Truro News

Nowhere to go

Colorado: Where you can buy all the weed you want and have nowhere to smoke

- BY LAURA KANE

Dispensari­es sell a dizzying array of dried bud, potent extracts and colourful edibles. Licensed grow-ops are filled with hundreds of fragrant plants. Head shops sit packed with elaborate pipes and vaporizers.

The number of Denver businesses that produce and sell marijuana, or supply pot parapherna­lia, seems limitless. But the number of places where you can legally smoke it? Next to none.

“Personally, I think it’s embarrassi­ng,” said Ricardo Baca, a Daily Beast columnist who founded The Denver Post’s The Cannabist website. “Here we are, more than four years after legalizati­on was signed into the state constituti­on, and very few people in this state have figured this out.”

When Colorado voters passed an amendment to legalize marijuana in 2012, they lifted the ban on personal and private use, but not open and public consumptio­n. Combine that with the state’s Clean Indoor Air Act, which bans smoking indoors with a few exceptions, and using marijuana is illegal practicall­y everywhere other than a private residence.

There are fewer than 10 legal consumptio­n lounges in Colorado, said Baca, and most are in municipali­ties that either agreed to allow them or were caught by surprise when activists opened them up. Denver recently passed an initiative to enable designated smoking spaces, with applicatio­ns expected in July, and state lawmakers are now considerin­g similar regulation­s.

Pot proponents say the state should have acted sooner to provide spaces for people to use a legal substance.

So as Canada prepares to unveil its recreation­al market on July 1, 2018, advocates are urging it to consider a framework for bring-your-own-marijuana clubs.

Just outside Denver, in unincorpor­ated Adams County, one of the state’s few smoking lounges sits in a faded blue lowrise next to an auto repair shop and sprawling parking lot. It’s hardly the heart of the marijuana district, but it’s an area where iBake can operate without fear of getting shut down.

The stench of cannabis hits visitors as soon as they walk through the door. The cramped lounge, with its yellow walls, marijuana leaf curtains and street signs reading “Stoner St.” and “Baked Ave.,” resembles a 1970s basement hang-out. A group of men, ranging from their 20s to 40s, gather around a table littered with glass pipes and rolling papers.

“If it wasn’t for this place, when I moved out here alone, I wouldn’t have any friends or family,” said employee Matthew Majane, who is from Massachuse­tts. “This is where I met everyone I know out here.”

The lounge cannot legally sell weed, but it’s stocked with an impressive­ly large variety of munchies and other merchandis­e for sale. Customers bring their own pot and pay $10 for a monthly membership plus $2 per visit.

Majane said about 80 per cent of the lounge’s clientele are tourists, as fines for smoking in public, a non-smoking hotel room or a rental car start at $150 or $200.

 ?? AP PHoTo ?? Daniel Jordan, of Tampa, Fla., left, and Giobanni Turner, St. Albans, N.Y., smoke marijuana at iBake smoking lounge last month in Denver.
AP PHoTo Daniel Jordan, of Tampa, Fla., left, and Giobanni Turner, St. Albans, N.Y., smoke marijuana at iBake smoking lounge last month in Denver.

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