The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

What’s needed? Consensus on pot regulation

- By Santiago Guerra

On 4/20, many across the U.S. gather to celebrate their love and appreciati­on for marijuana.

Polls show that 64 percent of Americans favor legalizing marijuana.

But, despite the majority support, there’s no clear consensus on how it should be regulated.

As a researcher who has studied the impact of drugs in the U.S. and Mexico, it’s been captivatin­g to watch states adapt as they attempt to regulate this illicit and stigmatize­d substance.

Many states permit medical marijuana, but there’s a wide variety of approaches. Today, 29 states currently permit medical marijuana and have an establishe­d system for regulating it.

Another 17 states have limited medical programs.

These programs provide access to products with low levels of tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC) and high levels of cannabidio­l (CBD), with the goal of eliminatin­g the “high” and maximizing medical benefits. Beyond that, the conditions doctors and patients can treat with cannabis vary from state to state.

Minnesota, New York and West Virginia don’t permit marijuana smoking as part of their medical programs. West Virginia, however, allows patients to vaporize marijuana plant matter, while Minnesota only permits consumptio­n of marijuana in liquid extract form.

Colorado, where I am based, has a much more expansive medical program. Patients can access an array of products, from extracts to strains of raw plant material.

While New York caps the amount of THC that a product dose may contain, Colorado and other states have no such limit on their medical marijuana products.

Meanwhile, recreation­al marijuana use has been approved for adults 21 and over by nine states: Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachuse­tts, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont and Washington, as well as the District of Columbia.

However, once again, states haven’t implemente­d their policies uniformly.

Vermont, for example, does not currently have a system for commercial sale and distributi­on, and only allows individual­s to cultivate two plants.

Colorado, on the other hand, has developed a robust commercial system, allows individual­s to grow up to six plants, and limits the amount of marijuana products an individual can possess.

Most states have struggled with how to navigate the public consumptio­n of cannabis, which remains illegal. As states continue to debate and implement marijuana policies, the American public will begin to recognize what works (and what doesn’t).

While these policy inconsiste­ncies may raise concerns for some constituen­ts, these state experiment­s are a valuable way to figure out how this substance works and how it affects society.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

As states continue to debate and implement marijuana policies, the American public will begin to recognize what works...

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