Posts Tagged ‘Washington’

Washington State: Fewer Teens Turning to Alcohol and Tobacco

Monday, March 18, 2013 @ 11:03 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

OLYMPIA, WA – Fewer students are smoking cigarettes or drinking alcohol, according to a recent survey of kids in Washington state. At the same time, a large number of students seriously considered suicide in the past year.

Meanwhile, the number of secondary school students who believe using marijuana is risky dropped to the lowest level since the state started collecting data.

The Healthy Youth Survey is taken every two years by students in grades 6, 8, 10, and 12 in more than 1,000 public schools inWashington. More than 200,000 youth took part in the survey in October 2012 by answering a wide variety of questions about their health and health behaviors.

All responses were voluntary and anonymous. The Healthy Youth Survey provides communities with needed information to make solid decisions about which health issues to focus on.

“The physical and emotional health of our youth is crucial to their success in school, in work, in personal relationships, and in their communities,” said Department of Social and Health Services Secretary Kevin W. Quigley . “It’s good to celebrate that fewer teens are using alcohol and tobacco, but it’s clear many teens need more support from the adults in their lives and from friends to make healthy choices and cope with challenges.”

Survey results show that cigarette smoking is down in all grades. About 10 percent of 10th graders reported smoking a cigarette at least once in the past 30 days. That’s down from nearly 13 percent in 2010 and from 25 percent in 1999. Statewide, about 50,000 youth smoke – and 40 start smoking every day.

Youth also use other tobacco products such as cigars or chew. Nearly as many 10th graders smoked tobacco from a hookah pipe as from a cigarette, and about 7 percent said that they smoked a cigar in the last month.

“We’re certainly encouraged to see that fewer kids are smoking cigarettes,” said Secretary of Health Mary Selecky . “In fact, smoking rates are half what they were a decade ago. I’m proud of our tobacco prevention and control work. It has truly made a difference in the health of Washington kids. Still, we’re seeing many teens using other types of tobacco, and using multiple substances, so there’s more work to do.”

safer than alcohol

Preventing underage drinking has been a statewide priority for the last decade, and nearly 11,000 fewer students are using alcohol compared to 2010. Still, with more than 115,000 youth who currently drink, the need for prevention efforts continues. Survey results show that 12 percent of 8th graders, 23 percent of 10th graders, and 36 percent of 12th graders used alcohol in the past 30 days.

The percentage of Washington 10th and 12th graders who smoke marijuana is nearly double the percentage of cigarette smokers.

“I’m pleased that underage drinking is trending downward,” said Liquor Control Board Chair Sharon Foster . “However, this past year’s privatization of liquor has more than quadrupled the number of outlets selling spirits. With the potential for increased youth access, it’s more important than ever for parents to talk with their kids about alcohol.”

Challenges remain in other areas. About 8 percent of 8th and 10th graders attempted suicide in the past year. Over 100,000 youth, ages 12-17, seriously considered suicide – about one in every six students. More than one in four teens surveyed said they felt so sad or hopeless for two weeks in a row that they stopped doing usual activities: 26 percent in 8th grade, 31 percent in 10th grade, and 30 percent in 12th grade. These numbers haven’t changed much over the past 10 years.

At the same time, students across all grades reported an increase in their “commitment to school,” and fewer are skipping school. “Teachers and school administrators have done a great job in creating safe and supportive learning environments for our students,” said Randy Dorn , Superintendent of Public Instruction. “More of them report they feel safe, enjoy being at school, and have opportunities to become involved in school-related activities. When students feel safe and are committed to school, they’re more likely to succeed.”

Healthy and safe school environments help support Washington’s workforce needs. “The Healthy Youth Survey helps communities serve youth in a way that will ensure Washington businesses have the workforce they need,” said Brian Bonlender , director of the Washington State Department of Commerce. “Keeping students healthy and safe strengthens our schools and helps keep students engaged, so they graduate with skills that support businesses and our economy.”

Recently added questions about sexual health help inform effective prevention programs. Nearly one third (32 percent) of 10thgraders and more than half (55 percent) of 12th graders reported having ever had sexual intercourse. About 7 percent of 10thgraders and 16 percent of 12th graders reported they had four or more sexual partners. About 6 percent of 10th graders and 5 percent of 12th graders reported having sex for the first time at age 12 or younger.

The survey is a joint effort of the Department of Health, Department of Social and Health Services, Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, Liquor Control Board, the Family Policy Council, and the Department of Commerce. Results are used to plan, implement, and evaluate state youth programs.

Survey results are available online. Survey fact sheets are also online.

SOURCE: Washington State Department of Health

Representative Nancy Pelosi: I Think State Marijuana Laws Have to Be Respected; I Think Tax and Regulate

Tuesday, March 12, 2013 @ 06:03 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

by Erik Altieri

Lets Be HonestIn an interview with the Denver Post, published this week, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi spoke about the marijuana legalization initiatives passed in Colorado and Washington in November.

When asked, “What are the measures in Washington (DC) that might address states that legalize marijuana and what is your view of federal policy?,” Minority Leader Pelosi expressed her support of state laws regarding marijuana and encouraged a tax and regulate policy:

Q: What are the measures in Washington (DC) that might address states that have taken steps to legalize marijuana and what is your view of the federal role?

Rep. Pelosi: I support the leadership of Jared Polis, who has been a leader on this issue as well as other members..I understand some of the Republican members support the law now that is passed, even if they didn’t before.

But in any case, to answer your question, what is my position regarding the states that have medical marijuana or recreational marijuana as the law of their states: I think that has to be respected. I think tax and regulate.

In order to do that, there has to be a level of respect for the fact, that if you are going to have recreational marijuana, someone is in business to do that and they have to have tax treatment in order for them to function as a business.

How the state of Colorado interacts with the federal government on the taxation issues is something they have to work out, but I think they should.

You can view the full interview here.

Representative Pelosi now joins the growing list of prominent politicians who are coming out in support of rational marijuana policy. Take a minute of your time and click here to easily contact your Representative and urge him or her to support Representative Polis’ legislation, HR 499: The Ending Federal Marijuana Prohibition Act of 2013, and put an end to our nation’s war on cannabis consumers.

Bill To Clear Cannabis Misdemeanors In WA Gets Committee Hearing

Tuesday, February 19, 2013 @ 07:02 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

By, Anthony Martinelli, TheJointBlog.com

Earlier this month legislation was filed in Washington State that would allow adults with a cannabis possession misdemeanor to have it removed from their record. The measure, House Bill 1661, is sponsored by a bipartisan assortment of 21 state legislators. It would include possession charges of up to 40 grams, and apply to adults 18 and older.

Based on data released last year, this law could apply to hundreds of thousands of people in the past few decades alone, allowing them to instantly get their life back. A cannabis possession charge is devastating to a person’s record, and effects housing, employment, education and even custody battles.

On Wednesday, February 20th, at 1:30PM, the first public hearing for House Bill 1661 will take place, and members of the community will be given an opportunity to voice their support of this measure. Lawmakers will be given an opportunity to make a near-heroic and retroactive stand against cannabis prohibition. The hearing will be held by the House Committee on Public Safety, and we urge anyone who can attend to do so. Those who can’t should contact members of the committee, asking for their support.

This legislation would be a crucial step forward, and one that would instantly alter the lives of thousands, setting a precedent for the rest of the country.

Source: TheJointBlog.Com

Washington cops and courts say THC DUIs not going up since I-502

Thursday, February 7, 2013 @ 07:02 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

By William Breathes

According to a Washington state police officer, state trooper and toxicologist, there hasn’t been any noticeable increase in arrests for driving under the influence of marijuana since a bill legalizing small amounts of marijuana went into effect in December.

 

The three testified before the Washington House Public Safety Committee yesterday as part of the ongoing discussion/implementation of Initiative 502, which legalized possession and consumption of up to an ounce of marijuana (as well as edibles and other “infused products”) for adults over 21. The law also set a blood-THC limit of five nanograms for every milliliter of whole blood – a level many said was too low to take into account higher tolerances for medical marijuana patients.

 

washington trooper.jpg
Washington State Trooper Lt. Rob Sharpe testifies Wednesday.

