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California could reshape pot rules as legal market struggles

Tudo

Troublemaker
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The nation's largest legal marijuana market is struggling.
Illicit sales continue to thrive. A shaky supply chain has customers looking at barren shelves in some shops. There are testing problems. And a proposal to allow home marijuana deliveries in cities that have banned pot sales could lead to a courtroom fight.
A Los Angeles hearing Tuesday provided a window into the state's emerging cannabis economy, in which early enthusiasm for broad legal sales has been followed by anxiety and frustration across a swath of the industry.
The state's top marijuana regulator, Lori Ajax, said after the hearing that the state remains in a challenging transition period as it attempts to transform what was once a largely illegal market into a multibillion-dollar, regulated economy.
"Unfortunately, there is confusion out there," Ajax said.
California kicked off broad legal sales on Jan. 1, and since then temporary rules have governed sales, growing and manufacturing of everything from pot-spiked munchies to infused lotions and balms. The state is now considering changes to those rules, though it's likely to take months before any revisions go into effect.
At the hearing, dozens of marijuana business owners, industry lawyers, activists and consumers each got 90 seconds to tell Ajax what needed to be done to create a more orderly, fair and, hopefully, prosperous marketplace.
Over two hours, she heard complaints about big business threatening mom-and-pop shops, a shortage of licenses and various suggestions for revamping testing rules that are intended to ensure the quality of products that reach store shelves.
Others complained about shifting rules for packaging.
A string of speakers focused on a proposed change in state rules that the League of California Cities says would allow unchecked home marijuana deliveries in places that have banned local pot sales.
To its critics, the change would create an unruly world of shady sales, but supporters say too many Californians are cut off from legal pot, even in a state where voters overwhelmingly approved it.
The fledgling legal system has created a patchwork of local laws, with some cities and counties embracing legal cannabis while others have limited sales or outlawed all commercial pot activity. That's created so-called pot deserts, where sales are forbidden.
Mina Layba, from the Los Angeles suburb of Thousand Oaks, said the proposal would conflict with a local law that bans deliveries. If approved, she said it would undercut licensed shops.
"Who then gets the benefit of taxes from deliveries?" she asked.
The state Bureau of Cannabis Control has said it is merely clarifying what has always been the case: that a licensed pot delivery can be made to "any jurisdiction within the state."
But others said the sickly and frail can't travel to make a cannabis purchase, making home delivery essential, especially in places that don't offer legal shops nearby.
"The patients are citizens too. They have rights and they have needs," said Sarah Armstrong of Americans for Safe Access, an advocacy group.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/cities-warn-unchecked-pot-deliveries-204425783.html
 

therevverend

Well-known member
Veteran
These same kind of stories came out in Washington state until they banned medical, group gardens, and cut the number of plants down to 4. About how all the poor Rec shops weren't making money because the medical people were cutting them out. This is the first step in eliminating medical.
 

Douglas.Curtis

Autistic Diplomat in Training
This sounds exactly like what was predicted by many people, for a few years now.See what happens when you use prohibition to control something? Chaos and suffering.




GOOD JOB CALIFORNIA!! Now EASE up on legislation and let this crap sort itself out.
 

GOT_BUD?

Weed is a gateway to gardening
ICMag Donor
Veteran
How is CO handling it? I was in Colorado Springs recently for work and couldn't visit a shop because rec was outlawed there. But there were quite a few medical dispensaries.

So I travelled down to Pueblo and visited a couple. One of them I really liked and they had a great selection (Rocky Mountain Blaze if you're interested). The other one was smaller and had less of a selection. But grew their own and sold flower, prerolls, and kief of the house brand. They had more edibles as well. (The Spot)
 
Next time your in Colorado Springs, head out to Garden of the Gods, check Emerald Fields..
Manitou Spring maybe..

The wife was recently out there from Out of state and picked up a OZ of Cindy..
 

GOT_BUD?

Weed is a gateway to gardening
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Next time your in Colorado Springs, head out to Garden of the Gods, check Emerald Fields..
Manitou Spring maybe..

The wife was recently out there from Out of state and picked up a OZ of Cindy..

It took a little under an hour to get to Pueblo from where we were staying. According to my coworker, it took about 45 to get to Manitou Springs. Not to mention the prices they were showing online was typically $20 higher for everything I got in Pueblo. It seems the two rec shops there have a monopoly and are comfortable charging more.

For what I picked up, the extra time driving was definitely worth the drive. Especially since work paid for the fuel.:biggrin:
 

BerrySeal

Member
Turns out you can sell mids and reggie to placebo tards when you stick a half pound jar in their face. Now that it's preweighed people know they are smoking bullshit. More people are waking up and realizing all the grodan garbage is just that. Literally begging for it to come out of a pickle jar again so they can actually get a wiff of weed.

Other issue is these retards using grow store bullshit with undisclosed pesticides in it, then playing stupid when they test dirty. Half that shits got pesticides in it cuz it ruins the plants natural defense.

Pretty sad to already know which way the rules are gonna sway. Bye bye prop 215. Bye bye pesticide and bud rot testing.
 
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