San Francisco Chronicle

Ads for pot kicked off Muni buses, properties

- By Michael Cabanatuan

As the cannabis industry takes shape in California, one place it won’t be able to advertise is on San Francisco’s public transporta­tion.

The Municipal Transporta­tion Agency’s Board of Directors on Tuesday banned ads for cannabis businesses from the transit system’s buses, trains, cable cars, stations and bus stops. The ban was a response to concerns that such ads are inappropri­ate for young Muni riders and might promote marijuana use among children.

Wilson Chu, president of the Chinese American Democratic Club, which had supported the legalizati­on of both medical and recreation­al marijuana use in the state, was among those pushing the board to act.

“There are many students that travel on Muni to and from school, and I think it’s a

good idea to limit their exposure to these kinds of ads,” Chu told the board.

The board approved the prohibitio­n on a 6-0 vote, with Director Malcolm Heinicke absent. It takes effect Wednesday just six weeks before the sale of marijuana becomes legal throughout the state and covers all commercial advertisin­g of cannabis and related products, businesses and services, and was supported by Mayor Ed Lee.

Board Chairwoman Cheryl Brinkman said the ban was not intended as a statement about recreation­al marijuana use but was an attempt to protect children riding Muni from being surrounded by its promotion.

“We don’t intend this as any value judgment,” she said. Legalized marijuana “will be the law of the land. But we’re falling in line with what standard advertisin­g practices are.”

Like many transit agencies, Muni already excludes advertisin­g for alcoholic beverages, tobacco products and firearms, but has allowed advertisin­g for medical marijuana businesses since 2014. Three of the city’s 46 licensed medical cannabis dispensary and delivery services — Eaze, Urban Pharm and the Green Cross — promote their enterprise­s on Muni.

Muni has more than 100 ads for marijuana-related businesses on its property. They range from small posters aboard buses to large banner ads outside to buses entirely wrapped in baby-blue ads declaring, “Marijuana has arrived.”

Under the ban, existing ad deals with cannabis businesses will be honored until the contracts expire, but future displays will not be allowed. With sales of recreation­al marijuana to adults becoming legal Jan. 1, the demand for advertisin­g from cannabis businesses is expected to boom. But no one opposing the ban spoke at Tuesday’s hearing.

Muni appears to be the first transit system in the Bay Area to enact a ban on marijuana ads, but that doesn’t mean the ads will start showing up on other agencies’ buses and trains in the region. BART’s advertisin­g policy doesn’t mention marijuana, but Jim Allison, an agency spokesman, said the transit system’s general counsel believes cannabis ads would be rejected under an existing clause banning “unlawful or detrimenta­l conduct.” That’s because marijuana is still illegal under federal law.

With legalizati­on looming, San Francisco is struggling to figure out how to regulate marijuana sales. Gail Stein, the MTA’s finance director, had suggested that the board reconsider the advertisin­g ban in six months, once the uncertaint­y had cleared.

But Brinkman said that if concern over exposing kids to cannabis advertisin­g is the reason for the ban, that shouldn’t change when regulation­s are adopted. She also suggested revising the advertisin­g policy to specifical­ly build in protection­s for children.

The ban’s impact on MTA revenues is unclear. Advertisin­g generates $19.6 million a year in revenue for Muni.

Denying marijuana ads could decrease revenues, but Ed Reiskin, the MTA’s transporta­tion director, said other advertisin­g is expected to make up for any loss.

After the vote, Chu said he was pleased with the board’s decision, describing it as family-friendly.

“There’s been an exodus of families,” he said. “This should help keep families in San Francisco.”

 ?? Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle ?? An ad for the Urban Pharm marijuana dispensary emblazons the side of a Muni bus.
Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle An ad for the Urban Pharm marijuana dispensary emblazons the side of a Muni bus.
 ?? Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle ?? A Muni bus ad promotes the marijuana delivery service Eaze. The Municipal Transporta­tion Agency is banning ads from cannabis-related businesses when the current contracts expire.
Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle A Muni bus ad promotes the marijuana delivery service Eaze. The Municipal Transporta­tion Agency is banning ads from cannabis-related businesses when the current contracts expire.

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