DENVER — At 8 a.m. New Year’s Day, in an industrial area a few miles
from downtown Denver, a former Marine named Sean Azzariti walked into a
giant store and bought a bag of weed. Legally. To smoke just for fun, if
he’s so inclined.
Azzariti’s transaction — 3.5 grams of Bubba Kush for $40 and
some pot-laced chocolate truffles for an additional $9.28 — was the
first in the state’s grand experiment in legalizing marijuana for
recreational use.
The first-in-the-nation law was greeted with long lines at retailers
and a lot of “Rocky Mountain High” jokes. But beyond the buzz, the
measure represented the institution of a major new public policy in
America — one that opponents fear will turn the state into a dangerous
land of debauchery and that backers hope sets a nationwide precedent.
If
Colorado is able to successfully legalize marijuana without causing a
social backlash, the tourism, tax and other considerations are likely to
compel several other states to quickly follow suit.
Backers say
enough signatures have been collected to put legalization before voters
this year in Alaska. Oregon would probably come next, and by 2016, they
hope to see measures on the ballot in six other states: Arizona,
California, Maine, Massachusetts, Montana and Nevada. Supporters are
also hopeful that lawmakers will push for legalization in Delaware,
Hawaii, Maryland, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont.
Washington state has legalized pot, but sales there won’t begin for at least a few months.
Experts
say there really is no way to know which way it will go. “Nobody on
Earth has ever done this before,” said Jonathan Caulkins, a drug policy
expert and professor at Carnegie Mellon University.
Before
Wednesday, the pro-marijuana movement’s biggest breakthrough came in
1996, when California became the first state in modern history to allow
marijuana use of any kind when it greenlighted medicinal use. Now 20
states and the District allow it.
Colorado has approved 136
licenses for retail sales, three-quarters of them in the city and county
of Denver and all at sites that have been legally selling marijuana for
medical purposes. Eighteen city stores had completed the full process
in time to open Wednesday. State officials expect dozens more to open
across the state, and some have estimated that pot sales could add more
than $200 million to Colorado’s economy.
Colorado residents 21 and
older are allowed to buy up to an ounce of marijuana per transaction,
and out-of-state customers are allowed to purchase up to a
quarter-ounce.
Azzariti’s involvement was not by chance. He was
active in the campaign to legalize recreational sales, and, although he
can use the pot however he pleases, the veteran of the Iraq war said he
needs it to deal with post-traumatic stress disorder.
His
purchase was the culmination of a large media event hosted by advocates
and the industry. Dozens of reporters filled the 3D Cannabis Center for a
7:30 a.m. news conference as customers waited in line outside, where a
light snow was falling. News releases were distributed, and advocates
were on hand for interviews. Other stores welcomed press, too, with
media handlers in tow.
Toni Fox, the owner of the outlet, said she
expects her average monthly revenue of $30,000 to grow more than
eightfold, to $250,000, once improvements are made.
Doors also
opened at 8 a.m. at Medicine Man, which boasts an even larger,
20,000-square-foot production space that the owners expect to double.
At
Medicine Man, two nonresidents who bought the legal limit of a
quarter-ounce of marijuana said it cost roughly $130. Prices are
expected to remain high in the short term, with only a few retailers and
a lot of demand. But over the long term, experts expect prices to fall
with competition.
At Medicine Man, where the line Wednesday
morning stretched up to 75 deep by 10 a.m., a security guard checking
identification at the door estimated that well over half of the
customers were from out of state. One customer, Kevin Schatz of
Nebraska, said his 90-minute wait and the taxes paid were “well worth
it.”
Not everyone was celebrating Colorado’s new marijuana reality Wednesday.
“Today,
we’re witnessing the dawn of Big Marijuana, in a similar way that we
had Big Tobacco for over 80 years,” said Kevin Sabet, who co-founded
Project SAM (Smart Approaches to Marijuana) with former congressman
Patrick J. Kennedy (D-R.I.). “We’re opening the doors to allowing a new,
powerful industry to downplay the effects of a substance they will be
profiting off of and to downplay the effects of addiction.”
Sabet,
who worked in the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy
during President Obama’s first term and serves as director of the Drug
Policy Institute at the University of Florida, said the negative
consequences of marijuana legalization include advertising aimed at
kids, an increase in drugged-driving incidents and a spillover of
marijuana from Colorado into surrounding states, where the drug remains
illegal.
Possession
of marijuana remains a federal crime, but, for now, the federal
government is taking a wait-and-see approach to legalization. Last
summer, the Obama administration said it would not challenge laws
legalizing marijuana in Colorado and Washington as long as those states
maintain strict rules involving the sale and distribution of the drug.
Local police are taking a similar approach, stressing that compliance and education are the primary goals.
“For the police department, the concern is safety,” said Cmdr. Les C. Perry, whose district includes the Medicine Man business.
Opponents
of legalization face an uphill battle. In October, Gallup reported that
a clear majority of Americans favor legalization — the first time it
found such results since tracking began in 1969.
Barry Sacharow
said his relationship with the drug dates back even further than
Gallup’s polls. The 58-year-old from Hollywood, Fla., said he began
smoking in 1968 in, of all places, Colorado.
“To go from Colorado
1968 and New York 1968 through the ’80s and the ’90s and all of the
years to be here today,” he said, “is an amazing thing.”
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