The committee’s job is to iron out any kinks in the system to keep this mythical rash of stoned-to-the-point-of-impairment drivers off the road. That’s not to say that such things don’t happen. They do. In fact, about one in six people arrested for driving while intoxicated involve marijuana according to Washington State Toxicologist Fiona Couper, who also testified. On average, those cases are higher than the .5 nanogram limit, she said. But she also noted that some cases are much higher, into the 70s and 80s. Even then, about half of the cases involving marijuana usually have something else in the mix that could be impairing driving, like booze or meth.

Most DUI stops, according to Olympia police officer Brian Wiley, are for alcohol. “It’s by far the most dominant influence at my municipal level.” Wiley’s testimony was also interesting for other reasons, including his position that passengers have every right to be puffing tough. He talks about how he wouldn’t necessarily pull someone over simply for seeing them holding a joint. He equated it to seeing them holding a beer, which is a $75 open container ticket: just because someone is holding the beer doesn’t mean they are drunk.

“If a person drives by me and there’s a bunch of smoke pouring out the window, no I can’t pull them over for that,” Wiley testified. “It might make me wonder, and I might pull in behind them and see how they are operating their car that day. But it doesn’t give me probable cause to stop them.”

Much of the discussion focused on how long marijuana would stay in people’s system (it varies) and how long people remain impaired. Several attorneys testified that DUI cases involving just marijuana were rare, and that most involved alcohol.

Then there was the testimony from Dr. Marilyn Huestis, who apparently studies cannabis and it’s effects on the human body. She refuted what Sewell said, adding that her quackery research shows that impairment can lastup to 21 days after using marijuana based on “residual THC in the brain”. Thankfully there are huge bodies of cannabinoid science refute what she says, including work from Yale University scientists like Andrew Sewell.

Sewell, who told the committee that there is no direct link between blood THC levels and how impaired someone might be. Getting stoned drivers off the road, he says, isn’t going to be accomplished with arbitrary blood levels. (Editors note: can someone get Sewell to talk to legislators in Colorado?)

Source:  http://www.tokeofthetown.com/2013/02/washington_cops_and_courts_say_thc_duis_not_going_up_since_i-502.php

Marijuana Legalization Implementation Draws A Lot of Attention In Washington

Monday, January 28, 2013 @ 06:01 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

Joe Klare

The implementation of Washington’s new recreational marijuana legalization law is drawing much interest from a wide-array of different groups in the state, including medical marijuana growers and possible cannabis retailers.

Many came to a recent Washington State Liquor Control Board meeting with a simple message: “we want to be involved.” Many small growers and small retail operations feel like they are going to be left out in the cold, which is a distinct possibility. Those with more money will have the advantage, and if most banks refuse to do business with marijuana retailers, it will be very hard to close the gap for the “little guy.”

Washington has a long road to go toward getting a retail system up and running, but it seems – at least for now – that those in charge are interested in what others have to say on the matter.

Improvements will be needed within the system as it grows, so advocates in the state still have much work to do.

Video here: http://the420times.com/2013/01/marijuana-legalization-implementation-draws-a-lot-of-attention-in-washington/

187,000 Lb. of Marijuana Annually? Legal Pot Business to Bloom in Washington

Tuesday, January 8, 2013 @ 06:01 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

By 

Voters in Colorado and Washington recently approved the legalization of marijuana for recreational — not “medical” — purposes. But this hardly means that the business of growing and dispensing of pot will be all fun and games.

A big Seattle Times story reveals what Washington residents and entrepreneurs intrigued with the business aspects of legal marijuana can expect, largely based on what’s been taking place for years in Colorado’s medicinal-marijuana industry. “This is not your father’s marijuana,” the story quotes Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper as saying. Hickenlooper was talking about the increased potency of many of today’s strains of pot. But he could have also been addressing the vastly different way that the marijuana business is currently conducted. The gist is that it’s just that — a business — and one of the most tightly regulated on the planet at that.

For a license to grow or sell pot in Colorado, would-be entrepreneurs have to go through background checks, submit years of bank statements, and cough up deposits and licensing and application fees that often add up to a hefty $500,000. Regulations also require 24/7 video surveillance — accessible to the police over the Internet — at marijuana dispensaries and farms where pot is grown. Each and every one of the thousands of pot plants grown in the state must also be labeled with a bar code, so that they can be tracked. TIME has previously reported that every worker in Colorado’s marijuana industry must be officially licensed and that records must be kept of the weight, departure and arrival of truck shipments of pot. Why all the regulation? One owner of a Colorado marijuana-growing operation offered this insight to the SeattleTimes:

‘I think a lot of the info they required weeded out a lot of people who would have been bad for the industry,’ said Kayvan Khalatbari, co-owner of Denver Relief.

(MORE: Grass Roots: The Beginning of the End of Pot Prohibition)

When you work in the marijuana field, making puns such as “growing like a weed” and “weeding out” probably come as second nature. What Khalatbari means by people who are “bad for the industry” are those who might have ties to organized crime, or who might be tempted into selling off some of their product to underage customers or the black market in neighboring states.

In any event, for years now, reports have been sprouting up (like weeds!) explaining how difficult it is to run a legal and profitable marijuana operation — not only because of strict oversight, but also because of tough competition. In some ways, the legal marijuana industry is a mirror image of the greater farming and food industry, in which large businesses have a huge advantage over mom-and-pop operations. Denver Relief is considered a medium-size grower, and it is based in a 13,000-square-foot (1,200 sq m) warehouse, where 2,000 pot plants require 62,000 watts of power and 2,000 gallons (7,570 liters) of filtered water each day. The image some have in their heads of a “typical” pot grower — a few plant beds in the basement, with special lights hovering above — seems to be way off.

Legal marijuana is already big business in Colorado. In the past two years the state approved 739 sites for growing pot — some with 10,000 plants — and the industry leases a total of about 1 million square feet (93,000 sq m) of space in the Denver area. Pot is expected to be an even bigger business in Washington, however. Roughly 1,000 grow sites will be needed to meet demand, with 363,000 consumers in the state anticipated to be somehow ingesting in the neighborhood of 187,000 lb. (85,000 kg) of dry marijuana annually. The assumption is that the marijuana industry in Washington will be regulated as strictly as it is in Colorado.

(MORE: Buzzkill: Turns Out, Selling Pot Fails as a Get-Rich-Quick Scheme)

Meanwhile, in Colorado, the state’s first legal “pot clubs” opened with the new year — and new laws stating that purely recreational marijuana can be smoked, though not sold. Instead of selling pot, Denver’s Club 64 charged $29.99 for admission to a BYOM New Year’s party. Guests smoked and socialized, while enjoying a showing of The Big Lebowski and snacking on Cheetos and Goldfish — because apparently, while the business aspects and legal status of marijuana have been transformed, some things never change.

Read more: http://business.time.com/2013/01/08/187000-pounds-of-marijuana-annually-legal-pot-business-to-bloom-in-washington/#ixzz2HbG5bD9B

Tell Obama To ‘Just Say No’ to Joe

Sunday, January 6, 2013 @ 08:01 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

White House online petition telling Obama to listen to the voters of Colorado and Washington about the future of cannabis legalization, not the famously anti-cannabis/pro drug war architect Vice President Joe Biden, only needs 7,000 more signatures to be brought to the president’s attention. The signatures are needed by Wednesday, January 9.

If you’ve not yet taken a moment to let the White House know that you too support the voters of Colorado and Washington, please sign the online petition to put it over the top, and get the White House on record to not interfere with the will of voters in states who no longer support cannabis prohibition and want it legalized and taxed.

by Allen St. Pierre

Will cigarette makers jump into pot market?

Wednesday, December 19, 2012 @ 09:12 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com
ByNICHOLAS K. GERANIOS Associated Press
SPOKANE, Wash.—Will the Marlboro Man light up a joint soon?The states of Washington and Colorado legalized possession of small amounts of marijuana in the November elections, but it is unclear if any cigarette makers plan to supply either market.

Marijuana remains illegal under federal law. President Barack Obama indicated last week that going after individual users won’t be a priority, but there’s no firm indication yet what action the Justice Department might take against states or businesses that participate in the nascent pot market, which has the potential to be large. For example analysts have estimated that a legal pot market could bring Washington state hundreds of millions of dollars a year in new tax revenue for schools, health care and basic government functions.

Bill Phelps, a spokesman for Philip Morris USA, maker of Marlboro, based in Richmond, Va., was vague when asked about the future intentions of the nation’s largest tobacco company.

“We have a practice of not commenting or speculating on future business,” Phelps said, adding “tobacco companies are in the business of manufacturing and marketing tobacco products.”

Less mysterious was Bryan Hatchell, a spokesman for the second-largest cigarette maker, Reynolds American Inc., maker of Camel and Pall Mall, among many others.

“Reynolds American has no plans to produce or market marijuana products in either of those states,” Hatchell said. “It’s not part of our strategy.”

But if major tobacco companies are not going to supply the new markets, it appears there are some ready to step in.

The Washington State Liquor Control Board is in the process of collecting applications from people who want to be certified to be able to grow pot legally. Agency spokesman Brian Smith said Tuesday that some applications so far have come from people who have long been growing marijuana when it was against state law.

“We’re getting a lot of interest from people that want to be producers,” Smith said. “Some say they have been growing it illegally until now.”

Indoor growing operations appear to be the most productive and secure for marijuana, Smith said.

“But we could have outdoor grows in eastern Washington,” he said.

Since no state had previously legalized marijuana possession, Washington must invent a production system from the ground up, Smith said. Colorado did have a licensed system for growing medical marijuana, but that was very tightly regulated and probably more stringent than Washington needs, Smith said.

“We don’t need to get to the level of oversight Colorado has in medical marijuana,” he said.

Washington’s new law decriminalizes possession of up to an ounce of pot for people over 21. But selling marijuana remains illegal for now. The initiative gave the state a year to come up with a system of state-licensed growers, processors and retail stores, with the marijuana taxed 25 percent at each stage.

In Colorado, a 24-member task force began work on pot regulations this week. The state’s Department of Revenue must adopt the regulations by July, with sales possible by year’s end.

Read more:Will cigarette makers jump into pot market? – The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/news/marijuana/ci_22223783/will-cigarette-makers-jump-into-pot-market#ixzz2FXGXKu8O

Medical Marijuana Providers Want Access To Forbidden Cities

Monday, December 17, 2012 @ 07:12 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

By 

Muraco Kyashna-tocha with cockatoo
Credit Amy Radil
Muraco Kyashna-tocha of Green Buddha Patient Co-op (with cockatoo) obtained a Seattle business license.

Marijuana legalization in Washington is taking effect against a patchwork of conflicting city laws. Some cities don’t allow marijuana dispensaries. But Seattle began requiring business licenses for them last year. Some medical marijuana providers see benefits to playing by cities’ rules. Others are fighting their restrictions.

Criminal defense attorney Douglas Hiatt represents many medical marijuana providers. When Seattle began to require licenses for dispensaries last year, Hiatt told them he would sue and advise his clients not to comply.

In his lawsuit in King County Superior Court, Hiatt said medical marijuana providers should be exempt from normal business licensing. He said since marijuana is illegal under federal law, those license applications could be used by federal prosecutors. “If you have to fill out a business license for the city that says, ‘I sell marijuana,’” he said, “well, you’re kind of incriminating yourself, aren’t you?”

But Hiatt didn’t get to make those arguments in court. His lawsuit was dismissed last Friday because he declined to name his plaintiffs. They are 13 dispensary owners whom he called John and Jane Doe. Hiatt said he’s not sure whether he’ll refile. He had hoped to use this lawsuit to challenge all attempts by cities in Washington to regulate marijuana providers. He said he had believed the Seattle City Attorney’s Office would be a more friendly adversary. “I thought we had an agreement to get this thing straightened out and do it on the merits and not screw around,” he said, “but I guess I was wrong.”

President Barack Obama’s comments Friday calling marijuana enforcement in Washington and Colorado a low priority became public just prior to Hiatt’s court hearing. Kent Meyer with the Seattle City Attorney’s Office told the judge Obama’s comments show “the risk of federal prosecution diminishes as we speak.” Hiatt responded that federal law hasn’t changed.

But medical marijuana providers seem split on whether to go along with Seattle’s licensing rules.

Muraco Kyashna-tocha runs the Green Buddha Patient Co-op in Seattle’s Ravenna neighborhood. She is also the director of the Evergreen State Cannabis Trade Association. She said she understands Hiatt’s fears about federal law. “I can appreciate that argument,” she said, but added, “I tend to follow a different track.”

She applied for a business license from Seattle and has been paying sales taxes for the past two years.

Kyashna-tocha said behaving like a legitimate business is the best way to win acceptance from local government and the public. And she said she is feeling safer in the wake of Initiative 502, which legalizes marijuana possession. “I’m one who believes in playing as much as possible with the system,” she said. “Our state is shifting on the issue of cannabis.”

But even as I-502 may prompt more demand for marijuana, dispensary owners say available real estate is scarce. State and federal law prohibit dispensaries near certain facilities like schools. In January the Seattle City Council will look at designating areas for larger-scale marijuana operations.

This week the city of Everett will consider a nuisance ordinance to restrict dispensaries to industrial areas. Marijuana advocates are planning a protest Tuesday. The Everett City Council hearing and vote is scheduled for Wednesday.

Amendment 64 is now law: Governor John Hickenlooper quietly signs measure

Monday, December 10, 2012 @ 09:12 PM  posted by theresa@idrasilrx.com

By Michael Roberts

Ever since voters approved Amendment 64, Governor John Hickenlooper’s office has been evasive about saying when he would ink the measure. But this morning, he quietly signed A64 into law — an action followed by a strangely worded announcement on view below.

Whereas Initiative 502 in Washington state (the equivalent of Amendment 64 there) set a specific date — December 6 — for the proposal to take effect, Hickenlooper has implied that he might put his signature on the line that is dotted as late as early January. He took this course, presumably, to avoid a celebration like the midnight party at the Space Needle, when hundreds of Seattle residents blazed up in defiance of prohibitions against public consumption of weed.

We’ll see if this tactic worked at Civic Center Park today around 4:20 p.m.

As for the announcement itself, the press release announcing the signing was so obtuse that it required a couple of calls on our part to confirm that A64 is now the law of the state. The opening passage begins: “Gov. John Hickenlooper today signed an Executive Order that makes an ‘official declaration of the vote’ related to Amendment 64. That declaration formalizes the amendment as part of the state Constitution and makes legal the personal use, possession and limited home-growing of marijuana under Colorado law for adults 21 years of age and older.”

When asked if there’s a distinction between signing the “official declaration of the vote” and signing the amendment itself, Hickenlooper spokesman Eric Brown responded via e-mail that the actions are “one in the same. Language in state law requires an ‘official declaration of the vote’ before taking effect. Governor signed that proclamation this morning.”

Also included in the press release is a list of members assigned to a task force that will guide Amendment 64′s implementation, and you can bet there’ll be controversy about it. The list is dominated by elected officials and bureaucrats — and while a few folks from the campaign and other pro-marijuana-reform groups are included, others taking part include Dr. Christian Thurstone, perhaps the most prominent medical professional in the state when it comes to identifying and decrying the negative health impacts of marijuana, particularly on young people of the sort who are expressly banned from using pot under A64.

We’ll get into those issues down the line. Meanwhile (update), here’s a statement from Amendment 64 proponent Mason Tvert — not a member of the task force:

“This is a truly historic day. From this day forward, adults in Colorado will no longer be punished for the simple use and possession of marijuana. We applaud Gov. Hickenlooper for issuing this declaration in a timely fashion, so that adult possession arrests end across the state immediately.

“We look forward to working with the governor’s office and many other stakeholders on the implementation of Amendment 64. We are certain that this will be a successful endeavor and Colorado will become a model for other states to follow.”

Press release about the signing of Amendment 64:

Gov. Hickenlooper signs Amendment 64 proclamation, creates task force to recommend needed legislative actions 

DENVER — Monday, Dec. 10, 2012 — Gov. John Hickenlooper today signed an Executive Order that makes an “official declaration of the vote” related to Amendment 64. That declaration formalizes the amendment as part of the state Constitution and makes legal the personal use, possession and limited home-growing of marijuana under Colorado law for adults 21 years of age and older.

It is still illegal under state law to buy or sell marijuana in any quantity and to consume marijuana in public or in a way that endangers others.

“Voters were loud and clear on Election Day,” Hickenlooper said. “We will begin working immediately with the General Assembly and state agencies to implement Amendment 64.”

To help inform the upcoming legislative process, the governor today also signed an Executive Order to create a Task Force on the Implementation of Amendment 64. The task force will consider and resolve a number of policy, legal and procedural issues, involving various interests and stakeholders, to implement the new constitutional amendment.

“All stakeholders share an interest in creating efficient and effective regulations that provide for the responsible development of the new marijuana laws,” the Executive Order says. “As such, there is a need to create a task force through which we can coordinate and create a regulatory structure that promotes the health and safety of the people of Colorado.”

The Task Force will be co-chaired by Jack Finlaw, the Governor’s Chief Legal Counsel, and Barbara Brohl, the Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Revenue. There will be 24 total members:

• Rep. Dan Pabon, appointed by the incoming Speaker of the House;
• Sen. Cheri Jahn, appointed by the incoming President of the Senate;
• Rep.-elect Dan Nordberg, appointed by the incoming House Minority Leader;
• Sen.-elect Vicki Marble, appointed by the incoming Senate Minority Leader;
• David Blake, representing the Colorado Attorney General;
• Kevin Bommer, representing the Colorado Municipal League;
• Eric Bergman, representing Colorado Counties Inc.;
• Chris Urbina, the Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment;
• James Davis, the Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Public Safety;
• John Salazar, the Colorado Commissioner of Agriculture;
• Ron Kammerzell, the Senior Director responsible for the Colorado Medical Marijuana Enforcement Division;
• Christian Sederberg, representing the campaign to pass Amendment 64;
• Meg Sanders, representing the medical marijuana dispensary and cultivation industry;
• Craig Small, representing marijuana consumers;
• Sam Kamin, a person with expertise in legal issues related to the legalization of marijuana;
• Dr. Christian Thurstone, a person with expertise in the treatment of marijuana addiction;
• Charles Garcia, representing the Colorado Commission on Criminal & Juvenile Justice;
• Larry Abrahamson, representing the Colorado District Attorney’s Council;
• Brian Connors, representing the Colorado State Public Defender;
• Daniel Zook, an at-large member from outside of the Denver area;
• Tamra Ward, representing the interests of employers; and
• Mike Cerbo, representing the interests of employees.

The co-chairs of the Task Force expect to form working groups, chaired by one or more members of the Task Force and comprised of persons with subject matter expertise, to aid in the group’s work.

Issues that will be addressed include: the need to amend current state and local laws regarding the possession, sale, distribution or transfer of marijuana and marijuana products to conform them to Amendment 64′s decriminalization provisions; the need for new regulations for such things as security requirements for marijuana establishments and for labeling requirements; education regarding long-term health effects of marijuana use and harmful effects of marijuana use by those under the age of 18; and the impact of Amendment 64 on employers and employees and the Colorado economy.

The Task Force will also work to reconcile Colorado and federal laws such that the new laws and regulations do not subject Colorado state and local governments and state and local government employees to prosecution by the federal government.

“Task Force members are charged with finding practical and pragmatic solutions to the challenges of implementing Amendment 64 while at all times respecting the diverse perspectives that each member will bring to the work of the task force,” the Executive Order says. “The Task Force shall respect the will of the voters of Colorado and shall not engage in a debate of the merits of marijuana legalization or Amendment 64.”

All meetings of the Task Force and any working groups will be open to the public. The Task Force will also endeavor to solicit public comment as part of its consideration of the policy, legal and procedural issues that need to be resolved to implement Amendment 64.

The Task Force will hold its first meeting at noon Dec. 17 in the Department of Revenue Gaming Conference Room, 17301 W. Colfax Ave., Suite 135, in Golden.

The Task Force is expected to report its recommendations and findings to the Governor, the General Assembly and the Attorney General no later than Feb. 28, 2013, unless it is either earlier terminated or extended beyond that date by further Executive Order.

Hickenlooper and Colorado Attorney General John Suthers sent a letter on Nov. 14 to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder seeking clarity on the federal government’s position related to Amendment 64. Colorado has not yet received a response.

“As we move forward now with implementation of Amendment 64, we will try to maintain as much flexibility as possible to accommodate the federal government’s position on the amendment,” Hickenlooper said.

Official Amendment 64 proclamation:

 

Amendment 64 Proclamation