Porterville Recorder

Get a pencil: California’s marijuana-tracking system delayed

- By MICHAEL R. BLOOD

LOS ANGELES — California’s legal pot economy was supposed to operate under the umbrella of a vast computeriz­ed system to track marijuana from seed to storefront­s, ensuring that plants are followed throughout the supply chain and don’t drift into the black market.

But recreation­al cannabis sales began this week without the computer system. Instead, businesses are being asked to document sales and transfers of pot manually, using paper invoices or shipping manifests. That raises the potential that an unknown amount of weed will continue slipping into the illicit market, as it has for years.

For the moment, “you are looking at pieces of paper and self-reporting. A lot of these regulation­s are not being enforced right now,” said Jerred Kiloh, a Los Angeles dispensary owner who heads the United Cannabis Business Associatio­n, an industry group.

The delay of the tracking system is but one sign of the daunting task facing the nation’s most populous state as it attempts to transform its long-standing medicinal and illegal marijuana markets into a multibilli­on-dollar regulated system. Not since the end of Prohibitio­n in 1933 has such an expansive illegal economy been reshaped into a legal one.

So far, it’s been an unsteady start.

The state Department of Food and Agricultur­e, which is overseeing the tracking system, expected it to be functional for the first legal sales on Jan. 1. Now it could take months before the system launches.

Business licenses issued to growers, distributo­rs and sellers are temporary and will need to be redone or extended later this year. Much of the state is blacked out from recreation­al sales because of the scarcity of licenses and because some local government­s banned commercial pot activity.

“There are a lot of things inside the law that are transition­al. I don’t think it’s as rigid as people want it to sound,” Kiloh said.

Another risk is that some consumers might stay in the black market to avoid sticker shock from hefty taxes. And there are concerns that a new distributi­on system will fail to get cannabis to shelves once current stockpiles run out, possibly in weeks.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MATHEW SUMNER ?? Margot Simpson, right, and Diana Gladden wait in line to purchase marijuana at Harborside marijuana dispensary, Monday in Oakland.
AP PHOTO BY MATHEW SUMNER Margot Simpson, right, and Diana Gladden wait in line to purchase marijuana at Harborside marijuana dispensary, Monday in Oakland.

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