Pubdate: Mon, 31 Aug 2015 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA) Copyright: 2015 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Authors: Brianna Gurciullom and Karen Mawdsley, NEWS21 Note: Brianna Gurciullo is a Kathryn Green Endowment and Stephen Holly Bronz Endowment Fellow. Note: Eighth in a series. POT'S BLURRY LEGAL LINE Washington, D.C., is feeling its way around a new law that allows residents to grow and consume marijuana, but not sell or buy. About 30 party guests in suits and summer dresses mingled in the backyard of a small home in the Forest Hills neighborhood in Washington, D.C., and snacked on hors d'oeuvres. Instead of cocktails, they sipped gourmet coffee and tea infused with marijuana. In the kitchen, servers poured hot and iced drinks for the tasting party. They were showcasing products from House of Jane, a California company that sells cannabis-infused beverages. Jane's Brew C-Cups were on display in the living room, stacked on a table. "What Jane's Brew is trying to do is alleviate, remove the stigma for cannabis," said Jill Amen, the company's cofounder, who was giving guests free samples. "It can be done in a professional way - just like a cocktail party, a very social event." This is the new world of marijuana in the capital, where residents have been able to legally possess, privately consume, and grow limited amounts of pot since February. The sale and purchase of marijuana remains illegal here, unlike the four states that have legalized both recreational and medical marijuana. Instead of being sold at shops and generating new tax revenue, marijuana in the district can be grown at home and shared. Smokers and growers said they feel like they can be more open about their passions, but politicians, activists, and business people said pot continues to be dealt illegally at homes or on the streets. The illegal market is as robust as ever - if not more so, with D.C. residents curious and talking about marijuana. As written, the law allows scenarios that cause residents and police officers to shrug their shoulders. You can't buy or sell marijuana, but what exactly constitutes a transaction? The line between legal and illegal is fine and blurry, confusing many and creating loopholes that some growers and dealers hope to exploit. The people who helped put legalization on last year's ballot said this will be the reality for D.C. for at least a few more years. The federal government still classifies marijuana as an illegal and a dangerous drug. Lawmakers' positions on marijuana have not evolved as quickly as the public's, and Congress has blocked the district from creating a system to tax and regulate pot sales. "D.C. is kind of like the Alice in Wonderland of cannabis. The Queen of Hearts is Congress," said Alex Jeffrey, executive director of the D.C. chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. "Recreation and regulation should go hand in hand. We are an exception to the rule." The city also has a medical marijuana program, which the D.C. Department of Health regulates. More than 3,800 residents were enrolled in the program in mid-July. Even if Congress - which approves D.C.'s budget - steps out of the way, it could take more than a year for the local government to implement a system for regulating and taxing pot sales unless a D.C. Council member introduces emergency legislation. After voters approved a ballot initiative by almost 70 percent to legalize medical marijuana in 1998, Congress blocked the city from creating regulations until 2009. The first legal medical marijuana sale didn't occur until 2013. Adam Eidinger, who as chairman of the D.C. Cannabis Campaign spearheaded last year's ballot initiative, said he thinks possession, consumption, and home cultivation of recreational marijuana are enough for now. "We can handle where we're at right now for a little while longer and be very content with it," he said. Opportunities, limits A business climate has emerged in the district characterized by entrepreneurs finding creative, roundabout ways to make money legally without selling marijuana itself. Businesses such as Canna Party L.L.C. bring products related to smoking marijuana into their clients' homes - like a jewelry party. MetroX DC delivers bongs, pipes, and lighters to residents' doorsteps. After the new D.C. law went into effect, Silver Spring, Md., resident Jacob Asbell founded Hydro-City, which sells and rents equipment to grow marijuana indoors. "We come to your place, we set everything up for you, we teach you how to use it, we include everything you need to grow, and then just add seeds and water," he said. The law still causes confusion. Other business people said they often feel like they have to test the law's parameters through trial and error. And marijuana possession remains illegal on federal land. That includes federally subsidized public housing projects, which are overwhelmingly home to black D.C. residents. The path to decriminalization Disparity in marijuana-related arrests between blacks and whites helped spur activists and politicians to set the district on the path to legalization. The American Civil Liberties Union found in a 2013 study that, though blacks and whites nationwide use marijuana at about the same rates, blacks in D.C. were eight times more likely to be arrested for possession than whites. Following that report, the D.C. Council voted in March 2014 to decriminalize small possession: Those caught with up to an ounce of marijuana would face only a $25 fine. Activists then landed a measure on the November ballot to eliminate all penalties for possession of up to 2 ounces, and allow D.C. residents to grow up to six plants at home. About 70 percent of district voters approved the measure. It passed in every precinct except one. Supporters said it would benefit those most likely to face arrest: members of black, lower-income communities. D.C. Cannabis Campaign posters read, "Legalization ends discrimination." As recently as five years ago, a majority of blacks in D.C. had opposed legalization, according to a Washington Post poll. But opinion appeared to shift in 2014, with 58 percent of blacks supporting legalization, a Post poll found. "Once the racial disparity issue was discussed and people began to understand that ... once people could see those numbers, the entire city came around," said Paul Zukerberg, an activist and D.C.-based lawyer. Police and public safety That dialogue also prompted a discussion about law enforcement practices. After the ACLU report, Metropolitan Police Department Chief Cathy Lanier publicly denied that D.C. officers targeted black residents. Council member David Grosso said the chief has since told him that the police are "taking a pretty hands-off approach" to enforcement - something the ACLU is monitoring. Between Feb. 26, when pot was legalized, and July 22, D.C. police made 120 marijuana-related arrests, according to MPD's public information office. Of those, 43 were for consumption of marijuana and 57 were for possession with intent to distribute. In 2010, law enforcement agencies including MPD made 5,393 marijuana arrests in D.C., according to an ACLU analysis. A legal market in D.C. could be worth $130 million a year, city officials have estimated. "If Congress would get off our backs, we would have a law passed in a couple of weeks," Grosso said. A Senate committee recently approved a bill to allow D.C. to tax and regulate pot sales. But its chances are unclear: A separate House bill would keep sales illegal. A growing medical marijuana program Recreational legalization has rippled into the medical marijuana realm. In July 2014, only 738 patients were registered with the Department of Health. By July 27 of this year, there were 3,948. Corey Barnette, who owns a medical marijuana cultivation center called District Growers, said he has seen an increase in demand for the marijuana that his business grows. "We do see a lot of people, who we would call closet medicators, are more open to marijuana programs," he said. The district has seven cultivation centers and five dispensaries. The city council has increased the number of plants cultivators can grow from 95 to 500 to 1,000. Still, Barnette's not worried about competition from homegrown plants. "Right now, all over D.C., people are learning just how difficult it is - or just how much attention is necessary - to grow a plant to pharmaceutical grade," he said. "You can grow your own tomatoes. Most people don't. You can grow your own carrots. Most people don't. You can make your own beer. Most people don't." [sidebar] About this Series This report is part of the project titled "America's Weed Rush," an investigation into the legalization of marijuana. It was produced by the Carnegie-Knight News21 initiative, a national investigative reporting project involving top college journalism students across the country and headquartered at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University. For the complete project, including additional stories, videos and interactive elements, visit http://weedrush.news21.com. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom