Cannabis News

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Florida’s Medical Marijuana Facing Obstacles Placed by State and Monopoly Interests
lorida’s misnamed Office of Compassionate Use seems not to know the meaning of the word compassion.

Supporters of Florida’s recently approved medical marijuana program are having to fight tooth and nail to get the program off the ground. They’re angry, and many are ill and in desperate need, reports Miami Herald columnist, Fred Grimm.

Office of Compassionate Use bureaucrats began hearing testimony this week around Florida, and, according to the Miami Herald, they are completely disregarding all of the “heart-rending testimony from the dying, diseased and debilitated,” the pleas from would-be cannabis farmers and entrepreneurs, as well as the voices of voters who approved of allowing medical doctors to prescribe cannabis.

On Election Day, Florida’s Amendment 2 passed by a landslide with over 71 percent of the vote. That was after two tries, three years and more than $11 million.

The amendment, in effect since January 3, is only five pages long, which means there is still a lot to work out.

Instead of working out the issues, the Office of Compassionate Use is now trying to change the rules that would allow the Florida Board of Medicine to preempt a doctor’s decision to prescribe MMJ; it is also attempting to limit the 10 treatable conditions.

This rule change, a blatant violation of doctor-patient confidentiality, would also require a 90-day waiting period before a patient could actually fill their MMJ prescriptions. And, patients will not be permitted to smoke medical cannabis, the least expensive delivery system.

The Miami Herald pointed out that these proposed rules also contemplate that Florida’s billion-dollar medical marijuana industry would remain in the grip of seven, politically influential operations—“monopolies that each hold an exclusive license to grow, process and dispense marijuana in designated geographic areas.”

These proposed rules will be adopted in July, supposedly only after public hearings. (cont)
I fucking hate government politicians and bureaucrats. I have no sypathy or patience for elitist Government apparatchiks resisting implementation of the will of the people expressed through democratic voting. If they can't support the program, then let them quit and do some honest work to make their living, for a change.

Colorado Pot Sales Hit $1.3 Billion, Taxes to Pay for ‘Game-Changing’ Program
Colorado is doing something constructive with the millions in marijuana revenue it’s raking in annually.

The Department of Human Services and Governor John Hickenlooper have requested an annual allocation of more than $6 million from the state’s marijuana-tax cash fund for a new program that would offer help to chronic drug users instead of criminalizing and jailing them.

Art Way, senior director for criminal-justice reform and Colorado director with the national Drug Policy Alliance, who worked closely with state agencies in crafting the proposal, believes the impact of this approach is potentially revolutionary for people struggling with addictions to heroin and other heavy narcotics.

In fact, Way believes the project could be a game changer.

“Marijuana tax revenue and marijuana legalization will fund broader drug-policy purposes and drug-policy concerns that have long had more of an impact on society, both from a human perspective and a fiscal perspective,” said Way, who believes mass incarceration and the failed War on Drugs has had devastating effects on society in the United States.

He also believes that if such a program can get underway anywhere in the United States, Colorado is the obvious place to start.

After all, newly released figures show that weed dispensaries sold $1.3 billion worth of recreational and medical pot in 2016. So the tax money is there. (cont)

Secret Gang of Texas Mothers Using Marijuana to Treat Postpartum Depression
The miracle of birth comes packaged with an array of trials: morning sickness, a hormonal rollercoaster, the incomparable and incomprehensible (if you are a man) sensation of passing a human child through an orifice that, not so long ago, was just big enough for something much smaller (if you are most men). And once that’s over, it’s not over.

Physical pain melts into mental anguish, as the thrill and the joy of bringing a human into the world turns into anger, sadness and weeping. For most women, the “baby blues” go away after a few days. For some, it never goes away, and becomes postpartum depression. As much as 20 percent of women have trouble sleeping, are overwhelmed with anxiety and suffer other symptoms a year after their pregnancies “ending.”

After her first child was born, Celia Behar couldn’t get out of bed. She cried uncontrollably; she had no connection to her daughter; she wanted to hurt herself. She was prescribed Prozac—and while that left her with insomnia and migraines, it was “better.” After her second child was born, she started smoking marijuana. And wouldn’t you know—it worked “right away,” she told Texas-based TV station KXAN.

Behar is lucky. She lives in California, where cannabis use is prevalent and the drug is widely available. Even so, parents who smoke weed are at best frowned upon—and they run a real risk of a visit from child-protective services. In Texas, cannabis is totally prohibited—and you may as well ride a broom and perform animal sacrifices in your front yard rather than be a pot-smoking mom. This is why, KXAN reports, there’s a “growing group of mothers in Austin” who “secretly [use] marijuana to treat postpartum depression.”(cont)
Good for them!
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
NY Gov. Cuomo: Opposes Marijuana Legalization, Repeats Gateway Theory
A Machiavellian viper and the would-be savior of the Democratic Party, Andrew Cuomo also knows more about marijuana than you—especially if you are a scientist, addiction researcher or anyone involved with public health.

He ought to know something. When he was sworn in as New York governor in 2011, Cuomo inherited a veritable police state, whose public enemy number one was weed. Led by then-Commissioner Bill Bratton’s “stop-and-frisk” NYPD, police in New York state arrested more people for low-level marijuana crime per capita than any other state in the country—an arrest rate for weed double the national average, according to the ACLU.

Under NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio, himself a former and possibly current marijuana user, the carnage has mercifully eased off, but police still bust black and brown young men for marijuana possession far more often than whites.

The easy and obvious solution to this pointless exercise would be to legalize marijuana. A majority of Americans, like the ones Andrew Cuomo will likely try to woo in primaries in three years, are pro-legalization; states Cuomo will need to win, like California and Florida, are liberalizing their drug laws.

This is the idea currently pushed in the state house by state Sen. Liza Krueger, a Manhattan Democrat. For someone with national political ambitions like Cuomo, adding legalization—a proven winner with broad support, including independents and the Democratic Party’s left wing, who Cuomo would presumably want on his side—is a no-brainer.

Or, not.

This week, Cuomo broke with most researchers and pushed the tired old lie that marijuana is a gateway drug—and then suggested a POLITICO reporter was on the pot for even asking about his views on recreational weed.

Here’s Politico on the scene, recounting a conversation with Andrew C.:

I support medical marijuana, I don’t support recreational marijuana—apparently you do, which explains some of the stories you’ve been writing. Recreational marijuana I think should be separated from the workplace, do we agree on that?”

As you know, it’s a gateway drug, and marijuana leads to other drugs and there’s a lot of proof that that’s true,” the Democratic governor said before attending the grand opening of a new casino. “There’s two sides to the argument. But I, as of this date, I am unconvinced on recreational marijuana.” (cont)
Well, I certainly agree with the first three words of this article being applied to Cuomo. I often wonder what universe these people actually inhabit. And what's up with familial political dynasties in this country. We has the Bushes, the Clintons, the Cuomos (dad and his dear little boy Andrew), then there is Polosi whose father was the machine politician Mayor of Baltimore and...wait for it, her Grandfather was the machine politician Mayor of Baltimore. I don't get it...really don't.
 

MinnBobber

Well-Known Member
Office of Compassionate Use bureaucrats began hearing testimony this week around Florida, and, according to the Miami Herald, they are completely disregarding all of the “heart-rending testimony from the dying, diseased and debilitated,” the pleas from would-be cannabis farmers and entrepreneurs, as well as the voices of voters who approved of allowing medical doctors to prescribe cannabis.
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Get your input in on Florida's proposed BS restrictions to the law!
FL Dept of Health is taking in written comments. I couldn't find a rideshare to attend and testify at a public mtg (here in FL for just a couple months) so submitted my written comments.

I started a separate thread with the link to submit.
Even if you are not a FL resident, help swamp them with comments to save the new program from these fuckin idiots who want to sabotage the intent of the law
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
Unemployment Insurance Drug Testing Rule - House Majority Leader
Majority leader (.gov) › 2017/02/14 › dr...
24 mins ago - It also allows—but does not require—states to drug test applicants for unemployment insurance. People who are abusing drugs may fail job-related drug tests, meaning they are not truly available for ...


I hope cannabis isn't included in this bill. It didn't say. Always something coming out that isn't fully explained to the public.
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Men's Wearhouse founder reveals how smoking marijuana for 50 years changed his life
George Zimmer has a penchant for speaking his mind.

The 68-year-old serial entrepreneur was fired from Men's Wearhouse, the company he founded 40 years earlier, in 2013 over differences with the company's board.

"You know, one of the very small reasons — and I say small — would be that I tended to be kind of a renegade or somebody who said what he thought," Zimmer told Business Insider about his firing. "That made the board of directors increasingly uncomfortable."

Zimmer has since launched a tuxedo rental company, Generation Tux, and is channeling his candor into marijuana activism.

Zimmer donated $50,000 in 2010 to an ultimately unsuccessful California ballot initiative that would have legalized marijuana for recreational use. He's spoken at cannabis conferences in California and Nevada, two states that fully legalized pot in 2016. This week, he'll add Oregon to the list when he gives the keynote address at the Cannabis Collaborative Conference on February 15.(cont)

So, if we smoke Bud with George will we like the way we look and he'll guarantee it? LOL

Essential cannabis news from the desk of David Downs | cannabis editor | San Francisco Chronicle

February 13, 2017

TOP NEWS
A Sacramento, CA. sheriff talked weed with the new AG Jeff Sessions: "Jones says his conversation with Sessions didn't lead him to believe much would change. 'Regarding the prioritization of federal resources to combat marijuana, he didn't see the federal government getting involved in marijuana use or low-level state, what are traditionally state and local crimes, but, I don't think he ruled out the possibility of the federal government getting involved in larger-scale operations.' The sheriff says those operations would include trafficking by drug cartels." (h/t CalNORML Ellen Komp)

Well, I certainly hope so. IMO, Sessions is the most objectionable cabinet appointee Trump has made. We will see

DEA Drops Inaccurate Cannabis Claims From Website

In a remarkable about-face, the US Drug Enforcement Administration on Monday removed inaccurate information about the purported dangers of cannabis from the agency’s website.

The change came after the nonprofit advocacy group Americans for Safe Access filed a legal petition calling for the DEA to remove the incorrect claims. Filed on Dec. 5, the petition argues that the misleading statements—among which that cannabis can cause psychosis, lung cancer, and permanent cognitive damage—violate the federal Information Quality Act, designed to ensure integrity of information published by federal agencies.

Steph Sherer, ASA’s executive director, cheered the agency’s removal of the claims.

“The DEA’s removal of these popular myths about cannabis from their website could mean the end of the Washington gridlock” she said in a statement. “The federal government now admits that cannabis is not a gateway drug, and doesn’t cause long-term brain damage, or psychosis.”

Cannabis Legislation 2017: We’re Tracking All Legalization Bills

Most state legislatures reconvene in early January, and by February they’re in full swing, moving some bills forward and killing others in committee. This year 27 state legislatures are considering bills pertaining to cannabis in some form. (Well, okay: 26. Mississippi had two medical marijuana bills, but they’re already dead.) Some states are pushing full adult-use legalization. Others are pulling back on medical legalization measures adopted by voters last November. We’ll keep tracking them as they live and die. Most state legislatures adjourn by early June. Stay tuned. (cont with reports state by state)
 
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damm

Well-Known Member
Maybe this isn't worth posting to some; but I think it is. Brad Klippert 8th District has filed a bill in the house to repeal legalization in Washington.

http://app.leg.wa.gov/billsummary?BillNumber=2096&Year=2017

It's worth noting that not all counties support legalization in Washington; which gives us area's where the black market is still booming and there is 0 legal shops.

Edit: He's in Eastern Washington which likely doesn't have any pot shops open. I hope it won't get far but the bill angers me as it goes against the will of the voters. Something Politicians always do.
 

BabyFacedFinster

Anything worth doing, is worth overdoing.
February 13, 2017

TOP NEWS
A Sacramento, CA. sheriff talked weed with the new AG Jeff Sessions: "Jones says his conversation with Sessions didn't lead him to believe much would change. 'Regarding the prioritization of federal resources to combat marijuana, he didn't see the federal government getting involved in marijuana use or low-level state, what are traditionally state and local crimes, but, I don't think he ruled out the possibility of the federal government getting involved in larger-scale operations.' The sheriff says those operations would include trafficking by drug cartels." (h/t CalNORML Ellen Komp)

A good sign if it's true
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Gov. Hickenlooper gets real about problems with marijuana in Colorado
USA - Want to know what Governor Hickenlooper hates the most about legal pot in Colorado? Just eavesdrop on him like we did on Tuesday afternoon.

He's in California, testifying in front of the state Senate. California has to figure out how to rollout retail weed in 2018, and the Governor told them not to be stupid.

"We had such a looseness in home grows, and so we had medical marijuana originally, and people could have six plants per patient, up to 99 plants. And it's crazy. Well, it's a stupid system, and I would encourage you guys to clamp down because it makes it very hard -- what you end up with is what we call the 'Grey Market,' so those folks are legally growing, they don't need a license, they don't have to fill out forms, we don't check on their credentials or their criminal history. 99 plants, that's a lot of marijuana."

Over summer, the state put out an entire report about the "Grey Market" -- which essentially means people are taking advantage of the loopholes and distributing their large amounts of weed "outside the intent of the law."

Governor Hickenlooper was also asked about the state's trouble regulating edibles and driving impairment, as well as whether the feds will crack down on legal pot. He said he's optimistic that President Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions will "let this experiment continue."

Why Nobody’s Buying Legal Marijuana in New York State
When he signed the country’s most restrictive medical-marijuana program into law in 2014, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo wanted to keep marijuana “out of the wrong hands,” as NBC-4 reported at the time.

This was the reasoning behind banning marijuana in its most popular form—that is, marijuana that can be smoked. By his own metric, Cuomo, a 2020 presidential hopeful, has recorded a smashing success, as medical marijuana is extraordinarily difficult to access in New York State.

In a state with a population of nearly 20 million, fewer than 14,000 sick people have managed to find a doctor willing to recommend them medical marijuana as of Feb. 7. This could be because the list of conditions for which marijuana can be recommended was for the first few years limited to terminal illnesses and some of the most debilitating conditions. It could also be because the list of cannabis-recommending doctors is a literal state secret.(cont)
Ah, another fine example of state government incompetence and intransigence

New Coalition Wants to Protect Workers From Being Fired Over Marijuana
Over half the nation has now legalized the leaf for medicinal and/or recreational purposes, putting millions of working class citizens in a position to consume the herb without any legal repercussions. However, many of these people are still at risk of catching some unwanted heat from inside the walls of the great American workforce because some companies still consider a positive test for marijuana to be grounds for termination.

It is for that reason there is now a push in legal marijuana states to pass protections for employees that feel threatened by no-tolerance drug policies. The national marijuana legalization advocacy group NORML is said to be spearheading these efforts in a number of jurisdictions, which it hopes will pave the way to new laws that prevent workers from being sent to the unemployment line for simply using a substance that has been deemed legal in the eyes of the state. (cont)
This will certainly be a continuing issue and topic of hot debate
 

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
House Approves Measure Aimed At Drug Testing People Who File For Unemployment

The U.S. House approved a measure (H.J. Res 42) that would roll back an Obama Administration regulation limiting the ability of states to drug test people who file for unemployment insurance.

The vote is the latest in a string of efforts by Republican leadership to use congressional authority granted under a federal law known as the Congressional Review Act to repeal recently finalized federal regulations. Before the Department of Labor’s rule can be repealed, however, the Senate must vote to do the same.
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Colorado Warms to Pot Clubs, Despite Federal Uncertainty
BY KRISTEN WYATT
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ENVER (AP) — At risk of raising the ire of the White House, Colorado is on the brink of becoming the first state with licensed pot clubs. But the details of how these clubs will operate are as hazy as the underground clubs operating already.

Denver officials are working on regulations to open a one-year pilot of bring-your-own marijuana clubs, while state lawmakers are expected to consider measures to allow either marijuana “tasting rooms” run by marijuana dispensaries, or smoke-friendly clubs akin to cigar bars.

Alaska regulators, spooked by how the Trump administration might view marijuana, recently decided not to move forward with rules for use of marijuana at authorized stores, though the issue there isn’t dead.

California and Maine voters expressly signed off on public marijuana consumption, but haven’t settled on rules. That means Colorado may be first out of the gate with statewide pot-club regulations, possibly by this summer.

Colorado officials from both parties have come around to the idea of Amsterdam-style pot clubs for a simple reason: Everyone is tired of seeing pot smokers on public sidewalks. (cont)


Indiana Senate Approves Restrictive Medical Marijuana Program
Indiana may be well on its way to becoming the next state to legalize a modest medical marijuana program. But make no mistake, it would be one of the most restrictive in the nation.

Earlier this week, the Indiana Senate puts its seal of approval on a piece of legislation designed to give epilepsy patients the freedom to use a non-intoxicating form of cannabis oil know as cannabidiol or CBD. The measure (Senate Bill 327) is the first marijuana-related bill to so much as receive a hearing inside the halls of the Republican-dominated Indiana General Assembly. It now goes before the House of Representatives for consideration.

“Medicinal use of cannabidiol. Defines ‘cannabidiol,’ and provides an affirmative defense to possession of cannabidiol if the person or the person’s child has been diagnosed with certain medical conditions, the cannabidiol contains no THC, and other specified conditions are met,” reads the bill’s synopsis.

While the reach of the proposal is rather measly in comparison to the comprehensive programs launched in more than 20 states and the District of Columbia, it is positive that the issue of marijuana reform is finally being taken seriously among the state’s legislative forces.(cont)

Washington Authorities Shut Down Delinquent Pot Company, Burn 2,000 Plants
Nobody really likes paying taxes, and so some of us don’t. But we’ve never heard of a tax delinquent’s house burned down by a militant IRS in retribution.

Frontier justice isn’t exactly what happened to Nine Point Growth Industries, the second recreational marijuana company in Washington to receive a state license—though authorities putting the tax-owing company out of business by storming the company’s grow house, seizing 2,000 plants and clones and destroying them in a scene reminiscent of the American opium wars a century ago is awfully close.

The Kitsap Sun recounts the fate of the delinquent West Bremerton, Washington-based company and its end last week in spectacular fashion at the hand of state Liquor and Cannabis Board agents. (cont)
 

TastyClouds

Well-Known Member
Maybe this isn't worth posting to some; but I think it is. Brad Klippert 8th District has filed a bill in the house to repeal legalization in Washington.

http://app.leg.wa.gov/billsummary?BillNumber=2096&Year=2017

It's worth noting that not all counties support legalization in Washington; which gives us area's where the black market is still booming and there is 0 legal shops.

Edit: He's in Eastern Washington which likely doesn't have any pot shops open. I hope it won't get far but the bill angers me as it goes against the will of the voters. Something Politicians always do.

That sounds outlandish. How would WA state turn down over a BILLION dollars in annual Cannabis Tax revenue for this moron? It seems like political suicide. Brad needs to vape a trench.
 
TastyClouds,
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damm

Well-Known Member
That sounds outlandish. How would WA state turn down over a BILLION dollars in annual Cannabis Tax revenue for this moron? It seems like political suicide. Brad needs to vape a trench.

That's a good question as Washington's law is the most restrictive in the country. We allow counties to opt-out of pot-shops for example. Pierce County (Tacoma, Fife) opt out just like Yelm does (Eastern Washington).

Technically Washington is a red state; it's just the cities (Seattle) and I suspect Olypmia to a degree to push us more democratic. It would not be shocked if this bill actually got voted on; however like in the link this is just the house.

Another bill has to go through the senate and then the governor has to sign it; at this point I would suspect veto from him as he's been trying to say he will protect our laws from trump.

The protests would pretty much shut down Seattle Metro area; I suspect the shops would refuse to close ... overall bad situation
 
damm,

damm

Well-Known Member
House Bill Examines Racist Drug War

The war on drugs has harmed the lives of millions of Americans in communities across the country, but there's no question that its impact has been felt hardest by people of color.

A new bill introduced in Congress seeks to begin remedying that.

Sponsored by Congressman Bobby Rush, an Illinois Democrat, the legislation would create a commission to study the effects that mass incarceration and forced prison labor have had on African Americans and shed light on the extent to which governments and private corporations have supported and benefited from such policies.

You can find the rest at the link below.

https://massroots.com/blog/house-bill-examines-racist-drug-war
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Just how mainstream is marijuana? There’s now a “Congressional Cannabis Caucus.”
Time to dispel any doubts you may still have that marijuana reform is truly a mainstream political issue. This week, a bipartisan group of U.S. representatives formed the first-ever "Congressional Cannabis Caucus" to work on legislation related to marijuana legalization and regulation.

Democrats Earl Blumenauer of Oregon and Jared Polis of Colorado teamed up with Republicans Dana Rohrabacher of California and Don Young of Alaska to form the caucus. Not coincidentally, all four representatives hail from states where recreational marijuana use is legal.

"The federal government’s decades-long approach to marijuana is a colossal, cruel joke, and most Americans know it," Rohrabacher said in a news release announcing the formation of the group Thursday. "Not only have incalculable amounts of taxpayers’ dollars been wasted, but countless lives have been unnecessarily disrupted and even ruined by misguided law enforcement."

The group didn't lay out specific legislative objectives, but the lawmakers said that there is a need for explicit rules that square federal law, which strictly prohibits marijuana use, with the growing number of state laws that allow for medical and recreational use. (cont)
 

turk

turk
House Bill Examines Racist Drug War

The war on drugs has harmed the lives of millions of Americans in communities across the country, but there's no question that its impact has been felt hardest by people of color.

A new bill introduced in Congress seeks to begin remedying that.

....yeah right....what's congress gonna discover next?...water wet?...fire hot?...
...if communities of color have to wait for congress...forget it.
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Capitol Hill Buzz: Cannabis caucus insists it’s serious

WASHINGTON — Alaska Republican Rep. Don Young says he never smoked marijuana, but he’s a member of the newest caucus on Capitol Hill — the Cannabis Caucus.

Four House members announced the formation of the caucus on Thursday. While the name elicits smiles, the lawmakers said their intentions are serious: Keep federal policies from interfering with states as they enact laws that allow for recreational or medical marijuana.

“I believe in states’ rights. Alaska voted to legalize it, pretty large margin,” said Young, 83. “The federal government should stay out of it, period.”

Eight states and the District of Columbia have legalized small amounts of marijuana for adult recreational use. Another 28 states have legalized medical marijuana. The members of the newest caucus said they expect strong interest in joining their group based on the state trends.

“Once a state has acted, members of Congress are interested in defending and working with their constituencies,” said Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo. (cont)
 

macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
When Retirement Comes With a Daily Dose of Cannabis

Ruth Brunn finally said yes to marijuana. She is 98.

She pops a green pill filled with cannabis oil into her mouth with a sip of vitamin water. Then Ms. Brunn, who has neuropathy, settles back in her wheelchair and waits for the jabbing pain in her shoulders, arms and hands to ebb.

“I don’t feel high or stoned,” she said. “All I know is I feel better when I take this.”

 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
When Retirement Comes With a Daily Dose of Cannabis

Ruth Brunn finally said yes to marijuana. She is 98.

She pops a green pill filled with cannabis oil into her mouth with a sip of vitamin water. Then Ms. Brunn, who has neuropathy, settles back in her wheelchair and waits for the jabbing pain in her shoulders, arms and hands to ebb.

“I don’t feel high or stoned,” she said. “All I know is I feel better when I take this.”
Yes, and those fascists at the DEA (yeah, talking about you, Rosenberg) decided to reclassify CBD as schedule one. Who made the decision to allow the DEA to set policy? Safety concerns and efficacy should be addressed by the FDA. DEA is for enforcement only. This has gotten completely out of control and Rosenberg needs to be given a bus ticket home.

Colorado town getting a drive-through marijuana shop
ARACHUTE, Colo. — The western Colorado town of Parachute is getting a drive-through marijuana shop, believed to be the first in the state.

The Parachute Board of Trustees approved a business license for Tumbleweed Express last week, the Glenwood Springs Post Independent reported Saturday (http://bit.ly/2m1PZCA).

“As far as I can tell, we are not aware of this business model ever coming up before,” said Robert Goulding, spokesman for the state Marijuana Enforcement Division.

The business is expected to open in March in a former car wash.

Tumbleweed Express also had to get approval from the Marijuana Enforcement Division, which said the store cannot allow anyone younger than 21 on the premises, even in the back seat of a car.

The business must also have security and surveillance, and marijuana may not be visible from outside the dispensary.

The car wash building will allow the goods to be screened from outside view.

“We think the drive-through is a very creative and innovative idea,” Parachute Town Manager Stuart McArthur said. (cont)

Very cool. I remember a bar in Crescent Beach, FL (just south of St Augustine) that had a drive through window for drinks by the cup!! Of course, this was in 1974 when drinking and driving was the state sport. We are so lucky we didn't kill ourselves or somebody else!

Arizona to Give Marijuana Legalization Another Try
Marijuana legalization came within 70,000 votes in Arizona of having a perfect record on Election Day. Of the five states with adult-use cannabis legalization measures on the ballot, Arizona’s Prop. 205 was the only one to fail in November, thanks largely to the best-funded opposition effort in the country—and at 51.32 percent opposed to 48.68 percent in favor, the lone setback was a narrow loss.

Barring unprecedented intervention from Donald Trump’s Justice Department, marijuana legalization’s record great success seems to all but guarantee that Arizona voters will consider the question again in 2018.

One citizen-led effort is already afoot—and if Safer Arizona has its way, the state will have some of the most permissive marijuana laws in the country.

The cannabis legalization advocacy group filed paperwork on Thursday to start circulating petitions in order to qualify a legalization effort for the 2018 ballot.

Led by Iraq War veteran David Wisniewski, the group has until July 2018 to collect 152,000 valid signatures from registered Arizona voters to put the measure on the midterm ballot.

If approved, marijuana legalization in Arizona would go a few steps beyond California and Colorado.

The Safer Arizona Cannabis Legalization Act allows adults 21 and over to possess, cultivate and consume cannabis—but it also repeals all criminal penalties related to marijuana entirely, while allowing up to 48 plants to be grown at home. In a nod to Arizona’s conservative voting bloc, the measure also provides “protection for firearm owners” who want to smoke weed—under current law, guns and pot don’t mix well—and also protects the custody rights of parents who use cannabis.
 
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Baron23

Well-Known Member
California Woman Denied Essential Heart Transplant Because She Uses MMJ
This is a sad story that will infuriate you.

Summer Waltman, 23, was born with fetal alcohol syndrome and has suffered heart complications for most of her life.

She is in severe need of a heart transplant and is generally a good candidate. However, she has been denied.

She is also a good candidate for a medical pump that could extend her life from days to years. But she was also denied this option.

Why? Because Summer Waltman uses medical marijuana for pain management and comfort.

“It seems to me like they’re just sending her just to die,” Waltman’s cousin Andrew Babcock told a local CBS station in Sacramento, California.

And yes, medical marijuana has been legal in California since 1996.

So, what is going on?
What a travesty.

Vermont bill streamlines marijuana legalization

MONTPELIER, Vt. — After a complicated marijuana legalization bill failed last year, a new bill would legalize up to 1 ounce of marijuana and allow Vermonters to grow several plants for personal use.

The new bill is simpler, by design.

“The more conservative it is, the more appealing it will be to people outside this room,” said Republican Rep. Tom Burditt, one of the bill’s sponsors at the House Judiciary Committee meeting Wednesday. Burditt voted against last year’s bill.

The former bill called for a regulatory structure similar to the system in Colorado. If realized, the state would have created a commercial market for marijuana and possibly generated up to $75 million in tax revenue. That bill passed the Vermont Senate, but failed in the House.

he new bill, much shorter in length, would be framed more like the system in Washington DC, where there are no provisions for sales but people can possess and grow small amounts of marijuana.

Study Acquits Long-Term Marijuana Consumption of Cardio Vascular Disease
recent study published in the American Journal of Public Health indicates longtime marijuana consumption has no direct association with cardiovascular disease (CVD) in middle-aged men.

According to the Feb. 2017 study, 5,113 participants ranging in age from 18 to 30 participated in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study for more than 25 years. For the study, doctors from the Division of Cardiovascular Sciences, National Heart, Lung, & Blood Institute at Bethesda MD estimated the cumulative lifetime exposure to marijuana by utilizing recurring assessments collected at examinations every 2 to 5 years.

The result was nothing short of outright encouragement for middle-aged men who feared their lifetime of recreational marijuana consumption might lead to cardiovascular disease later in life. (cont)
Perhaps should be in medical forum, but safety is intrinsically linked to legalization so it also seemed like news to me. That and I have bad genetic cardiac disease so this was very cool news to me personally.
 

justcametomind

Well-Known Member
When Retirement Comes With a Daily Dose of Cannabis

Ruth Brunn finally said yes to marijuana. She is 98.

She pops a green pill filled with cannabis oil into her mouth with a sip of vitamin water. Then Ms. Brunn, who has neuropathy, settles back in her wheelchair and waits for the jabbing pain in her shoulders, arms and hands to ebb.

“I don’t feel high or stoned,” she said. “All I know is I feel better when I take this.”
About time!
 

BD9

Well-Known Member
Congress has a cannabis caucus now and they want to see cannabis legalized and regulated.

http://circa.com/politics/government/cannabis-caucus-wants-marijuana-laws-that-protect-states-rights

Four lawmakers representing states that have legalized weed have launched the first ever Congressional Cannabis Caucus.

Jared Polis (D-Colorado), Dana Rohorabacher (R-California), Earl Blumenauer (D-Oregon) and Don Young (R-Alaska) say they want to work together on legislation related to the legalization and regulation of marijuana.

The caucus plans to pursue new laws that would allow more government research into cannabis, increase access to medical marijuana for military veterans and reform tax and banking laws for pot businesses.

Each of the caucus members is already pushing legislation related to cannabis policies. Rohrabacher -- who smokes to help treat chronic pain -- has a bill that would protect people who use cannabis in compliance with their state's laws.

Pot advocacy groups have applauded the new caucus and are pushing more lawmakers to take part.

This week, the Michigan chapter of the cannabis advocacy group NORML sent letters to lawmakers from that state urging them to become apart of the caucus.
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Massachusetts Lawmakers Justify Tinkering with Marijuana Legalization
Almost 1.8 million people in Massachusetts voted to legalize marijuana in November. But did they really mean to do that?

It’s a ridiculous question to pose about a simple yes-or-no ballot proposition, but such are the mental gymnastics now being played by a pair of Massachusetts lawmakers, who are—unfortunately—now tasked with rewriting the voter-approved law. And they’re doing it for a governor who has made his distaste for legalization well known.

Massachusetts voters handily approved legalization in November, approving Question 4 by nearly seven percentage points, despite opposition from nearly every major state politician, including Governor Charlie Baker and Boston Mayor Marty Walsh. Since then, possession of small amounts of cannabis for adults 21 and over has become legal, but elected officials have done everything they can to delay or outright undo much else.

A handful of lawmakers called a special, sparsely-attended holiday session to delay the opening of recreational marijuana stores by six months. In January, a key state senator introduced legislation to sharply reduce the amount of cannabis adults can possess and grow at home—and delay the first legal, over-the-counter sale by two years.

Now, state Senator Patricia Jehlen and Rep. Mark Cusack are open to making more “major changes” to the voter-approved law, changes due on Baker’s desk by June.

Possible tweaks could include raising the tax rate, giving local municipalities more leeway to limit the number of marijuana retail outlets and messing with plant and possession limits. As they explained to the Boston Globe, they can justify doing this because the voters weren’t quite sure what they were doing with their ‘yes’ votes:

“I don’t think the voters were expressing deep engagement with every single sentence,” Jehlen said in a telephone interview. “But I think the concept of allowing people to own and use and grow marijuana legally, that is what is our mandate, to protect that.”

Cusack concurred. “I think the will of the voters is they wanted recreational marijuana, not that they sat there and read every word of the ballot measure before they voted for it. It was really: Do you want it or do you not?”

This is disingenuous at best—and in Jehlen, this is coming from one of marijuana’s biggest supporters

Our self-serving, elitist, 'I know better than you', POS politicians could justify anything with their double talk and complete lack of any ethics besides expedient protection of their own career by pandering to their special interest groups. Well, I hope the voters in MA prove them wrong and send these people packing. A referendum is binding, politicians are paid by the electorate to implement it, anything else is anti-democratic. If they can't find it in themselves to do the will of the people as expressed in a democratic vote, then they should resign.
 
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