Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bill would create pot public-use licenses

- By COLTON LOCHHEAD

Marijuana is legal to possess in Nevada, but using it anywhere but inside of a private residence is a big no-no.

That is something the state’s most weed-friendly lawmaker wants to change.

“If we’re going to bring people here for marijuana tourism, they need a place to use it,” State Sen. Tick Segerblom, D-Las Vegas, said. “We don’t want them walking up and down the Strip smoking. Let’s give them some place to go.”

Segerblom intends to introduce a bill this session, which begins Feb. 6, that would give government­s at the city and county levels the authority to issue public marijuana-use permits for just about every possibilit­y. Big events like the Electric Daisy Carnival, bars, hookah lounges or even designated pot-friendly streets or sidewalks would all be fair game if Segerblom’s bill were to pass.

But some in local government

worry pushing for public usage a few months after legalizing recreation­al marijuana is simply too much, too soon.

“Having it in a public square when we just passed it, I have very serious reservatio­ns,” said Clark County Commission­er Mary Beth Scow.

Scow, who did not support the legal pot ballot measure, said she’d prefer to wait and see how social marijuana experiment­s go in other states before rushing into it in Southern Nevada.

In November, Denver voters approved a measure similar to Segerblom’s bill. That measure creates a four-year pilot program that allows most types of businesses, including cafes and yoga studios, to apply for a public-use license. It is expected to go into effect sometime this summer.

Colorado and Washington, which both legalized recreation­al marijuana in 2012, have set precedents for Nevada and other states as medical and recreation­al marijuana regulation­s are crafted.

“Where these other areas are collecting data and seeing how things go, it would be wise for us to watch what happens in other states,” Scow said.

Scow’s not alone in thinking Segerblom’s proposal is going too fast.

Clark County Commission Chairman Steve Sisolak said he’s worried that there are talks of adding new folds to the industry before the state has crafted the regulation­s that will guide and govern the recreation­al market. The Department of Taxation is drawing up the rules for the recreation­al marijuana market, but those aren’t expected to be finished until later this year.

There are also other issues relating to marijuana that the county wants to address, like the odor from cultivatio­n facilities, Sisolak said. And he’d like to have more time to figure those out before jumping into discussion­s about public use, he added.

“I’m not saying it’s not a good idea in some point in time, but I don’t know when that point in time is,” Sisolak said.

Segerblom said he understand­s some lawmakers could be hesitant to let people start smoking in public settings, but he noted that the bill would put all the power into those lawmakers’ hands.

“It’s up to them. If they want, they can take 10 years,” he said. “I’m not forcing them to do anything, I’m just giving them the right.”

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