Nevada rules to aid pot demand
CARSON CITY, NEV. » Nevada moved Thursday to reduce supply problems at recreational marijuana stores that have faced overwhelming demand for newly legal pot and the possibility of their shelves going empty.
Regulators approved emergency rules that would speed up licensing for pot distributors, a sticking point that launched a legal battle and threatened the flow of supplies after dozens of retailers started selling recreational marijuana on July 1.
Nevada’s law is unique among legal pot states, dictating that only alcohol wholesalers can transport the drug from growers to storefronts for the next 18 months. But the state rewrote the rules Thursday used to enforce the state’s pot law to make it clear that it’s legal under certain circumstances to license some retailers to transport pot from growers to storefronts.
Gov. Brian Sandoval endorsed the proposal last week after a judge ruled in June state law dictates
only alcohol wholesalers can transport pot from growers to store fronts the next 18 months.
The judge had rejected the state’s claim it has the authority to license some pot retailers to serve as their own middleman if there aren’t enough alcohol distributors to do the job
he new regulation makes it clear that’s legal, at least for now. A lawyer for the alcohol wholesaler groups that won the court injunction told the tax panel during Thursday’s three-hour hearing that he’s convinced the new regulation is just as illegal as the earlier one the judge threw out.
James DeVolld, chairman of the Nevada Tax Commission charged with regulating recreational marijuana, sought reassurances from state attorneys that they are on solid legal ground before joining the other commissioners in backing the emergency regulation unanimously.
“I think like all the commissioners, this is such an important time in the state of Nevada’s existence that I just want to do it right,” DeVolld said.