Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Clark County officials are in no rush to authorize marijuana lounges.

- By Colton Lochhead

Could the nation’s first legal and licensed marijuana lounge end up in Southern Nevada?

The short answer? Yes, technicall­y. The long answer? It’s complicate­d. “There’s no rush,” Clark County Commission­er Chris Giunchigli­ani said Friday.

The Nevada Legislatur­e’s lawyers threw a curveball to local government­s last week with a legal opinion saying nothing in the state law prohibits marijuana consumptio­n lounges.

After months of following the guidance of the state in navigating the legalizati­on process, local government­s are poised to decide whether they want to move forward with something that no city in the nation has done — license and regulate social consumptio­n lounges.

Not so fast

Although elected local officials have an appetite for cannabis clubs, even the most pro-pot lawmakers like Giunchigli­ani are pumping the brakes.

Giunchigli­ani said she initially opposed consumptio­n lounges, but she’s seen the need for them since recreation­al marijuana sales started July 1.

Smoking in public is illegal, and all casinos have been told to ban it on their properties. Giunchigli­ani said tourists complain they have no place to smoke the drug they bought legally in Las Vegas.

“We’ve put people at risk of violating the law,” she said. “They’re gonna consume someplace.”

But Giunchigli­ani said that’s not enough reason to immediatel­y license such lounges.

“We have to do this right,” she said. North Las Vegas City Councilman Isaac Barron said “the time has come” for legalized pot lounges. But he said rushing blindly to open consumptio­n lounges without due diligence “would be contrary to what we want to achieve in legalizati­on.”

“There’s a lot of things we need to work out,” Barron said.

Moving slow in Denver

Denver is the only municipali­ty that has legal consumptio­n lounges on the books after voters in the city approved a ballot measure last November.

But seeing those lounges become a reality in the Mile-High City is still a ways off.

Denver started taking applicatio­ns for what it calls social consumptio­n permits last month, but officials told the local magazine Westword that it could take several months, at minimum, before those spots can open.

In Nevada, Clark County appears to be the most prepared entity to jump into the pot lounge arena, and county commission­ers are poised to discuss the topic on Tuesday.

The county’s Green Ribbon Advisory Panel, which consists of marijuana, gaming and tourism industry leaders, has discussed the topic at length since March and has considered a one-year pilot program to start.

But not everyone is on board with the idea.

Tread carefully

Commission­er Susan Brager said she has too many unanswered questions

about the implementa­tion of the lounges to allow them to begin operating in Clark County.

Among other questions, Brager wanted to know who would be able to operate a lounge, where they could and could not be located, what kind of ventilatio­n they would be required to have and where the marijuana products consumed inside them would come from.

Brager said she’d like the county to hold a town hall on the issue. Living up to its promise of being a gold standard for recreation­al marijuana would require input from citizens, she said.

“I think we’re moving too quickly still,” Brager said. “Once you open up the door, where does it go from there?”

Gov. Brian Sandoval also opposes pot lounges, and though local government­s have all the say in whether to allow them, Sandoval’s reluctance could prompt trepidatio­n.

Sandoval said having legal barlike locations for marijuana use could draw the ire of the U.S. Department of Justice and Attorney General Jeff Sessions — who many in the marijuana industry view as one of their top opponents.

“I think that this might invite more (federal) scrutiny with regard to the sale of recreation­al marijuana,” Sandoval said last week.

Giunchigli­ani said local government­s should take the governor’s comments to heart.

“I’m not so much worried about being first,” she said. “We don’t want to do anything that puts a bull’s-eye on our heads.”

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