San Francisco Chronicle

Denver to license pot clubs, but few may open

- By Kristen Nichols Kristen Nichols is an Associated Press writer.

DENVER — Colorado’s largest city is on the brink of licensing some of the nation’s first legal marijuana clubs.

But Denver’s elaborate hurdles for potential weed-friendly coffee shops and gathering places may mean the city gets few takers for the new licenses.

Denver voters approved bring-your-ownpot clubs in a ballot measure last year after city officials dragged their feet on calls to give legal pot smokers a place to use the drug. The city plans to start accepting applicatio­ns by the end of the month.

“There are plenty of places where you can consume alcohol. Let’s give people a place to go to consume marijuana,” said Jordan Person, head of Denver NORML, which advocates for pot-friendly public policy.

But Denver’s would-be “social use” clubs have faced one delay after another.

First, the state liquor board prohibited pot use at any place with a liquor license, making bars and many restaurant­s offlimits. And pot shops can’t allow consumptio­n on the premises.

That left gathering places like coffee shops, art galleries and yoga studios. Furthermor­e, would-be clubs must stay twice as far as liquor stores from schools and anywhere children congregate, including playground­s and sports fields.

“We can’t be in places where it makes sense,” said Kayvan Khalatbari, a Denver marijuana consultant who helped run last year’s club campaign.

City officials say the rules are as flexible as possible given stiff resistance from some community groups and marijuana skeptics. The voterappro­ved club measure also says the club licenses are a pilot program and neighborho­od groups must agree to allow a club before it could open.

The voter-approved club measure also says the club licenses are a pilot program and neighborho­od groups must agree to allow a club before it could open.

One hopeful applicant says the regulation­s are stringent but still a step forward for the industry.

“A lot of us are hoping this will ... open the doors for a new kind of business,” said Connor Lux, who runs a co-work space for the cannabis industry and plans to apply for a social use license to hold public, weed-friendly events at his business just north of downtown Denver. Applying for a license costs $1,000; the license itself is $1,000 a year.

Colorado’s marijuana law neither allows nor denies pot clubs, leaving the state with a patchwork of local club rules. Some cities tolerate them; in others, clubs operate undergroun­d, with members arranging meet-ups using social media.

 ?? David Zalubowski / Associated Press ?? The Denver cafe Mutiny, which owner Jim Norris hopes to turn into one of the first legal pot clubs.
David Zalubowski / Associated Press The Denver cafe Mutiny, which owner Jim Norris hopes to turn into one of the first legal pot clubs.

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