Pubdate: Tue, 14 Oct 2014 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2014 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Joni Balter, Bloomberg News Note: Joni Balter is a longtime Seattle columnist and writer who contributes to local NPR and PBS affiliates. LESSONS ON LEGALIZATION FROM COLO., WASH. Colorado and Washington state knew they were jumping into the unknown when voters legalized recreational marijuana two years ago. They just didn't know the half of it. But thanks to what we've learned from the two pioneering states, it is now easier for those that follow to separate hype from hemp. Voters in Oregon, Alaska and Washington, D.C., where legalization plans are on the November ballot, should be skeptical, for example, of promises about the revenue the government will get from pot taxes. Residents might also ask for more specifics on how edibles will be regulated. But the cautionary lessons from Colorado and Washington should not discourage other places from taking the legalization plunge. Instead, this experience should help others design a system that works better, a necessary step as the movement spreads. Here are some missteps to try to avoid. First, lower expectations for tax revenue and consider more carefully how competition from medical marijuana might affect recreational sales. Another hitch has been when localities want to opt out of allowing retail sales, further complicating calculations on market share. The Colorado law allows cities and counties to ban retail outlets that sell marijuana. The Washington measure didn't specifically address this question and is now facing a lawsuit. The No. 1 sleeper issue has turned out to be how to regulate edibles. This caught most everyone by surprise. Both Colorado and Washington enacted additional rules for these products after two edible-related deaths and an increase in ER visits in Colorado. Then there is the matter of accommodating marijuana tourists. Travelers from all over the world have descended on Colorado and Washington and bought marijuana. But a successful pot tourism industry requires suitable public spaces to ingest it, and neither Washington nor Colorado allows smoking in public, in parks, on sidewalks and so on. Both states should borrow Amsterdam's "coffee shop" model so adults can purchase small quantities of marijuana for on-site consumption. Every state that hops on the legalization train will have its own debates on all these questions and many others. But if you accept the evidence that alcohol is worse than marijuana or that the drug war didn't work or simply that legalization is inevitable, it doesn't take much to see the trend. The public is clamoring for a more up-to-date and realistic approach to recreational pot, and government is figuring it out. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom