Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pot retailers request 24-hour operations

Proprietor­s cite recent after-hours robberies

- By Colton Lochhead Las Vegas Review-journal

Marijuana stores want to be part of Sin City’s 24/7 life.

Cannabis dispensari­es in Clark County are permitted to be open from 7 a.m. to 3 a.m., but the county’s Green Ribbon Panel on Friday said it wants to advise commission­ers to extend marijuana store hours.

Crime is one of the biggest reasons dispensari­es want the always-open option, the panel said during its first meeting since recreation­al marijuana sales became legal on July 1.

Several panel members said they believe that would deter the dispensari­es from being targeted in the wake of a string of robberies — all of which happened during the four-hour period when dispensari­es are closed.

The proposal would have to be approved by Clark County commission­ers.

The panel touched on a range of topics during the meeting that could shape how marijuana businesses operate in the future in unincorpor­ated Clark County.

Cannabis to your door

Will marijuana home deliveries be allowed when the state enacts permanent regulation­s next year?

Companies can currently deliver up to 1 ounce of marijuana to customers as part of the temporary regulation­s adopted while the state irons out permanent rules to be in place by Jan. 1.

But the Department of Taxation’s most recent draft of those regulation­s would prohibit pot home deliveries.

Green Ribbon panelist Andrew Jolley, who owns The Source dispensari­es and serves as president of the Nevada Dispensary Associatio­n, said illegal delivery services are a common and problemati­c issue across the valley.

“A regulated, tested market is a much better alternativ­e than the black market,” Jolley said.

The state, however, said delivery regulation­s will likely be included when a new draft of the rules is released this month.

“I would expect to see home deliveries allowed,” said department spokeswoma­n Stephanie Klapstein. “What we’re really examining right now is seeing how to set it up so that it’s heavily regulated.”

But issues remain. Jacqueline Holloway, Clark County’s business licensing director, told the panel that the county received a complaint from a marijuana dispensary employee who said they were mandated to deliver marijuana products in their personal vehicle.

The panel did not make a recommenda­tion on home deliveries, saying If we made every decision based on failed legislatio­n, nothing would get done. We do need to look at these tourists in the eye and give them a valid option. it would be better to wait for the state’s regulation­s.

Consumptio­n lounges

The ever-sticky topic of marijuana consumptio­n lounges popped up again at Friday’s meeting.

In the spring the panel discussed the possibilit­y of launching a pilot program for consumptio­n lounges, but it decided to hold off to see if the Nevada Legislatur­e would pass any laws on the topic.

A bill that would have permitted various forms of public pot use seemed to have momentum, but it died after Gov. Brian Sandoval voiced his opposition.

Seeing that caution from state lawmakers should tell the county that it should tread cautiously on the issue, said panel member and Nevada Gaming Commission

Chairman Tony Alamo.

“I think we need to walk slowly and methodical­ly,” Alamo said.

But Jolley argued that the tourists coming to Las Vegas have no place to consume the now-legal product, and the county should explore proceeding with its own regulation­s, rather than waiting for the Legislatur­e, which won’t meet again until 2019 barring a special session.

“If we made every decision based on failed legislatio­n, nothing would get done,” Jolley said. “We do need to look at these tourists in the eye and give them a valid option.”

Holloway noted that state Sen. Tick Segerblom, D-las Vegas, requested a legal opinion from the Legislativ­e Counsel Bureau on whether local government­s could regulate public consumptio­n lounges without a state law being in place.

Drop boxes at Mccarran

The county’s director of aviation, Rosemary Vassiliadi­s, noted that advertisin­g of marijuana would continue to be banned at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport, and she pointed out that the airports in Denver and Portland, Oregon — cities in states with legal marijuana — have similar bans.

Vassiliadi­s also said 20 “amnesty boxes” will be installed at Mccarran and other airports in Clark County, where travelers would be able to safely get rid of any marijuana before going into the TSA sections of the airport.

Marijuana is regulated federally as a Schedule I drug with the likes of heroin and ecstacy.

Drop boxes at Mccarran would be located inside the parking garage and before the ticketing counters, Vassiliadi­s said.

Contact Colton Lochhead at clochhead@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4638. Follow @ Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

 ?? Elizabeth Brumley ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file @Elipagepho­to Jayson Stutsman works April 13 at medical pot dispensary Euphoria Wellness.
Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal file @Elipagepho­to Jayson Stutsman works April 13 at medical pot dispensary Euphoria Wellness.

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