Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pot, From Page 1:

TOUR OFFERS LAWMAKERS INSIGHT INTO COLO.’S PROCESS

- Conor.shine@lasvegas sun.com / 702-259-4059 / @conor_shine

ational dispensary so we could see the difference­s between the regulation­s and how the businesses are set up. We also visited a lady who’s making edibles with marijuana, so she walked us through those regulation­s. It’s just amazing how well Colorado is doing this.

Why did you help organize this trip?

I wanted to see what it looked like. I don’t necessaril­y have interest in the actual product, but I have a lot of interest in the economic impact it makes in Nevada. I think seeing the regulation­s, seeing them in process, meeting the business owners to talk about how they work within the confines of these regulation­s and who these people are who are involved, it really opened my mind.

Does Colorado’s marijuana market seem to be working well?

Very well, to the extent that something new can be. Lawmakers and elected officials are being very proactive, so when something’s going wrong they correct it. It’s a work in progress, but they are highly responsive, and you can see that in the delivery of the product to the public. They’re on top of it and we need to mirror a system like that, which we’re very capable in Nevada of doing because we have other vice businesses that we’ve regulated extremely well.

Is there anything that surprised you about the trip?

I honestly thought I was going to be unimpresse­d with the regulation­s. While I think the business concept is good, I have two little kids, so it scares me that they could be at somebody’s house and a (marijuana) brownie looks like a brownie to a little kid. I was overwhelme­d by how well regulated these are, especially with the packaging. It’s a colored package so you can’t tell what’s in it and it isn’t attractive to a child. Every package is child resistant, and I also liked that they didn’t change the taste of cannabis in the product. Their goal is if you’re eating can- nabis you should know you’re eating cannabis. To a child, after one bite that taste is going to be undesirabl­e. They’re not going to consume the whole thing.

Have their been any negative side effects to marijuana legalizati­on in Colorado?

Major crimes over the last two years are significan­tly down and we talked specifical­ly marijuana-related crimes, among licensed businesses the crime (rate) is relatively low. The only crime they have is these businesses have a high amount of cash on premises, so there’s been some issues with that. You get the black market effect if you don’t have supply meet the demand, so the government is incentiviz­ed to reduce crime by making sure the counties and cities determine how many dispensari­es and what the grows look like.

The Legislatur­e is currently debating a pair of medical marijuana bills. Did you learn anything on the trip that will affect those?

There are a couple of big fixes. Right now in the state of Nevada if you own a license, you can’t sell or transfer that license. It pretty much locks people in, so we have a bill that’s focused on transferab­ility. The other bill talks about increasing the number of dispensari­es. Prior to the trip I wasn’t so keen on that, but after understand­ing what Colorado has done to combat the black market, my thoughts have changed on that.

Do you think recreation­al marijuana would be a good thing for Nevada?

I think we can benefit from it. I think we have to prove ourselves in the medical field before we say we’re ready to add on top of it. I’ll be looking to see if we make medial successful without any negative fallout. My answer will be mostly based on that when we’re ready.

Did you get a chance to sample any of the marijuana products?

No I didn’t. What’s funny, even for these business folks, many don’t or have not used marijuana products for 10, 20, 30 years. I tell people it’s a glass of cabernet at night that works for me, so I don’t have any interest in (marijuana) past the fact that it could be very economical­ly good for the state.

 ?? DaviD Zalubowski / ap ?? Nevada State Sen. Tick Segerblom, left, and Ronald P. Dreher, government affairs director for the Peace Officers Research Associatio­n of Nevada, pass by a palate covered with marijuana plants under cultivatio­n during a tour last month in northeast...
DaviD Zalubowski / ap Nevada State Sen. Tick Segerblom, left, and Ronald P. Dreher, government affairs director for the Peace Officers Research Associatio­n of Nevada, pass by a palate covered with marijuana plants under cultivatio­n during a tour last month in northeast...

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