Pubdate: Sat, 05 Oct 2013
Source: Las Vegas Review-Journal (NV)
Copyright: 2013 Las Vegas Review-Journal
Contact: http://www.reviewjournal.com/about/print/press/letterstoeditor.html
Website: http://www.lvrj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/233
Author: Ed Vogel
Page: 2B

NOISE DISRUPTS MARIJUANA HEARING

Meetings Continue Next Week As State Seeks to Adopt Regulations

CARSON CITY - During a hearing dominated by technical problems 
Friday, the state began asking residents what they want in 
regulations for Nevada's new medical marijuana program.

At times witnesses giving their ideas could not be heard because of 
loud music and talking by others. Marla McDade-Williams, the deputy 
administrator of the Division of Public and Behavioral Health, 
pleaded for people to show more courtesy.

The hearing was teleconferenced between Las Vegas and Carson City, 
but dozens, if not hundreds, of people also listened in through 
telephone conference calls. One person put his speaker phone on hold, 
a step that led to the playing of his loud music. Other people just 
talked, unaware their voices could be heard.

In Las Vegas, some people complained there were not enough copies of 
the tentative regulations available for them to read.

Hearings continue Monday and Tuesday as the state tries to adopt 
regulations by April 1 that put into effect a law passed by the 
Legislature. The law requires the state to license marijuana grow 
farms and dispensaries where the state's 4,000 residents with medical 
marijuana cards can acquire their medication.

Voters passed a constitutional amendment in 1998 and 2000 to allow 
citizens with doctors' permission to use marijuana for medical 
reasons. But the 2001 law that implemented the amendment required 
patients to grow their own marijuana, a step that some were unable to 
accomplish.

Others states with medical marijuana programs allow patients to buy 
marijuana through licensed dispensaries, and legislators approved 
that plan in June. Now the state must adopt regulations before the 
new law can be put into effect.

McDade-Williams said she was not sure how many people listened in by 
conference call Friday, but she noted that 350 people are signed up 
to receive information about developments in the medical marijuana program.

Additional hearings will be conducted this fall before the 
regulations are approved.

The tentative plans would require people interested in testing 
marijuana, or operating grow farms or dispensaries, to have at least 
$250,000 available.

One person said the testing lab regulations must define how often and 
when "batches" of marijuana should be tested. Others said marijuana 
must be checked for the presence of pesticides.

A man complained that the nonrefundable $5,000 cost of seeking a grow 
license is exorbitant, while another asked where growers legally can 
obtain seeds. A woman said the state should allow small mom-and-pop 
boutique growers, similar to people who grow specialty tomatoes.

Where legal cultivators can grow marijuana will depend on local 
zoning ordinances, McDade-Williams told the crowd, because the law 
does not address that issue. Lyon County commissioners already have 
outlawed dispensaries in unincorporated parts of the county, and 
others are expected to enact similar bans.

That there is money to be made from peddling marijuana was clear from 
people who spoke Friday. Many were lawyers or veteran legislative lobbyists.

While the regulations only will apply to medical marijuana, Nevadans 
could in the next few years pass a ballot question to legalize the 
recreational use of marijuana by adults, like Colorado and Washington 
did last year.

The Marijuana Policy Project of Washington, D.C., has announced that 
it will circulate petitions in Nevada in 2016 to put a marijuana 
legalization question on the ballot.

Two similar questions failed in the past, but a poll released 
Thursday by the Retail Association of Nevada shows overwhelming 
support for legal marijuana if state taxes on the product go to education.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom