Cannabis News

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
Barack Obama Just Cut The Sentences Of 98 Drug Offenders. Dozens Would Have Died Behind Bars.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/obama-clemency-drug-sentences_us_581256dee4b064e1b4b149b3
President Barack Obama commuted the sentences of 98 federal prisoners on Thursday, meaning he has shortened the sentences of 872 individuals over the course of his presidency.

The individuals granted clemency on Thursday were imprisoned for drug crimes. Dozens of them had been sentenced to life imprisonment, meaning they would have died behind bars without Obama’s intervention.
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
‘Kind of taboo’: Pot industry moms form support group in an era of legalization

Before Chanda Macias drops her 6-year-old son off at school, she spritzes some Febreze on herself. If anyone sniffs a trace of marijuana on her, the mother of four worries she would be labeled an unfit parent — or at least a mother unfit to host play dates.

Macias, a former cell biology specialist at Howard University, left her job last year to foray into Washington’s nascent pot industry and open a medical marijuana dispensary. Her business is legal, but the stigma has her questioning how to discuss her profession with her children.

In the male-dominated industry, there are few mothers she can turn to. Macias connected with other moms in the local marijuana business, forming a support group to navigate child-rearing in the murky age of legalization (cont)
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Washington D.C. Bill Would Allow Medical Marijuana Reciprocity with Other States

WASHINGTON (Oct. 28, 2016) – A bill working its way through the Council of the District of Columbia would allow patients with valid medical marijuana cards from other states to access medicinal cannabis in D.C. Passage would take another step toward effectively nullifying federal prohibition in practice.

Cnc. Yvette Alexander introduced B21-0210, the Medical Marijuana Reciprocity Amendment Act of 2015, last year. The legislation would expand the District’s medical marijuana program. If passed,patients undergoing a qualifying medical treatment or possessing a valid medical marijuana card from another jurisdiction could access medical marijuana in Washington D.C.

The ordinance would also expand D.C’s medical marijuana program in several other ways. It would eliminate the limitation on the number of marijuana plants permitted to be grown at D.C. cultivation centers. I would allow medical marijuana cultivation centers to expand into adjacent real property with community notice, and to provide for the relocation and change in ownership of dispensaries, cultivation centers, and testing laboratories. Finally, it would amend the District of Columbia Health Occupations Revision Act of 1985 to allow for the authorization of additional health professionals to recommend medical marijuana based on the recommendations of the Boards of Medicine and Nursing.
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Group recommends relaxing marijuana rules for police hiring

BALTIMORE — Officials are looking to make it easier for people who’ve used marijuana in the past to become police officers in Maryland.

The Baltimore Sun reports (http://bsun.md/2fhgl4l ) that the commission that regulates hiring in Maryland has recommended that the state relax a rule regarding past marijuana use for prospective officers.

Under the current state policy, people cannot become officers if they used marijuana more than 20 times in their lives, or five times since turning 21 years old.


The Latest: Alaska’s first marijuana shop opens to long line

By Associated Press October 29 at 5:20 PM
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The Latest on the start of legal marijuana sales in Alaska (all times local):

1:15 p.m.

Alaska’s first marijuana store is now in business, drawing a crowd from all over the state.

Herbal Outfitters’ owner Richard Ballow says his store in Valdez accepted customers as planned Saturday, at “high noon.” He says more than 250 people were waiting in line to get in his shop.

Ballow says customers came from as far away as Anchorage and Fairbanks, more than 350 miles to the north. He says he feels blessed to be a part of something historic.

The opening of Herbal Outfitters marks the first time it’s been legal to buy pot since November 2014, when Alaska residents voted to allow people 21 and older to use pot recreationally.

The opening comes less than a week after the state’s first marijuana testing lab got to work in Anchorage.

For you CA FC members (:brow:)
Pot ballot drives put medical, recreational users at odds


y Patrick Whittle | AP October 29 at 5:58 PM

PORTLAND, Maine — A handful of recreational marijuana legalization drives has the medical pot industry bracing for something it never expected to deal with: competition.

Legalization is on the ballot in five states this November, and all five currently allow some form of medical marijuana already.

Growers, medical professionals and users of medical marijuana say they worry that people who want medical marijuana will buy it on the open market instead of going through the hassle of getting a doctor’s recommendation.

“This is being structured for big corporations to come in and in a very short period of time wipe out the caregivers,” said Lori Libbey, a board director of a Maine group campaigning against legalization and a nurse who administers cannabis. “I wonder who is going to be able to provide for pediatric patients.” (cont)

Pot-legalization movement seeks first foothold in Northeast

By Bob Salsberg | AP October 30 at 11:14 AM
BOSTON — Having proven they can win in the West, advocates for recreational marijuana hope the Nov. 8 election brings their first significant electoral victories in the densely populated Northeast, where voters in Massachusetts and Maine will consider making pot legal for all adults.

