Pubdate: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 Source: News-Item, The (PA) Copyright: 2014 The News Item Contact: http://www.newsitem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3556 Author: David Pierson, Los Angeles Times Page: A9 SHUNNED BY BANKS, LEGITIMATE POT SHOPS MUST DEAL IN RISKY CASH OAKLAND, Calif. (TNS)- The suppliers arrive at one of the nation's largest marijuana dispensaries carrying hundreds of pounds of cannabis in duffel bags, knapsacks and baby diaper totes. They leave with those same carriers stuffed with wads of cash. Harborside Health collects the money from thousands of customers, spending $40 to $60 a pop for one-eighth of an ounce of pot. No credit cards or checks are accepted. That's not by choice. Though Harborside's business is legal in California and a growing number of other states, most banks still won't touch the marijuana industry, fearing the federal prohibition that remains in place. That's a huge security problem for Harborside and hundreds of other dispensaries forced to deal in cash by the truckload. The fast-growing Oakland company stores its weed and money in a phalanx of high-grade safes, inside a vault with 18-inch walls of reinforced concrete. Thirty-six cameras and two security teams-one to watch the other - guard the business. To pay local and state taxes, employees carry bags filled with bills to government offices, changing routes every time. "We've gone through three armored car services already, and that doesn't even include the many that refused to work with us," said Steve DeAngelo, who co-founded Harborside in 2006. "The biggest concern to us is the threat to the well-being and safety of our staff and patients." Need for banking services As the marijuana industry expands into a multibillion-dollar business, the need for proper banking services continues to intensify. Attempts by the Obama administration earlier in the year to ease the problem have so far failed to spark widespread change. Without banks and credit cards, financial transparency remains elusive. Taxes and basic accounting are complicated. Paying vendors and employees is both a headache and a danger. Unless Congress takes action, the problem will grow. Twenty-three states now allow some form of legal cannabis, including Alaska and Oregon, where voters approved measures for recreational use in the recent midterm elections. Cash is already sloshing around an estimated 2,000 medical and recreational dispensaries operating in the U.S. today, up from about 1,400 three years ago, according to the National Cannabis Industry Association. California is home to about three-quarters of them. The Obama administration issued guidelines in February aimed at forging a path for banks to work with marijuana businesses in states where it's legal. It requires banks to issue reports ensuring that their cannabis-related clients are reputable, but it doesn't absolve banks of civil charges if those reports prove untrue. As of August, only 105 banks and credit unions were working with legal cannabis sellers, according to remarks by the director of the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. The agency did not respond to requests for an update of those numbers. "The guidelines certainly did not throw open the doors to banking, as we had hoped," said Taylor West, deputy director of the Denver-headquartered National Cannabis Industry Association. "We have continued to see financial institutions feeling vulnerable." West has heard whispered anecdotes of measured progress. "It happens extremely quietly," she said. "Most institutions that are starting to work with cannabis businesses are insisting that it stay confidential." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom