Las Vegas Review-Journal

Marijuana banned at Mccarran

Ads on private cars, taxis will be allowed

- By Michael Scott Davidson Las Vegas Review-journal

Clark County commission­ers voted Tuesday to ban both the possession and advertisem­ent of marijuana at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.

The ban extends to all airport-owned property throughout the county, including parcels leased to private businesses. The decision was made to keep the airport’s rules consistent with federal regulation­s, according to commission­ers.

Commission­ers tabled the issue at their Aug. 1 meeting but unanimousl­y decided this week the ban would not apply to taxis and personal vehicles vinyl-wrapped with advertisin­g.

“I think common sense won,” said Commission­er Jim Gibson, who argued for less stringent rules in August alongside Aviation Department Director Rosemary Vassiliadi­s.

Commission­er Larry Brown, who said last month he would like to see the airport “ban everything as related to recreation­al and medical marijuana,” voted in favor of allowing the vinyl-wrapped cars.

But Brown also told fellow commission­ers he has concerns the approval is a “slippery slope.” He does not want to see mobile billboards making loops around the airport.

“We don’t want Mccarran Airport to become the pilot program where people start challengin­g the gray area of the legal industry,” he said.

After the meeting, Brown said speaking with marijuana industry representa­tives helped ease his hesitation.

“They agreed that we need to kind of set the boundaries and encourage all the (marijuana industry) membership to stay within the bound

AIRPORT

aries,” he said. “That way, if we can agree on the front end, we can identify when someone pushes the envelope too far.”

Offenders of the law can be subject to both a misdemeano­r criminal charge and civil fines. Vassiliadi­s will be responsibl­e for setting the fines.

Recreation­al use of marijuana became legal in Nevada on Jan. 1, but the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion classifies marijuana as an illegal Schedule 1 controlled substance.

The Nevada Gaming Commission also recently made clear that marijuana will not be allowed in Nevada casinos as long as it remains illegal at the federal level.

Contact Michael Scott Davidson at sdavidson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3861. Follow @davidsonlv­rj on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States