The Sentinel-Record

Oregon State Fair generates buzz with 1st legal pot display in US

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GILLIAN FLACCUS

SALEM, Ore. — Living marijuana plants went on display Friday at the Oregon State Fair, with organizers saying it’s the first state fair in the nation to allow cannabis for public viewing.

The state voted to legalize recreation­al marijuana in late 2014. Here are a few things to know about legal pot in Oregon and the display at the fair:

No. While the tent holding the display smells strongly of weed, fair authoritie­s are only allowing immature plants — that is, pot plants without flowers.

Marijuana leaves are much less potent than the flowers, or buds, and it’s not yet legal to transport flowering plants within the state anyway.

Donald Morse, director of the Oregon Cannabis Business Council, said his group hopes to get permission to display flowering pot plants next year, but the details aren’t finalized. and recreation­al grow sites are recognized under state law as farm crops.

The Oregon Liquor Control Commission is in the process of licensing recreation­al marijuana in much the same way it already controls the sale and use of alcohol.

Fair spokesman Dan Cox says the event must adapt to changing cultural and societal values and allowing the display is one part of that shift.

Oregonians voted to legalize marijuana in 2014 and the state allowed the sale of marijuana “edibles,” such as pot-infused candies and confection­s, earlier this year.

This week, the state said it had processed $25.5 million in taxes on recreation­al pot since January 2016.

Anticipate­d state revenue through June 2017 was recently quadrupled by Oregon’s Legislativ­e Revenue Office, from $8.4 million to $35 million.

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