Friday, October 25, 2013

Abandoned Chocolate Factory to Start Selling Marijuana

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This former Hershey factory in Ontario is on track to be repurposed into a weed manufacturing plant. It's like right out of a fairy tale! Smiths Falls Mayor Dennis Staples couldn't be more pleased, and Canadian stoners everywhere are rejoicing at the prospect of a hydroponic hub, where weed flows like wine.

When the Hershey factory came to Smiths Falls in June of 1963, it brought jobs, tourists, and money to the town. When they shut down the factory, considered "the Willy Wonka Wonderland of Eastern Ontario," the jobs, the tourists and the money left. Now the smell of melted chocolate is being replaced by primo weed and Smiths Falls has a new opportunity for growth.

Ottawa-based medical marijuana company, Tweed Inc. has set its sights on the 470,000 sq. ft. abandoned chocolate factory in Smiths Falls, Ottawa. Location scouting has been difficult because landlords are particularly snooty when it comes to renting out space for "sanctioned drug production." This means jobs, revenue and buzz for the town. For Mayor Staples this is personal and he couldn't be more pleased. His brother lost his battle with colon cancer and medical marijuana "made his last days on this Earth much more bearable."

In June, the Canadian Department of Health said that people were no longer permitted to grow medicinal marijuana in their homes. Instead, they're allowing companies to manufacture and supply the drug. The chairman of a drug panel for Canada's Association of Chiefs of Police, Mark Mander remarked that this licensing was a "tightening up versus loosening up" of drug laws in that it distinguishes "the legitimate from the illicit use."

Over 30,000 Canadians have medical marijuana licenses, and Health Canada estimates that sales of the medicinal weed could reach $1.25 billion by 2024.

This article was brought to you by the Huffingtonpost

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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Bill In Massachusetts Introduced To Legalize And Regulate Marijuana

A House Bill 1632 was introduced in hopes to make Massachusetts the third state to legalize and regulate the adult use of marijuana. The measure has been referred to the Joint Committee on the Judiciary, but has yet to be scheduled for a hearing.

House Bill 1632 would regulate the commercial cultivation, processing, and retail of cannabis to adults over the age of 21. You can read the full text of this proposal here.

Massachusetts is one of a growing number of states where lawmakers are considering full cannabis legalization. For updates on the proposed bill be sure to visit MassCann/Norml.

Since I live in the state of Massachusetts I will do my best to blog about the bill as progress is made. Make sure to check back with us, along with NORML, for information on the progression of the proposed bill.


Story by: Cannabis Country


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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

D.C.'s Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Say They Are Losing Money

WASHINGTON -- You might not think it would be possible to lose a buck in the marijuana business. In the nation's capital, you'd apparently be wrong.

“All medical marijuana businesses are operating at a loss,” D.C. dispensary Capital City Care's general manager David Guard told the Washington Times.

“So far, all we have been doing is bleeding cash,” Bob Simmons, with one of D.C.'s six approved cultivation centers, Alternative Solutions, said to the paper.

D.C.'s medical marijuana program has been operational for some three months now. In that time, only 59 patients have been added to the registry of legal buyers, reports the Washington Post:
The city’s pioneering dispensaries say they are losing money; doctors remain fearful to write prescriptions; and patients with HIV or cancer who may legally obtain the drug say they have been stymied by lengthy applications and warnings that the purchases remain illegal under federal law. Those were among the many warnings that advocates for a robust medical marijuana program ticked off Monday at a hearing, as they urged D.C. council members to relax the city’s strict medical marijuana standards.
Advocates are asking that the District's program be expanded, since current regulations allow medical marijuana to be prescribed only to patients with cancer, glaucoma, HIV/AIDS or a condition that causes severe muscle spasms. D.C.'s program is among the country's most restrictive; other jurisdictions are far more expansive, allowing marijuana to be prescribed for such conditions as anorexia and migraine, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, nausea and Hepatitis C.

Another limitation: Few doctors in the nation's capital are now able to prescribe medical marijuana. Via Washingtonian:
Najma Roberts, a spokeswoman for the Department of Health, said that since the program launched, only 62 physicians of the approximately 1,400 accredited by the city have picked up the recommendation forms. And of those, only 39 have actually filled them out.
The low participation is said to be at least partly due to doctors' fears of breaking federal law.
D.C. Councilmember Yvette M. Alexander (D-Ward 7), who chairs the Council's health committee, said she was amenable to growing the District's medical marijuana program -- with reservations.
“We already have a lot of HIV, cancer, glaucoma -- there are thousands in the district," she said, according to the Washington Post. "We’re talking about expanding, but we’re not really utilizing it to the full extent currently.”.......

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Monday, October 21, 2013

Cat Caught Bringing Cannabis Into Moldovan Prison

Believe it or not, a cat was busted for smuggling weed into a prison in Moldova. No, I am not tripping, this really happened. After noticing a cat routinely entering and leaving the prison through a hole in a fence they guards became suspicious.
The guards noticed a odd collar on the cat. After closer inspection, they found two packets of cannabis attached to the collar. 
The Department of Penitentiary Institutions said Friday that someone in the village of Pruncul was using the cat as a courier to supply inmates with dope at the local prison......
 
You can read the full story at Cannabis Country

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Sunday, October 20, 2013

High Marijuana Taxes Could Derail Legalization Plans

Washington State - When Congress banned marijuana in 1937, it did so in the guise of taxation, imposing a prohibitive levy on cannabis and created criminal penalties for those who failed to pay it. Marijuana taxes also played a prominent role in what may be the beginning of the end for pot prohibition: the legalization measures that voters in Colorado and Washington approved last fall.

Supporters of Washington’s I-502 and Colorado’s Amendment 64 emphasized the revenue that the government could reap by recognizing cannabis production and distribution as a legitimate business. The tricky part, as officials in both states will soon discover, is balancing the desire for tax revenue against the desire to eliminate the black market created by prohibition. Or as UCLA drug policy expert Mark Kleiman, an adviser to Washington’s marijuana regulators, puts it: “What if we gave a pot legalization and nobody came?”

The dilemma is especially clear in Washington, where I-502 specified a 25 percent excise tax at three levels: sales between producers and processors, between processors and retailers, and between retailers and consumers. That’s in addition to the standard state sales tax of 8.75 percent. According to calculations by BOTEC, Kleiman’s consulting firm, these taxes will make the retail cost of cannabis 58 percent higher than it would otherwise be, accounting for 37 percent of the price paid by consumers. One BOTEC projection, based on a production cost of $2 per gram, indicates the after-tax retail price will be $17 per gram, or $482 per ounce. Another projection, based on a production cost of $3 per gram, puts the retail price at $25.50 per gram, or $723 per ounce.

That’s a lot more than pot smokers in Washington currently pay. According to the website Price of Weed, which collects reports from marijuana consumers across the country, the average price for high-quality cannabis in Washington is $239 per ounce. Some of those purchases may be from medical marijuana dispensaries, which are not explicitly authorized by state law but operate as patient and provider cooperatives. Washington’s medical marijuana rules are relatively permissive, allowing cultivation and possession by patients with a wide variety of conditions, as long as they have a doctor’s recommendation. Dispensaries in Seattle currently charge $250 or so per ounce, and medical marijuana sales remain untaxed under I-502.

In short, BOTEC’s projections indicate that the after-tax price for marijuana sold by state-licensed outlets will be something like two to three times as high as prices charged by black-market dealers or dispensaries. “That’s a big problem,” Kleiman says. “The legal market is going to have a hard time competing with the illegal market, but a particularly hard time competing with the untaxed, unregulated sort-of-legal market.”

Colorado’s constitution, unlike Washington’s, requires separate voter approval for new taxes. The price of legal marijuana in Colorado therefore will depend on the fate of Proposition AA, an initiative on next month’s ballot that would authorize not only the 15 percent excise tax mentioned in Amendment 64 but also a special sales tax of up to 15 percent. That’s on top of the standard state and local sales taxes, which in Denver total 8 percent. Meanwhile, voters in Denver, where most pot stores will be located, will decide whether to approve an additional municipal marijuana tax of up to 15 percent. Supporters of the marijuana taxes, including Amendment 64 co-author Brian Vicente and the Medical Marijuana Industry Group, argue that they are necessary to fund an effective regulatory system, which in turn will help discourage federal interference. Opponents, led by Rob Corry, a Denver attorney and longtime marijuana activist, argue that excessively high taxes will undermine regulation by preserving the black market. “Over-taxation creates a marijuana market ripe for takeover by the unregulated, untaxed, underground market,” Corry says.

The Proposition AA campaign deems that prospect “unlikely,” saying “the combined taxes on retail marijuana sales will add about 22 percent to the retail cost of marijuana products”—less than half the impact of Washington’s taxes. That estimate does not include local taxes, which could make a big difference given Denver’s important role in the marijuana industry.Washington and Colorado legislators will have the power to adjust tax rates. But they may be tempted to keep taxes high in the hope of generating more revenue, even when reducing rates might actually boost revenue by allowing licensed sellers to attract more business. The backers of hefty marijuana taxes are putting a lot of trust in legislators’ ability to anticipate unintended consequences and learn from experience—skills that do not come naturally to politicians.

This article was brought to you by Forbes.com
Author: Jacob Sullum

50 Pounds Of Cannabis Seized From A Michigan Medical Marijuana Dispensary Raid

A raid on a Michigan medical marijuana dispensary known as Sweet Greens turned up 50 to 60 pounds of cannabis. JNET members raided the shop at 5:30 p,m. on Wednesday October 16th according to Michigan State Police Detective Lt. Dave Cook.

Lt. Cook claimed the location was still operating as a dispensary, despite a February Michigan Supreme Court ruling which said dispensaries are not protected under the state's medical marijuana law. Shortly after that ruling, Jackson County dispensaries had been sent a cease and desist order from the Jackson County Prosecutor's Office........

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