USA TODAY US Edition

New pot laws may affect 84M Americans

9 states consider legalizing medical or recreation­al use

- @trevorhugh­es USA TODAY

Nearly 60 million Americans may wake up Nov. 9 to find voters in their states have abolished longstandi­ng marijuana prohibitio­ns, a three-fold expansion for legal cannabis across the country.

An additional 24 million Americans could find themselves in states with newly legal medical marijuana use, a smaller but still significan­t expansion of legalized pot around the United States. Already, half of the states permit some form of medical marijuana use, and more than half of all Americans live in a state that has approved medical marijuana.

California, experts say, will likely play the most significan­t role in cannabis legalizati­on on Nov. 8. Voters in our most populous state are widely expected to approve the “Adult Use of Marijuana Act,” adding nearly 40 million names to the list of people who live in a state with legal pot.

Lawmakers see marijuana taxes as a source of new revenue to close budget gaps, while entreprene­urs are considerin­g the business case, with potentiall­y billions of dollars in profits possible from this fast-growing Made-In-America industry.

Arizona, California, Maine, Massachuse­tts and Nevada are considerin­g legalizing recreation­al marijuana. Voters in Arkansas, Florida, Montana and North Dakota are asking voters whether to permit medical use for certain conditions, such as cancer or chronic pain. None of those votes will change the federal ban on marijuana use, although legalizati­on advocates say it may further pressure Congress, the DEA and

the FDA to act.

Four states — Colorado, Oregon, Washington and Alaska, plus the District of Columbia — have already legalized recreation­al marijuana. An additional 25 permit medical use. But this election has the potential to dramatical­ly shift the conversati­on because so many Americans live in the nine states where relaxation measures are being considered. If it were its own country, California alone would have the world’s sixth-largest economy, and what happens there almost inevitably spreads east.

Polls nationally show growing support for marijuana legalizati­on. A poll released earlier this month by the Pew Research Center found 57% of adults think marijuana use should be legal, up from 53% last year and 32% in 2006. That despite the fact that marijuana remains a Schedule 1 controlled substance and is illegal at the federal level. A Gallup poll released Oct. 19 showed even stronger support: 60%, up from 58% last year and 50% in 2011.

“There’s been an enormous shift in public opinion on this issue, and I think that has directly led to why it is appearing on so many state’s ( ballots) this year,” said John Kagia, executive vice president of industry analytics for New Frontier Data. “This is going to be an enormous industry, no matter how you slice it.”

Colorado was the first state to legalize recreation­al marijuana, with voters approving the measure in 2012 and sales launching in January 2014. That vote came after the country already had more than a decade of experience with medical marijuana, a deliberate strategy on the part of backers who say they started with medical marijuana first before seeking to broaden it. No state has yet legalized recreation­al marijuana via its legislatur­e.

Critics say there’s insufficie­nt evidence to back the health claims made by medical marijuana supporters. They worry widespread legalizati­on opens the door to Big Tobacco-style companies interested in selling drugs to the public, especially kids, without regard for the public health consequenc­es.

New Frontier, which doesn’t take a position on legalizati­on, estimates the legal cannabis market could be worth nearly $8 billion by 2020.

Still, entreprene­urs — particular­ly in California — are rushing to fund greenhouse­s, invest in growing and harvesting technology and create social media platforms to connect buyers with cannabis recommenda­tions. Those investment­s are targeted at medical marijuana, which is already legal, but the rush shows how investors are positionin­g themselves for what’s widely considered a slam-dunk recreation­al legalizati­on vote in California.

“People are beginning to un- derstand that this isn’t just about not putting people in prison, but about making a lot of money,” said Jeffrey Zinsmeiste­r, the executive vice president of the antilegali­zation group Smart Approaches to Marijuana, which has funded opposition campaigns in several states.

RECREATION­AL ARIZONA

Prop. 205 would legalize adult recreation­al marijuana use, cultivatio­n and sales, with a 15% sales tax to fund new state regulation, enforcemen­t and education efforts. A recent Arizona Republic/ Morrison/Cronkite News poll found 50% of registered voters favor legalizati­on, 40% oppose it and 10% were undecided. The poll surveyed 784 registered voters between Aug. 17 and Aug. 31, with a margin of error of 3.4 percentage points.

Since that poll, however, voters have been bombarded with ads. Polling expert Mike O’Neil said he expects the “No on Prop 205” ads will draw undecided voters to their side.

“At a very simplistic level, it’s ‘Drugs are bad’ against ‘Gee, we’re overkill with respect to marijuana,’ ” O’Neil said. “Anytime you’re proposing something new, it’s easy to scare people, and when in doubt … (people) just vote no.”

CALIFORNIA

The California plan, known as the Adult Use of Marijuana Act, allows residents to grow up to six plants at home and gives municipali­ties the power to allow or ban outdoor grows and marijuana stores. It requires commercial growers to comply with environmen­tal regulation­s — many illegal growers today ignore laws governing water, pesticide and fertilizer use — and gives existing medical-marijuana providers a head start in getting business licenses.

The measure also maintains existing prohibitio­ns on youth use and driving while high. Critics worry it will open up television advertisin­g to marijuana companies and goes too far in permitting people previously convicted of violent drug offenses to join the industry. Medical marijuana is widely available in California, and a large portion of the economies of Humboldt County and the far northern portions of California are heavily dependent on illegal growing.

“AUMA is not the best initiative, but it’s way better than the status quo,” said Lanny Swerdlow, a registered nurse and director of the Palm Springs-based Marijuana Anti-Prohibitio­n Project. “It’s a template, something to build on.”

Polls show it’s likely to pass.

MAINE

The ballot measure expands the state’s well-regarded medical marijuana program to recreation­al use, but it also permits the creation of “marijuana social clubs,” where people would be able to consume marijuana. Critics worry that might increase the amount of impaired driving, in the way that bars can lead to more drunken drivers on the road.

There’s also concern that the measure requires marijuana-focused publicatio­ns to be sold from behind store counters, a proposal that was struck down as unconstitu­tional in Colorado. Gov. Paul LePage signed Maine’s medical marijuana law in 2011, but he opposes this recreation­al legalizati­on effort.

MASSACHUSE­TTS

Most of the state’s political establishm­ent opposes the measure to legalize recreation­al marijuana, with former governor Bill Weld one notable exception. Weld, a Republican, is running on the Libertaria­n presidenti­al ticket with Gary Johnson.

Current Gov. Charlie Baker argues legalizing marijuana in the Bay State could increase youth use and distract regulators and public health officials wrestling with an epidemic of opioid abuse and overdoses. Despite that toplevel opposition, voters appear poised to approve the measure. Fifty-five percent of likely voters now say they favor legalizati­on for recreation, WBUR radio reported. That poll found that half the people surveyed had tried marijuana at some point in their lives.

NEVADA

A year after its medical-marijuana program launched, Nevada’s voters are now considerin­g whether to legalize recreation­al growing and use. Nevada’s program would be open to anyone visiting the state, and supporters say the tourist-heavy market could be worth $390 million, with up to $1.1 billion in economic impact.

Medical dispensari­es would be granted an 18-month monopoly on recreation­al sales, and alcohol distributo­rs would also have an 18-month monopoly on distributi­on. Home growing would be banned anywhere within 25 miles of a licensed dispensary, which could make home cultivatio­n illegal for up to 90% of the state. The latest polling showed more than 55% of people approved of the measure.

Critics complain that the ballot measure was largely written and funded by those who stand to benefit the most from legalizati­on.

MEDICAL ARKANSAS

Arkansas voters in 2012 nearly legalized medical marijuana, rejecting the measure 51% to 49%, and this year they’re considerin­g two competing measures, both of which are opposed by the state’s Republican-dominated political establishm­ent. As in many states, Arkansas voters who are personally familiar with medical marijuana use are more likely to support legalizati­on, especially if they have experience with people who have struggled with opioid use or abuse.

Medical marijuana advocates say cannabis is a safer alternativ­e to potentiall­y deadly and physically addictive prescripti­on drugs like OxyContin.

“I have a cousin who suffers from Lupus,” said Deb Sanders, a grandmothe­r from Mountain Home who supports legalizati­on. “She smoked some marijuana. She said she could not believe how much better she felt. ... She stopped hurting, her anxiety attacks went away. She doesn’t do it recreation­ally, she only does it when she absolutely has to. Her condition has gotten so much better since she introduced into her regimen. She’s been able to get off some of her synthetic medication­s.”

FLORIDA

Florida’s proposed Amendment 2 would allow patients to obtain marijuana if they have “debilitati­ng ” illnesses, such as cancer, HIV, post-traumatic stress disorder, Parkinson’s disease and epilepsy. Under existing state law, only patients with certain medical conditions that benefit from non-euphoric strains of cannabis and patients with irreversib­le “terminal” illness may access the drug through state-approved doctors and growers.

A proposal in 2014 to broadly legalize medical marijuana won nearly 58% of the vote but fell short of the required 60% needed for adoption. Polls indicate the measure may have enough support this time around.

“Most of the polls, in most of the states, most of the time, show more people in favor than against, but in none of the states are the margins so significan­t that we feel comfortabl­e,” said Ethan Nadelmann, the executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, an advocacy group backing marijuana legalizati­on throughout the country. “And there’s opposition money that’s starting to emerge.”

MONTANA

This may be the second time voters here approve a medical marijuana plan. They approved one in 2004, but lawmakers in 2011 repealed it and replaced it with a far more restrictiv­e system — a move that was upheld by the Montana Supreme Court earlier this year.

Now, Initiative 183 aims to restore much of the original system, including allowing providers to hire employees to cultivate, dispense and transport medical marijuana. The initiative also repeals the requiremen­t that physicians who provide certificat­ions for 25 or more patients annually be referred to the board of medical examiners and bars law enforcemen­t from making unannounce­d inspection­s of medical marijuana facilities.

NORTH DAKOTA

North Dakotans are considerin­g permitting medical marijuana for certain conditions, such as cancer or PTSD. Acknowledg­ing the state’s rural nature, patients who live more than 40 miles from a “compassion­ate care center” would be allowed to grow up to eight plants as long as they notified local law enforcemen­t in advance.

 ?? TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY ?? Jars of dried marijuana flowers at the Denver-based Medicine Man marijuana store.
TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY Jars of dried marijuana flowers at the Denver-based Medicine Man marijuana store.
 ?? TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY ?? Eric Benevento, a marijuana production and quality control worker at the Denver-based Medicine Man cannabis store shows a tray of drying marijuana. A single indoor-grown plant can produce several ounces of saleable marijuana flower.
TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY Eric Benevento, a marijuana production and quality control worker at the Denver-based Medicine Man cannabis store shows a tray of drying marijuana. A single indoor-grown plant can produce several ounces of saleable marijuana flower.

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