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Toronto dispensaries once owned by the Prince of Pot will all shut down this weekend

The last of the former Cannabis Culture dispensaries in Toronto, once synonymous with Marc and Jodie Emery, will close this weekend after becoming a frequent target of police raids — a consequence the marijuana activists blame on the government’s support of licensed producers.

The dispensaries were making pot available in contravention of the law, until recreational marijuana is actually legalized by the government, a process expected to happen in July 2018.

  • Prince of Pot Marc Emery and wife released on $30K bail and dispensary reopens

But former owner Jodie Emery said she believes dispensaries in Toronto have been raided more frequently in the past year because the federal Liberals want to keep the recreational weed market clear for the licensed producers already selling medical marijuana.

“We’re seeing a government and corporate push to exclude the pioneers, to literally put us in handcuffs and throw us into cages while they move in to open up their own shops to sell their own pot.”

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Jodie Emery, right, said the raids on recreational dispensaries have punished the activists who have fought for legalization. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

The pioneers of pot

The Emerys divested themselves of their Cannabis Culture shops in Toronto on March 10, as part of their $30,000 bail conditions on possession and drug trafficking charges.

Jodie Emery said the couple decided to open the storefronts to fund their activism — and because she believed the franchise model would be successful once Ottawa legalized pot.

“We wanted to have our spot in this industry, because we’ve earned it and we deserve it …after 10 years of being broke and suffering through prison and court,” she said.

Jamie McConnell, Cannabis Culture general manager

Jamie McConnell, the owner at the Village Dispensary, said he’ll keep doing this somewhere else. (CBC)

The 461 Church St. location was reborn as the Village Cannabis Dispensary after the Emerys sold it to Jamie McConnell, the store’s former manager.

McConnell said his landlord will no longer rent to the dispensary, something he said has happened because of pressure from the police raids and the city.

“I was planning on being here forever, my goal was jail or the landlord locking me out. It looks like the landlord locked me out.”

He said he believes it’s better to have marijuana “activists and users” sell the products than licensed producers, because they know first-hand what makes a quality product.

“I don’t know what the government’s going to do as far as legalization, but I’m not going to stop.”

Legal producers also took risks: lawyer

But Andrea Hill, a corporate and securities lawyer with the firm SkyLaw who represents several regulated marijuana firms, said the dispensaries have been shut down because what they’re doing is illegal. It has nothing to do with the regulated medical marijuana industry.

And those licensed producers have been pioneers in the industry as well, she said.

  • Liberals want to move up pot legalization to avoid Canada Day celebrations
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“They’ve put themselves on the line just as much as anyone else,” the lawyer said. “If a business is operating outside of the law and it can’t make it and it has to shut down I think that means that the law wins — and that people who play by the rules win, at the end of the day. I think that’s a good thing.

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The Liberal government is expected to make recreational pot legal by July 1, 2018. (Julie Gordon/Reuters)

Why Melissa Etheridge is crushing on cannabis, Canada and Trudeau: ‘I love what he stands for, what you all stand for’

Rocker Melissa Etheridge is coming to Toronto, and she couldn’t be more excited.Story continues belowAside from performing for Canadian Music Week (on April 22 at Toronto’s Danforth Music Hall), Etheridge is in town for the first-ever O’Cannabiz Conference & Expo, a three-day event running from April 21 to 23. The gathering will explore the latest marijuana regulations, industry standards and best practices for both medicinal and recreational marijuana in Canada. Several keynote speakers — including Etheridge herself — will discuss the future of cannabis and the “budding” Canadian market.Etheridge has been a cannabis activist since surviving breast cancer in 2005, when she used marijuana to deal with the adverse side effects of chemotherapy. She doesn’t mince words: she says the plant has changed her life. In 2014, she teamed up with Greenway Dispensary in California to create a line of cannabis-infused wine, called Know Label Wine, and then in 2016, she launched her own company, Etheridge Farms, which produces legal cannabis products (in California only).READ MORE: Marc Emery claims smoking marijuana makes people better driversShe’s looking to expand her businesses north of the border, and with Canada considering a change in marijuana legalization by June 2018, it’s looking positive for the longtime musician. Global News spoke with Etheridge about her new initiatives, why the U.S. differs so much from Canada in terms of our views on marijuana, and why she’s a big fan of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.Global News: Can you tell me a little bit about your background, your relationship with cannabis and how it has changed over the years?
Melissa Etheridge: Before breast cancer I was that casual rock-star user, it wasn’t something I did all the time, but I certainly didn’t turn it down. I probably did it more than I did drinking, but it was sort of a social thing.
When I went through breast cancer, I used it as medicine, and it really became clear to me what a medicine it is. It can be so powerful and strong for so many things, and it made me an advocate when I felt the pain relief and its help with appetite. I started walking that walk and that led me into the community in California — these fine people who’ve been fighting this fight for many, many years — and inspired me to jump into the business.Why does marijuana have a terrible reputation? Is it historical, is it ignorance, is it both?
It’s lack of education, and there was a concerted, amazing effort in the ’30s and ’70s to really vilify cannabis, to make it scary. “This is from bad people across the border, they’re bringing it into our country…” They really did a number on Americans, especially my generation.
Realistically, if we compare it to anything… any other sort of drug…
Anything. [Laughs]
… marijuana is far less impactful, less damaging. Correct?
Yeah. You see what a good PR job they did on it! It’s very sad, but slowly… I feel it’s like the LGBT movement 20 years ago. It takes people to come out of the closet, to tell their family members, their coworkers, their neighbourhood, “Hey, I am a person who smokes cannabis. I am a contributing citizen and I’m not a stereotype.”
READ MORE: Pot legalization in Canada: Here’s what you need to know about proposed lawYou have two marijuana businesses on the go right now. What sorts of products do you make?
We have vape pens coming out in a few weeks, edibles, oils… oh, and a topical! When I started seeing how many uses cannabis has, aside from the psychotropic effects, I was blown away. The topicals have been used for generations for broken bones, sprains, cuts, burns and bruises. It goes deep into the wound and helps healing because [humans] have our own endocannabanoid system that connects with cannabanoids. [Laughs] It’s like we were made to be on the Earth with this medicine.
I have grandmothers who have knitted all their lives, and arthritis has crippled their hands. They sleep with gloves on after putting the topical on their hands, and they come in the next day and say, “It’s a miracle!” I’ve seen this with my very own eyes. If we could just reschedule it, make it a legal herb… we could investigate and research the amazing things this flower can do.Music-wise and songwriting-wise, how does cannabis impact you?
Cannabis and music go hand-in-hand. There is the experience of listening, which is a mystical experience that we can’t explain. This shows how important music is to our very existence. When you have an herb that enhances that experience, that deepens it into our soul and emotional life, then that’s something. My ultimate goal is… I want a Melissa Etheridge show and a Melissa Etheridge dispensary so people can have that experience. I love to smoke and write, it puts me in a place of inspiration. It sets me in a place to understand how human beings are connected in this wonderful way, and we shouldn’t be afraid of the spiritual side of us.
Just last week, the Canadian government announced it would be tabling legislation to legalize marijuana. Things are changing here. Any thoughts on that, considering we’re just across the border, yet we have such different viewpoints?
Yes! I love Canada! [Laughs] Do you know what’s weird? I can have my legal cannabis here and be in Canada and have my legal cannabis there, but I can’t fly from Canada to California with my cannabis. [Governments] really have to step up with how it’s changing and what’s happening. Once they take the fear out of it, then we can really move forward with it like you guys are. You’ll find there will be more jobs, the economy would be better, people are going to be healthier, there will be fewer opioid deaths, fewer alcohol deaths.. really, the plus sides of this are astounding.
READ MORE: Melissa Etheridge reveals why she rejected Brad Pitt as sperm donorSo what is the difference here, between the U.S. and Canada?
Your country has been on its journey, and yes, you have religion and values, but there hasn’t been a sector of Canadians who’ve been taught that your country is based on certain religious values. That can kind of mess up something. When things are thrown into the category of “good” and “evil,” and they’re never looked at again… cannabis, we don’t even talk about it! It’s thrown into the “drugs” category.
Canada has been moving along on all fronts. You were the first with the LGBT rights, now with cannabis, the immigration policies. Your [Prime Minister] Justin Trudeau, I want to kiss him on the mouth. [Laughs] OK, maybe not on the mouth! [Laughs]It’s because he’s “hot,” right?
[Laughs] He is, I know. Even to me, isn’t that weird? No, but seriously, I love what he stands for, and what you all stand for. He’s a consistent leader, and your government is showing consistent leadership. Not from fear, but from looking into the future and saying, “Wow, look where we can go.” I’m loving me some Canada.
[This interview has been condensed and edited.]Follow @CJancelewicz

Here’s Why The Beauty Industry Is Embracing Cannabis Like Never Before

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Weed is taking over the world of beauty. From hair care to body lotions, pot-infused products are on the rise. Though most of these products cannot get you high, they still come with their own perks. Not only can they moisturize dry skin, but they also can also ease inflammation and so much more. Hemp seed oil and CBD are all the rage these days, and people cannot get enough. For this reason, brands from all over the world are welcoming pot with open arms.

Weed is taking over the world of beauty

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Sparking a bowl comes with its own set of benefits. But it’s cannabis beauty products that people are going crazy over.

From soaps to shampoos, the world of beauty is embracing weed. And so are the individuals who cannot seem to get enough of these luxurious, pot-infused delights.

The majority of these beauty products cannot get you high. However, they are still without a doubt useful in so many ways.

Not only can hemp seed oil and CBD beauty products reduce inflammation, but they can also treat a cornucopia of skin conditions, such as Eczema, and so much more. For this reason, beauty brands all across the globe are welcoming the herb with open arms. Ones that you may know and love.

For example, Lush Fresh Handmade Cosmetics, a beauty brand that’s famous for their beautiful bath bombs. In addition to their bath fizzers, which do not contain the slightest hint of weed, unfortunately, the company offers Henna Fluff-Eaze, a hair treatment containing organic hemp seed oil.

Smashing the herb’s stigma through beauty products

beauty 2 Heres Why The Beauty Industry Is Embracing Cannabis Like Never BeforePhoto credit

While most of these weed-infused beauty products include hemp seed oil, CBD products are also on the rise. And according to Andrea Revivo, product manager for Spa De Soleil, its healing properties and benefits are helping to smash the stigma surrounding the herb,

We’ve been seeing this step away from the stigma of cannabis and [people] really understanding the benefits and healing properties.

We’re seeing people wanting it in their skin care and anti-aging creams, face mists, face masks and lip balms. And now I’m seeing the rise of luxury skin care with CBD.

Of course, the majority of these CBD beauty products require a medical card and a trip to a dispensary. But you can also purchase some of these goodies from large, online retail shops.

As for THC beauty products, the ones that can get you high, you can find most of those in California. The Golden State is what has made has made medical pot a billion-dollar industry. Not to mention, it’s home to several top-notch weed brands.

Take Whoopi & Maya, for example, a company that focuses on relieving menstrual cramps. Women swear by these infused products, and beauty bloggers cannot stop talking about them.

With Proposition 64 being the new law in California, the state is now in a position to take advantage of post-prohibition product development. The future for weed beauty products is a bright one, indeed.

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Brittney Sanger

I am a free spirit located in a small college town. Most of the time I am busy working towards my degree in Healthcare Management. During my spare time, I enjoy writing, reading, shopping, music and board games. Most of all, I like Cannabis. I am a firm believer in Cannabis and the good it does for people. Marijuana is my motivator, my medicine for when I’m sick, and my most favored pick-me-up. Meeting and connecting with other Cannabis lovers is a passion of mine. It’s a nice feeling to know that so many people feel the same way I do on the subject.
13087790 488318254699179 6066319535818198417 n Heres Why The Beauty Industry Is Embracing Cannabis Like Never Before

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Pot lovers have more to celebrate on 4/20 Weed Day

Pot lovers have something extra to celebrate on this year’s Weed Day: the federal government’s legislation to decriminalize recreational marijuana introduced last week.The annual April 20 cannabis culture celebrations have grown in significance this year with Ottawa’s Cannabis Act, highlighting a path to legalize recreational marijuana use by Canada Day next year, with distribution and sale laws varying from province to province.The government introduced a series of bills, including one to strengthen impaired driving regulations.Story continues belowUntil anticipated laws are in place, however, it remains a criminal offence for an individual to possess any amount of marijuana.READ MORE: The highs and lows of pot legalizationWhile the federal government says current marijuana laws will be enforced until new laws are passed, marijuana activist Eric Shepard says he hopes the police take a relaxed approach to enforcement during a Thursday afternoon rally at Victoria Park.“There is a change in the air. I believe the London Police Service recognize that their strategy was ineffective and unnecessary so hopefully, now we will be able to have a more reasoned event,” said Shepard.In the meantime, it’s unclear how marijuana-related charges laid against smokers and pot shop owners before Ontario courts will be dealt with.Several pot dispensaries in London have reopened, after police raids in early March led to drug-related charges for up to 10 people. It remains illegal for medicinal pot smokers to purchase marijuana from non-government-licensed producers.READ MORE: Canadians trust pot producers less than banks, realtors and fast food companies: reportShepard is using Thursday’s gathering to address what he calls flaws within the legislation.“We do need to dampen that celebration by recognizing that these regulations are not perfect – they’re far from perfect in fact. This is an opportunity for us to unpack that legislation,” said Shepard. “I, for one, hope this is a gateway to a larger conversation around drug use because we all use drugs. From caffeine to alcohol to cannabis – they’re all drugs so we need to think about these things intelligently.”The proposed legislation would allow adults 18 and over to possess up to 30 grams of marijuana and grow up to four plants per residence for personal use.Hundreds of activists are expected to flock to Victoria Park Thursday afternoon to kick-start a day of smoking marijuana, with an emphasis on communal smoking – around 4:20 p.m.

4 Products Medical Cannabis Patients Need To Avoid

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Currently, the cannabis industry is in an odd stage of growth. Individual states have created mandatory consumer safety requirements for medical and recreational products, yet some states are still working out the kinks with their new systems and others are lagging behind with meaningful regulation. In the wild west of the cannabis space, it’s particularly important for medical cannabis patients to be picky. After all, you are your best medical cannabis advocate. Here’s are the medical cannabis products it may be best for patients to avoid.

1. Products that have been exposed to commercial chemicals

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There was a recent scare in California when Steep Hill Lab found that 93 percent of randomly sampled California cannabis strains tested positive for toxic, residual pesticides and fungicides.

Of specific concern was the use of myclobutanil, which is a fungicide often used in grapes. The chemical is considered safe for eating when used properly, but when it’s heated and inhaled, that’s another story.

When smoked, myclobutanil transforms into toxic hydrogen cyanide. Exposure in high doses can be fatal, in low doses, this compound is aggravating and can potentially make you sick. Medical cannabis patients don’t want to be inhaling this stuff.

No matter where you live, there are a few ways to avoid pesticide contaminated bud. Here are some general tips and tricks:

  • Grow yourself and grow organic
  • Ask a caregiver to grow organically for you
  • Visit your caregivers grow to get an idea of how they treat their plants
  • Don’t be afraid to ask questions, like:
    • What kinds of products do you use on your plants?
    • Do you flush your soil?
    • Have you sent samples into a lab?
  • Do your research on who supplies for your collective or dispensary
  • Chat up your budtenders to get a better idea of what cannabis products are the safest and best suit your needs
  • Do your research on companies that supply your CBD or hemp oil online
  • Buy lab tested bud whenever possible

If you’re making your own medical cannabis oil, it is highly recommended to only use organic cannabis. While a particular batch may pass pesticide testing in a given state, cannabis oil is highly concentrated.

An extract or an oil made from bulk bud considered safe may not actually pass pesticide screening in a concentrated form. Thus, it’s best to go organic from the start.

2. Products that contain potentially toxic additives

Buyer Beware Avoid 2 4 Products Medical Cannabis Patients Need To AvoidPhoto credit

Recently, Project CBD has released reports on possible toxic additives in vaporizer cartridges. Of particular concern was propylene glycol (PG) and polyethylene glycol (PEG). Both of these thinning agents are considered safe to consume orally, but when heated and inhaled they are less safe.

In fact, both compounds transform into formaldehyde when heated to high temperatures. PEG also breaks down into the known carcinogen acetaldehyde.

While these toxins seem to be released at temperatures higher than the average pen vape (446˚F, 230˚C), holding on to a button too long or taking hard draws may increase the heat in your vapor pen and thereby put you close to the off-gassing temperature.

This is not to say that all vapor cartridges are bad. Based on this evidence, however, it may be beneficial to be a bit more picky about the products you buy. Ingredient lists should tell you whether or not PG or PEG were added to your pen. If concerned, contact a manufacturer.

Instead of purchasing these products, opt for cartridges that use vegetable glycerine or medium-chain triglyceride oils (MCT oils, like coconut oil). Though, unfortunately, even MCT oils can produce small amounts of acetaldehyde when heated to high temperatures. Though, it produced 33 times less than PEG.

For more information on how to buy healthier vapor cartridges, check out the full article here.

3. Discolored extractions

Buyer Beware Avoid 3 4 Products Medical Cannabis Patients Need To AvoidPhoto credit

As a general rule of thumb, if it doesn’t look good, smell good, or taste good, you probably don’t want to put it in your body. Sometimes low-quality butane hash oil (BHO) and other concentrates will be a deep brown color.

These products are not ideal for medical cannabis patients, who may have compromised immune systems and less able to clear out environmental toxins from the body.

Whether or not discolored extractions (or any extracts, for that matter) have unsafe levels of residual solvents will vary from sample to sample. Opting for lab tested extractions whenever possible will help you avoid inhaling potentially harmful or irritating solvents.

However, discolored extractions may have been heated at very high temperatures, compromising the integrity of the plant and its medicinal compounds. This makes for poor quality medicine.

To find a high-quality concentrate, look for a golden or amber color. Sometimes it can be a little on the dark amber side, but avoid products that are:

  • Muddy brown and waxy
  • Lumpy or burnt looking
  • Hard black rocks

Discolored or weird textured extractions may also hit very harshly and induce uncomfortable coughing that can be a little too jarring for someone who is ill. In times of sickness, it’s recommended to get the highest quality products that are still in an affordable price range.

It’s important to note that Rick Simpson Oil is almost always a very dark green, black, brown color. Some types of hash that have not been extracted using a solvent may also be quite dark. If you’re concerned, ask a budtender if possible.

4. Bud that may be moldy

Buyer Beware Avoid 4 4 Products Medical Cannabis Patients Need To AvoidPhoto credit

In another California investigation, Steep Hill Lab in Berkely gathered 20 samples of dispensary bud and analyzed them for the presence of pathogenic bacteria and fungus. For this work, Steep Hill teamed up with Dr. George Thompson, an infectious disease expert at UC Davis, and Dr. Joseph Tuscano, at the UC Davis Cancer Center.

After analyzing the microbial DNA in the samples, Dr. David Land of Steep Hill was taken aback. He told KPIX 5,

We were a little bit startled that ninety percent of those samples had something on them. Some DNA of some pathogen.

The team found several different harmful pathogens. As Thompson explains,

Klebsiella, E.coli, Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, these are all very serious infections for anybody in the hospital. But particularly in […] the cancer population.

Of course, the easiest way to avoid moldy cannabis is to purchase bud that has passed laboratory inspections. However, many people around the world lack access to proper cannabis safety measures. For everyone else, there are a few simple but imperfect ways to avoid moldy cannabis:

  • Avoid cannabis with visible white, gray, or black fuzz
  • Avoid cannabis that smells musty
  • Avoid cannabis bud that is too damp or has been exposed to rain and water
  • Avoid smoking cannabis that tastes “off” or causes chest pain and excessive irritation when inhaled
  • If possible, make sure your grow room is humidity controlled
  • Handle cannabis plants with clean hands and clothing
  • Make sure your grow room is well ventilated
  • Always keep your grow room clean and animal-free
  • Check out your caregiver’s grow and make sure it is clean, dry, and well ventilated

For more information on how to spot moldy bud, check out the full article here. Want to know what moldy weed looks like? Read here.

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Police chief says marijuana laws difficult and expensive to enforce

Published: Apr 19, 2017, 1:24 pm • Updated: Apr 19, 2017, 1:24 pm

By John Jackson, Special To The Denver Post

The Denver Post opinion pages solicited commentary from various marijuana policy and industry leaders, as well as the public, for a special cannabis-themed edition of the Sunday Perspective section the weekend before 4/20. The Cannabist is presenting these op-eds throughout the week.


While serving on Gov. John Hickenlooper’s task force to implement Amendment 64, I quickly learned that we were changing more than our laws, we were engaged in a huge paradigm shift which was the creation of what would be a new marijuana culture. To this day, Colorado law enforcement struggles with the litany of conflicts created by “legal marijuana.”

These conflicts have caused confusion, expense, frustration and an inability to keep pace with the constant changes being applied to the laws. Regulating a new industry from scratch has resulted in lots of trial and error and hundreds of legislative bills — all of which local law enforcement has a role in enforcing.

Marijuana legalization has become an unfunded mandate for communities, like Greenwood Village, that have banned either recreational stores or medical dispensaries or both. These jurisdictions are still required to address the safety issues created by marijuana legalization.

By choice, these cities and counties have opted out of the legal marijuana systems and any subsequent tax revenue. In spite of the ability to ban marijuana sales, communities still have the many consequences of marijuana; such as open and public consumption, impairment related traffic accidents, and large home-based grows. Local governments who chose to ban marijuana have these costs with none of the compensating resources.

Public events have become a challenge to manage with the many ways people can openly consume marijuana in violation of state laws prohibiting public use. The biggest complaint that local law enforcement receives is the open and public use of marijuana. There is no question that our constitution prohibits marijuana consumption in an open and public manner. Yet marijuana advocates at the capitol promote a muddy and unclear definition of open and public.

Then there’s marijuana impaired driving. There still is not a well proven tool to field test for either presence or impairment with marijuana. A significant concern is the false negative which is being created from law enforcement not routinely taking people to the hospital for a blood test, the only currently reliable test for the presence of marijuana. Taking all people to the hospital is time consuming and costly process for law enforcement and for citizens. Because we do not have the resources to test everyone we believe might be impaired by marijuana, or marijuana in combination with alcohol, there is a perception that many fewer people are impaired by marijuana than law enforcement believes there actually are.

One of the biggest, and perhaps defining issues facing the future of legal marijuana in Colorado may be how well Colorado can place some preventive guardrails on what has been defined as the “gray market.” This market takes marijuana grown under legal pretense to then divert it out of state. The further Colorado marijuana gets from Colorado, the higher the value of it to the seller, as it may be worth five times what it was here in Colorado.

There are several key variables which have contributed to the proliferation of the gray market, but perhaps the largest is the manipulation of the extended plant counts and the allowances given for caregivers to grow their marijuana in residential homes. Large scale growing operations, which were not anticipated by the voters to be in residential areas, have become commonplace, and create hazards across our state. When four or five people come together to grow their hundreds of marijuana plants in a residential home, it is tantamount to being the marijuana source for the grey market hiding in plain sight.

In Arapahoe and Douglas Counties, law enforcement recently served numerous search warrants and arrested many people for using home grows as a method of diversion to other states, under one control. There have been countless examples of this kind of criminal behavior.

Many people who used marijuana when they were younger have no understanding of the potency of today’s marijuana and the ever-changing consumption methods, whether it be “vaping” or “dabbing.” The many ways that marijuana is consumed and how the THC is absorbed have not been well studied as to their levels of impairment and the time it takes to eliminate the impairment. By “dabbing” high potency concentrates and consuming “shatter” people can achieve psychotic highs not normally associated with marijuana consumption. It is through these consumption methods and edibles that we have documented some horrific examples of bizarre behavior here in Colorado and why potency needs to be better addressed.

Marijuana and THC are overtly commercialized and marketed. People seem to acknowledge that when they voted to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana, they did not vote for stores to be on every corner or for marketing geared toward enticing our youth into use.

If there is a lesson to be learned from these challenges, it is that we must stick to both the spirit and letter of the voter-approved amendments 20 and 64, with an error to the side of public safety.

I have witnessed what appears to be some medicinal benefits of marijuana. This has caused me to take a step back to frame my thoughts on how we should allow for this beneficial use, while keeping the public safe. It is time for a much larger scope of testing, regulation and distribution of medical marijuana and concentrates. At this time, the controls are simply not there at a state level to ensure quality and dosages via a reliable and regulated testing and distribution system.

An obscene amount of money, both legally and illegally, is being derived from the legalization of marijuana. Many people and perhaps even the State of Colorado marijuana tax recipients have become intoxicated with these funds. Yet, the constant change in marijuana laws makes it hard to measure effectiveness, and create success with any of the regulation, because it changes often before it is implemented.

We must slow this social experiment down to a pace at which we better understand the unintended consequences. Public safety must be paramount as we evaluate these new policies. I encourage the legislature to adequately fund and evaluate the effects of legalization on public safety, and I encourage the public to look carefully at these unintended consequences in their communities.

John Jackson is the chief of police for Greenwood Village.

This story was first published on DenverPost.com

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