapped potential in medical-marijuana research.

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