Pubdate: Thu, 18 Nov 2010 Source: Pueblo Chieftain (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Pueblo Chieftain Contact: http://www.chieftain.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1613 Author: Peter Roper Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) CERTIFICATES FOR COMPLIANCE State wants to show which medical marijuana businesses have met requirements. The Colorado Department of Revenue has sent out more than 900 certificates of compliance to the operators of medical marijuana centers and cultivation operations around the state -- certificates intended to show police and sheriff's deputies that the particular business has met all the state application requirements for operating legally. They aren't state medical marijuana licenses, however. Those won't be available until July and state regulations on operating medical marijuana businesses still are being developed, said Julie Postlethwait, spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Revenue's enforcement division. "Those medical marijuana businesses that have met all the state requirements thus far are receiving these certificates so they can demonstrate to law enforcement officers that they are operating legally, at least in terms of meeting the state's requirements," Postlethwait said this week. State officials set out a schedule of requirements last summer for any marijuana businesses hoping to operate legally, including certifying to the state by Aug. 1 that 70 percent of the marijuana each center sold was cultivated by that business and not purchased elsewhere. But state officials said there were two parts to legally operating a marijuana business -- meeting the state requirements and also obtaining some form of local approval from either county or municipal officials. Pueblo County responded by requiring those businesses to demonstrate by this past July 1 that they had filed the necessary paperwork to obtain a state sales tax license. That paperwork didn't constitute formal county approval of a local medical marijuana business, but the commissioners and the Pueblo County Sheriff's Office are allowing any of those businesses meeting the existing regulations to operate -- as long as other crimes do not occur there. "Right now, we're aware of between eight to 10 businesses operating in the county," sheriff's spokesman, Deputy Laurie Kirkpatrick, said Wednesday. "Our narcotics investigators make a point of stopping in to check on those operations." Last summer, 17 marijuana business applications were filed with the county's planning office. Postlethwait said police and sheriff deputies should not jump to the conclusion that any business not displaying a state certificate is illegally operating. "If they encounter that situation, they should call our department to make certain a certificate is not forthcoming," she said. City Council adopted licensing regulations in late summer but has not authorized any marijuana businesses within the city limits. City officials do not expect to do that until after state licenses become available in July. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom