Pubdate: Tue, 11 Dec 2012 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2012 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Justin Berton Page: A1 NEW FREEDOMS BUDDING Laws Are a Hit With Tokers, Gay Activists - and Entrepreneurs SEATTLE - Vivian McPeak was among the 100 pot enthusiasts who gathered beneath the city's Space Needle to toke up the minute a new state law legalizing the recreational use of marijuana took effect. McPeak, the dreadlocked executive director of Hempfest - the nonprofit organizer of a huge annual pot festival that has grown into a source of civic pride - said the taste of victory early Thursday was even more sublime because Washington state voters had approved same-sex marriage along with pot possession. As of Sunday, when the dreary skies parted and the first 150 gay nuptials were performed at City Hall, the Emerald City became a place where it was perfectly legal to spark a joint and marry one's same-sex partner. That may lead some San Francisco residents to conclude that Washington residents are living the dream - the California dream. "We're living in the freest place on Earth," McPeak said with cheer. "It's even freer than San Francisco. But don't worry - you guys will catch up." Uncharted territory For all of derision showered upon "San Francisco values," Seattle - the laid-back land of coffee, rain and grunge ethos - and the rest of Washington state have taken a step into uncharted liberal territory, one that California voters shied from when they approved Proposition 8's ban on samesex marriage in 2008 and voted against legalizing pot two years later. Passage of the new Washington laws was powered by the Seattle region's left-leaning population of 3.5 million, which has outpaced the rural counties east of the Cascade mountains, where voters overwhelmingly opposed the measures. "I hate to see a society turn its back on God, and that's what's happening here," said Pastor Joe Fuiten of Cedar Park Assembly of God in Bothell, about 40 minutes northeast of Seattle. "Now we feel like how any minority population feels. There's a sense of alienation from the common culture." Fuiten, who recently served as state chairman for Newt Gingrich's presidential campaign, said passage of the laws was "a double whammy" to Christian values. He predicted the election would be recalled as a gateway moment when Washington voters approved lawlessness. "We used to joke that if you wanted to point to what was wrong with the country, you could point to San Francisco," Fuiten said. "And if God was going to send an earthquake, he'd probably send it there. Now maybe he has to send it to Seattle." Pot infrastructure Pot activists are eager to start designing an infrastructure that could see state-licensed marijuana retail stores open as early as next December. At stake, advocates said, is nothing less than serving as the progressive standardbearers for a larger cultural shift they hope will sweep east across the country. If legalization succeeds, Washington state - and Seattle in particular - will provide a blueprint for other communities to follow suit. Mess it up and the city will serve as a national punch line for liberalism run amok and a target for conservative talking heads. Sound familiar? "We've been given a special charge," said John Davis, the owner of the Northwest Patient Resource Center, a popular medical marijuana dispensary in residential west Seattle. "And if we blow it, if it's a joke, if it's a sham, if it doesn't work - then we're going to set drug policy back 40 years." Up to an ounce The new law, known as Initiative 502, won with 55 percent of the vote and allows anyone over age 21 to possess 1 ounce of marijuana. The state will grow and heavily tax the product, and sell it through state-licensed retail shops. Residents can smoke in their homes, and police will cite public pot smokers, just as they would those who violate open-container laws. Drivers found with too much THC - marijuana's active ingredient - in their bloodstream will be arrested for impaired driving. Seattle police will not cite anyone for smoking in public during a one-year grace period, said department spokesman Sgt. Sean Whitcomb. Despite the conflict with federal law, which views marijuana as an illicit narcotic, Whitcomb said the local department has decided to side with voters. "The people of Seattle want marijuana decriminalized, and they made their voice heard during the election," Whitcomb said. Eye on feds Yet as San Francisco marijuana dispensary owners know, the discretion to exert a federal crackdown begins with the regional U.S. attorney. Melinda Haag, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California that oversees San Francisco and Oakland, has been targeted by protests at Bay Area pro-pot rallies for her enforcement orders, which have resulted in raids and letters pressuring building owners to evict tenants who sell medical marijuana. By contrast, the top federal prosecutor for western Washington, Jenny Durkan - who is openly lesbian and lives in Seattle with her partner and two sons - is viewed by local pot advocates as simpatico to the cause. As activists such as Davis attempt to maneuver under the new law and stay off the radar of federal authorities, there's some concern that legalization could result in a new green rush and open the door to black-market sellers. And it's unknown what effect legalization will have on medicinal dispensaries, which plan to stay open when recreational shops start selling. Future unknown Davis predicted that the extensive state taxes and bureaucratic overhead would turn a $10 joint into a $17 commodity, a price point vulnerable to undercutting by street sellers. Others expect steep price drops as a glut of supply floods the market, and yet others fret over the quality of the weed. Mike Keysor, who owns the Northwest Cannabis Market, a sort of warehouse bazaar where sellers and customers are encouraged to haggle over prices, said the government's dope would pale in comparison. "When was the last time the government could make anything better?" he asked The sight of Keysor's market, where more than 500 youthful card-carrying patients moved through the doors Saturday beneath the cranking sounds of Van Halen, would likely give anti-pot crusaders heart palpitations. Growers made quarter-pound sales, and smokers exhaled skyward with enthusiasm to contribute to what the market's critics have dubbed a massive bake house. In the wake of legalization, Keysor has developed plans to open a 16,000-square-foot market in downtown Seattle next year, which he said would be the largest facility of its kind, one "that is unique (on) this planet." "The people will still need their medicine," Keysor said. "And this is the best way to bring it to them." Cashing in There's also no shortage of Seattle businesspeople ready to invest in the pot market and hoping to attract fence-sitters likely to buy a joint only if it comes from a state-approved shop. Brendan Kennedy, CEO of Privateer Holdings and a San Francisco native who graduated from St. Ignatius, said his group of investors wants to buy companies that will make the pot industry more chic and open Starbucks-like outlets. An often-quoted analysis from Sea Change Strategy, a research and strategy firm, estimated that the national medical marijuana industry pulled in $1.7 billion in 2011 and could grow to $8.9 billion by 2016. Those numbers did not account for legalization in Washington and Colorado, whose voters also approved marijuana possession on Nov. 6. An analysis from the Washington state Office of Financial Management estimated revenue in first year of $560 million from pot sales. Some Washington academics predict that in a few years the local marijuana industry could rival apples as the state's top revenue producer. California epiphany Kennedy says he was struck two years ago - while listening to a radio debate over Proposition 19, the failed measure to legalize marijuana in California - with the realization that pot entrepreneurship was "was going to be the biggest opportunity of our lifetime." Kennedy, who has an MBA from Yale, envisions marijuana retail stores in Seattle without a Grateful Dead banner or Bob Marley poster in sight. Instead, he says, the stores would be as well-branded and - -managed as Nordstrom, Amazon, Boeing and Microsoft - "all pioneering brands that were built in Seattle and built in Washington." "It's a city of pioneers," Kennedy said. "It's a state of pioneers. We're extremely rational. We know what we're doing. We're just pioneering a new industry." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom