Pubdate: Thu, 18 Jun 2015 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2015 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Authors: Ricardo Baca and Elizabeth Hernandez ACTIVISTS WANT ITS USE ALLOWED AT CLUBS, BARS The same activists who in 2012 successfully legalized the cultivation, sale and use of recreational marijuana in Colorado have started their next big initiative: the push to allow pot consumption in places now off-limits. Activists are seeking a measure on Denver's November ballot that asks voters to approve allowing marijuana consumption in commercial establishments - including bars and clubs - that meet certain guidelines. They hope to get the question approved by the clerk and recorder's office and gather more than 4,700 signatures before summer's end. To get the proposal on the November ballot, assistant city attorney David Broadwell said the petition would have to be "signed, sealed and delivered" by Sept. 3. "We're confident that voters will agree that adults should be able to use marijuana socially in private venues when around other adults," backer Mason Tvert said prior to a meeting about the measure late Wednesday afternoon with Broadwell and others. A public-consumption ban has inspired public-versus-private debates that led to the raids and closures of several cannabis clubs. "Denver has been overly restrictive," said activist Brian Vicente. "We believe that's unconstitutional." Most noteworthy about the proposal by Tvert and Vicente is that it's significantly more liberal than previous ideas involving cannabis-only clubs floated by state Rep. Jonathan Singer, D-Longmont, and others. "We're proposing a narrow exemption to Denver's current ban on social cannabis use by adults," said Tvert, communications chief at the Marijuana Policy Project. "It would simply allow adults 21 and older to consume marijuana in designated areas and venues where only adults are allowed. This is allowing adults to have the option to use marijuana in certain venues that choose to allow it." Instead of limiting marijuana use to cannabis clubs operating separately from bars, a model already in place in cities such as Toronto, this proposal would allow existing bars and venues to dedicate 21-and-older spaces to indoor vaporizing and outdoor, out-of-public-sight smoking, Tvert said. The smoking areas would conform to the state ban on indoor smoking. Restaurant owners had no immediate opinion. "We haven't polled our members on this issue because it is currently illegal to consume publicly," said Sonia Riggs, Colorado Restaurant Association president and CEO. The activists said many of their proposed regulations would operate via the same rules placed on alcohol consumption, such as allowing underage patrons entrance to a concert venue serving liquor. At Wednesday's meeting, Vicente noted that tourists encounter great difficulties finding locations to consume their legal pot: The proposed "Limited Social Marijuana Consumption Initiative" spells out the suggested rules. Denver marijuana czar Ashley Kilroy said the city doesn't take positions on proposed ordinances but added that the issue of public consumption "has been on our agenda." "They raise the same types of questions we've been asking about this: Do the people of Denver want to consume marijuana in a commercial business? What issues would we be solving if we allowed this in some way? I think those questions have been out there, and we've been engaged in those conversations," said Kilroy. Vicente on Wednesday said their motivation for the proposal rested largely on the fact that "Denver was being inactive on the issue." Kilroy said she attends neighborhood meetings and other forums, where she has "heard comments that range the entire spectrum." Another question Kilroy has for the activists: Have they considered the conflicts with state laws? The questions around state laws are contentious. Some in city government have said Colorado's pot-legalizing Amendment 64 prohibits the public consumption of marijuana, but Tvert and his colleagues (who wrote the amendment) disagree. "As one of the people who conjured up Amendment 64 and was considered one of the two primary sponsors, I can attest to the fact that they're wrong," Tvert said. "Amendment 64 intentionally did not prohibit private businesses from allowing adults to responsibly consume marijuana on the premises. I don't know where they would get that. (Amendment 64) said it would be illegal to consume openly and publicly, but it's not open or public if it's in a private business." Kilroy said: "There is that issue - if it is a private, commercial business that is open to the public, is it considered private?" She deflected the question to Broadwell, who also had no comment on the issue of Amendment 64 prohibiting the public consumption of cannabis. Broadwell said he does wonder why proponents worded their proposal so broadly, rather than just suggesting cannabis clubs. Tvert said the broad nature of the proposal is intentional. "It's really irrational to allow adults to consume this product but prohibit them from using it in private places that would allow it - especially with tourists," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom