Pubdate: Wed, 18 May 2011 Source: Telluride Daily Planet (CO) Copyright: 2011 Telluride Daily Planet, A Division of Womack Publishing Company Contact: http://www.telluridenews.com/forms/letters/ Website: http://www.telluridenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3881 Author: Matthew Beaudinn The Associated Press contributed to this report. TOWN TO TINKER WITH MARIJUANA REGS And activists say, 'legalize it' The Town of Telluride will continue to refine its medical marijuana policies as the State of Colorado drags its feet in forging overarching rules. Last week, the Telluride Town Council gave direction to the town attorney to continue crafting local rules that will provide a blueprint for governing the industry, which has proven problematic across that state as it surged in popularity. As it stands now, the town's medical marijuana ordinance draft spans some 41 pages and, once passed, will take several key positions, regulating the age of dispensary workers and further regulating signage. "I'm ready to go and we're ready to go. They don't want to wait another year," said Town Attorney Kevin Geiger. The town is seeking stricter regulations on signage in hopes of avoiding confusion. In the past, some dispensary signs had simply stated "ice cream," or "soda." The new rules will require that businesses denote that marijuana is in their products. "This will make it clear," Geiger said. Council backed away from other measures, such as a regulation of the distance between a dispensary and a park, believing it could put some medical marijuana centers out of business. They did stick with keeping dispensaries at least 500 feet away from schools. Thom Carnevale, meanwhile, feared that the local government was making a habit of overreaching. "Meeting after meeting, all we do is try to regulate more and more and more," he said. "It's very troubling for me aE& We just continue to want to regulate and anticipate problems that don't exist, and it's very troubling." Council member David Oyster didn't see it that way. "I think we should take a leadership position in this," he said. "We're a home-rule municipality because we don't want the state to tell us what to do all the time." Telluride also brought its age rules in line with the state: one must be 21 or older to work at a dispensary. In the past, it was 18. The new rules will also restrict venting of fumes into public spaces, such as main street. The rules will come back for another reading at the next town council meeting. Adam Raleigh, owner of the Telluride Bud Company, attended the meeting and told council that it was hard for dispensaries to set themselves apart on signs. "If I just have 'infused products,' well, every dispensary has infused products," he said. "I should have the right to advertise responsibly to my clients." Telluride's effort to regulate the industry is one of many, and comes amid marijuana advocates' big wins in this year's session of the Colorado Legislature. Advocates are now turning their sights to a bigger effort -- full legalization on the 2012 ballot. Pot legalization backers hope to start gathering signatures as soon as this summer to put the question to voters. Given Colorado's low signature threshold for ballot initiatives, which currently stands at about 86,000 people, they say they expect an easy path to the polls. Colorado voters defeated a legalization measure in 2006, as did California voters last year. But activists here are regrouping for another push. "We're going to have a great legalization debate in 2012," predicted Laura Kriho of the Cannabis Therapy Institute, a powerful grass-roots organizer that alerts marijuana advocates to lobby public officials on measures related to pot. Lawmakers heard from activists several times during the 2011 session that ended last week, and they achieved some surprising victories. Advocates defeated a proposal to set a driving-high impairment standard that was backed by law enforcement. They quickly squashed a proposal to ban edible marijuana, and dispensaries chipped away at some residency rules and other requirements through a revision of marijuana regulation that had been adopted the year before. With lobbyists working Capitol halls and a network of marijuana patients packing committee hearings, Colorado's pot community won over lawmakers on many measures intended to crack down on the nascent industry. "With each passing legislative session, we're seeing marijuana and the marijuana distribution system further entrenched and accepted in the state," said Brian Vicente, head of Sensible Colorado. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.