Supporters believe “yes” votes in New England would add geographical diversity to the legalization map, encourage other East Coast states to move in the same direction and perhaps build momentum toward ending federal prohibitions on the drug. (cont)
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
This possibly has already been posted. Some food for thought. We had a really good medical cannabis industry here. Almost anyone could get a medical mj card. Things have changed drastically here. Not really for the better IMO.

I do like the fact that many people will be released from prison due to the new laws but that should happen anyway. It's crazy to keep someone in prison for life due to cannabis. I like the idea of legalization but not the way we did it here. Keep on top of what is going on so you don't get screwed over and not realizing it. There was nothing the medical cannabis advocates could do.

The legal Cannabis lobbyists had the money and the lawmakers ruined the medical csnnabis here. They voted in something the medical cannabis community didn't want. Many of our fav dispensaries were forced to shut down or get arrested. My fav dispensary was raided because they refused to shut down. They were protesting the new law. These really nice people still need to go to court. They could end up in prison and with a big fine.

From my experience buying at the state stores in Oct 2016 a cost of a gram is up by about $3. You can still get the $10 grams but those are generally low in THC or it's been on their shelf awhile. My cannabis now is somewhat drier than the dispensary days. Still is kickass though and good flavor from what I've bought so far. It's weird though everything is prepackaged and sealed up. You can't smell it beforehand. Sorry so long of a post.
:leaf:
CK

This week, hundreds of marijuana dispensaries will be shuttered. How did that happen? Wed Jun 29th, 2016 1:30am
This week, hundreds of marijuana dispensaries will be shuttered. How did that happen?The evening of November 6, 2012, will live long in the memories of many progressive Seattleites. It was a night of raucous celebration in the heart of Seattle as a singular mass of bodies danced at the corner of Pike Street and 10th Avenue.

In the tide of humanity, a middle-aged man with a gray beard and a plaid blue shirt sprayed the crowd around him with champagne. People kissed and danced, screamed and cheered, laughed and exchanged high-fives. A Barack Obama impersonator made the rounds, allowing celebrants to take pictures beside him. Musicians with various horns crawled through the crowd as well, trumpeting their joy to the skies. The pungent scent of cannabis faded in and out.

The celebration was on account of three things: Barack Obama, gay marriage, and legal pot. On this election night, the nation’s first African-American president had just won re-election, and Washington state voters had chosen, through ballot initiative, to legalize same-sex marriage and recreational cannabis. Each of those victories would have been unthinkable even 10 years before, so it makes sense that people took to the streets to mark the occasion.

But not everyone was celebrating. While Washington’s vote to legalize recreational marijuana—along with a similar measure in Colorado that passed on the same night—was a watershed moment in our country’s retreat from the War on Drugs, it was also the beginning of the end of the state’s medical-marijuana (MMJ) culture. That culture had existed for 14 years, made legitimate by another unlikely political victory and fostered by the medical-marijuana dispensaries that dotted the state. Those dispensaries were gray-market affairs, but the new recreational system of pot stores would be more regimented than a Marine on a diet.

MMJ advocates warned that sooner or later the recreational system would replace the patchwork system of medical providers, potentially making it harder for patients to get their medicine. In 2015, the state legislature proved them right by passing the Cannabis Patient Protection Act, or CaPPA, which grants a small minority of dispensaries I-502 licenses while requiring that the rest, at long last, close their doors.

“I don’t like the prices I’m seeing, and I particularly do not like what’s happened to the patients… . They’re screwed. If you’re a real patient for whom this is a life-changing medicine, you probably can’t afford it unless you hung onto your old connections, which has been my advice all along: ‘Don’t burn your connections, you’re going to need him or her pretty soon.’ ”

For many, pretty soon is Friday, July 1. On that day, the vast majority of the state’s dispensaries will be forced to turn out the neon marijuana light and close up shop, ending an era that helped thousands of cannabis patients.

“I like the part about nobody having their life fucked up,” says lawyer and pot advocate Jeff Steinborn, looking back on I-502, which he opposed at the time. “I do not like the way the market’s been controlled—they’re regulating it like plutonium.
 
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macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member

looney2nz

Research Geek, Mad Scientist
Got bank? Election could create flood of marijuana cash with no place to go

“There’s not a single human being who thinks there is any benefit at all in forcing marijuana business to be conducted on an all-cash basis,” said Rep. Earl Blumenauer, a Democrat from Oregon who has called for the decriminalization of marijuana since coming to Congress in 1996.

Word! The DEA/DOJ/FDIC created this INSANE situation where there's floods of cash on the streets 'cause 'banks can't deal with 'criminals''... so every dispensary, every patient is a target.
at least they aren't lying about it anymore.
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
Word! The DEA/DOJ/FDIC created this INSANE situation where there's floods of cash on the streets 'cause 'banks can't deal with 'criminals''... so every dispensary, every patient is a target.
at least they aren't lying about it anymore.
The situation is the natural consequence of Marijuana being a Schedule I drug and illegal under federal law. The banking issue not only has the squeeze of the DEA/DOJ on banks who deal with dispensary cash, but also has the Sword of Damocles over the heads of the depositors. Because of the Patriot act and other things to fight terrorism, a key component of bank procedure is to know the depositor. It is a gutsy dispensary owner that officially admits he is depositing a bunch of money sourced from federal felonies.

Even if there was no squeeze on the banks because of things like Operation Choke Point (Federal strategy to deny banking to things they don't like--even if legal.), I'm not sure how they can fix the second issue without substantial changes in federal criminal law. It's tough to sign a document that could send you to federal prison.
 
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Tranquility,
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CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
Here in WA state the credit unions are going up to bat for the cannabis industry. I have read where several are able to assist with their banking needs.

Depending what happens on Tues during the election. If cannbais does well at the ballot box, that puts more pressure on the Feds to change the status of our fav flower. Get out and vote! Make cannbais legal medically and legally.
 

grokit

well-worn member
California cities ban pot shops ahead of legalization vote

web1_Pot-Shop-Ban_Park-565x400.jpg

AP PHOTO/RICH PEDRONCELLI, FILE San Jose joined other cities on Nov. 1, 2016, by banning
pot shops ahead of Tuesday’s vote on whether to legalize the drug in California.


San Jose joined other cities on Nov. 1, 2016, by banning pot shops ahead of Tuesday’s vote on whether to legalize the drug in California.

San Jose has banned ahead of next week’s vote on whether to legalize the drug [including sales of recreational marijuana] in California.

Several cities across the state have halted or regulated nonmedical pot sales in the days before Californians decide on Proposition 64 on Tuesday.

The San Jose Mercury news reports (http://bayareane.ws/2eU16fR) city leaders say the ban will help stop illegal pot shops from opening, should the measure pass. Officials say the indefinite ban will likely remain in place until 2018, when the state could begin licensing retail pot shops under the proposal

Polls have shown Proposition 64 with more than the 50 percent of voter support needed to pass.

:argh:
 

grokit

well-worn member
Marijuana ballot initiatives: billionaire's tool or direct democracy?

1011741_1_1102-marijuana-legalization-california-ballot-initiative_standard.jpg


Legalization stands a good chance of passing in at least four states, with polls showing a majority of voters approving it in California, Maine, Massachusetts, and Nevada, which would join Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, Washington, and Washington, D.C., where the plant is already legal.

“[Y]ou must read the text. Not just the short ballot summary — the actual law,” wrote Michael Levinson, a Facebook employee and blogger, in an October post. “Because most ballot measures are abhorrently written. Many propose overly specific solutions or are overloaded with unrelated or unnecessary provisions.”

Meanwhile, special interest groups – including, perhaps most significantly, business interests – exercise even greater control over the measures than in the traditional legislative process, drawing up the proposals, collecting the signatures, and financing the campaigns...

:evil:
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
D.C. Council votes to allow medical marijuana users from elsewhere to buy in city

http://m.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/nov/2/dc-council-votes-to-allow-medical-marijuana-users-/
Wow, great news that I have been waiting on. Can't believe that this is the only report on this city counsel vote in the news. Washington Post missed it entirely as did AP.

P.S. found some more info...has a 30 day review period for Congress but still expected to go into effect in very early 2017

https://mjbizdaily.com/category/news-by-state/district-of-columbia/
 

grokit

well-worn member
Eventually the investors will demand continuous growth and ever-increasing returns, forcing the commodities that make up fertilizers to be wagered on, which will effect even mom & pop companies that will be trying to stay afloat as the multinationals also saddle them with ever-increasing regulations.

edit:
Of course after the shakeout it's either a race to the bottom or more likely price-fixing, collusion or outright purchasing of these raw material suppliers, then it's a race to control the commodity itself.

:shit::worms: Compost is our only recourse!

Gotta love wall street :tup:


:myday:
 
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