Pubdate: Wed, 02 Jul 2014
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2014 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Andy Mannix
Page: A1

FIRST POT SHOP POISED TO OPEN TUESDAY

All It Needs Is License, Supply of Marijuana

Seattle Store Expects to Sell Out the First Day

A week before the grand opening of Cannabis City, James Lathrop paces 
by the conspicuously bare glass display cases in his small shop, 
tucked away just south of downtown Seattle.

Barring some 11th-hour business catastrophe, 10 pounds of marijuana 
will line these shelves Tuesday, a quantity Lathrop expects will sell 
out that day at $15 to $20 per gram. But until he officially receives 
his retail license from the state Monday, it's only glass 
paraphernalia and small label plates that read "Fine Jewelry," 
remnants from when the cases lived in a Sears department store.

One of the many nice things about the burgeoning legal marijuana 
business, Lathrop jokes, is he can be forthright about the intended 
use of these handcrafted glass pipes, some of which stand several feet high.

"These are not tobacco pipes," he says, laughing. "We should get a 
sign that says that."

On Tuesday, Lathrop plans to open the doors to Cannabis City and 
become the first marijuana retailer in Seattle. For Lathrop and other 
pioneers of Washington's newly legalized pot industry, cutting the 
ribbon marks the culmination of months of grueling preparation. Until 
last week, he and his business manager, Amber McGowan, worked as many 
as 16 hours a day to prepare the business for its first customers, as 
well as a two-hour state inspection, which they passed last week, he said.

"We were still doing construction the day of our inspection," he 
said. "This window got replaced an hour before he got here."

Meanwhile, Cannabis City's supplier, Nine Point Growth Industries in 
Bremerton, is hustling to get 30 pounds of marijuana ready to go out 
the door for Lathrop and several other retailers around the state 
also expecting to open next week.

Customers are allowed under the law to buy up to an ounce at a time. 
But because the demand is likely to be so high the first day, Nine 
Point has been working around the clock since Monday measuring all 30 
pounds into 2-gram bags so more buyers will have a chance to partake 
in the historic day, said Greg Stewart, CEO of Nine Point.

"That is all that I had available," he said. "I could literally sell 
as much as I had right now. If I had 10 times as much I'd be able to sell it."

Road to Cannabis City

For Lathrop, being among the first to navigate Washington's new 
marijuana laws was daunting from the beginning.

Before he could even be eligible for the licensing lottery, he had to 
secure a location. Marijuana retailers can't be within 1,000 feet of 
a school, playground, recreation center, child-care center, public 
park, public transit center, library or arcade.

And landlords at some properties that did work were hesitant to take 
him on as a tenant. Lathrop said about 10 people turned him down 
before he found the rundown, 620-square-foot space near Fourth Avenue 
South and South Lander Street, which he began renting in November.

Cannabis City has since hired 15 staff members, including security 
guards who will check IDs and manage the line when the shop first 
opens. Lathrop also installed 11 cameras - eight inside, three 
outside - and an advanced alarm system.

But simply getting the shop staffed and up to code wasn't enough, 
Lathrop said. "We had to make it cool."

There was no specific template for "cool," and some of Lathrop's 
ideas were subtle. The wood paneling on the wall and the floor 
planks, for example, are angled exactly 60 degrees. After adding the 
360 degrees of a circle, he explained, that makes them 420 degrees.

This was so important to Lathrop that when the carpenter installed 
half of the floor at 45 degrees, Lathrop made him tear it up and 
start over, he said.

Finding a supplier that would be ready to ship for Cannabis City's 
opening was no easy task. McGowan sent about 30 letters to suppliers 
before she found Nine Point, she said.

As more retailers open over the summer, demand is almost certain to 
exceed supply, said Stewart, of Nine Point. His business has been 
getting up to 10 calls a day from retailers looking for product, and 
he's had to turn them down.

"I'm afraid of us all looking foolish to the nation," Stewart said. 
"You know, having this big run-up and then a day and a half later 
having nothing on the shelves."

Waiting to exhale

With opening day coming next week, Lathrop and McGowan can't relax just yet.

While they plan to host an extravagant ribbon-cutting ceremony 
Tuesday, they still have no way of knowing what time the marijuana will arrive.

Lathrop can't officially file the order with Nine Point until he's 
received his license, which he's told he will get via email Monday, 
but he doesn't know exactly when. To comply with the state's policy, 
Nine Point then has to quarantine the pot for 24 hours before 
shipping - a measure that will allow regulators to keep tabs on 
shipments as the industry continues to grow, said Brian Smith, 
spokesman for the Liquor Control Board.

So if Lathrop's license doesn't come until Monday afternoon, Cannabis 
City won't have pot for sale until Tuesday afternoon.

Cannabis City is the only store in Seattle to have passed its 
inspection, and it is expected to be the only one in the city opening 
Tuesday. A store in Bellevue and another in Des Moines also could 
open that day, as well as a few others around the state.

Stewart said he's also preparing shipments to shops in Vancouver and 
Bellingham for next week, as well as Olympia and Bremerton for 
slightly later in the summer.

Lathrop said he plans to open his store at "high noon" and hopes the 
weed has arrived by then, though he said that could change Monday if 
the license comes in later.

Sales will be in cash, and there's an ATM in the shop.

Per the state inspector's orders, they have to obscure the glass 
display cases that will hold the marijuana. As part of the state's 
policy, retailers can't place marijuana in view of passers-by. Though 
the windows are already blurred, the inspector feared wandering eyes 
would still be able to catch a glimpse of the product from the 
sidewalk if the door was opened, Lathrop said.

But aside from a few small alterations and a little red tape, 
Cannabis City is ready.

"We just need the cannabis to get on the shelves," McGowan said.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom