Pubdate: Sun, 06 Sep 2015 Source: Honolulu Star-Advertiser (HI) Copyright: 2015 Star Advertiser Contact: http://www.staradvertiser.com/info/Star-Advertiser_Letter_to_the_Editor.html Website: http://www.staradvertiser.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5154 Author: Jack Healy, New York Times COLORADO STONERS PUSH PUBLIC POT USE DENVER - Whether bought from a downtown shop or cadged from a friend's basement greenhouse, legal marijuana is easy to find in Colorado. Places to smoke it, not so much. Smoking in private homes and on front porches is allowed. But under a thicket of state, local and private regulations, marijuana use here, in a state at the forefront of legalization, is banned from parks and sidewalks, airport smoking areas, hotel rooms, gallery events, nightclubs and nearly every other corner of public life. Smoking in public is regularly ticketed, and in spring the Denver police raided two private marijuana-friendly clubs and handed out citations. But in the latest battle over legalizing marijuana, advocates are seeking to allow legal pot use in establishments like bars or clubs that cater to over-21 crowds. Supporters are calling it "limited social cannabis use." In Denver some of the advocates behind the 2012 vote that made Colorado, with Washington state, the first in the nation to legalize the sale and use of recreational marijuana say that the restrictions on use are too onerous and have created a paradoxical landscape where consumers - tourists in particular - are illegally consuming their legally bought marijuana. The crowd at the private fenced patio at the Bud & Breakfast of Denver, one of a handful of marijuana-friendly accommodations across the state, eagerly supports more places to legally and comfortably use marijuana. A retiree from Texas and Owner, Bud & Breakfast of Denver her husband and adult daughter were sitting under a sun shade and marveling at how surreal it felt to buy marijuana, and then smoke it, with no worries about the police barging in. The setup at the bed-and-breakfast is bring-your-own. The owner, Joel Schneider, said he used to offer small free samples at a "bud bar" until he got a misdemeanor citation. But for $300 to $400 a night, guests get breakfast (called the Wake and Bake), a 4:20 afternoon tea, access to shelves of bongs and vaporizers, and plenty of space to chat and smoke. "We try to create a social atmosphere," Schneider said as his guests mingled on the patio and lit up. "Everyone who stays here has something in common: They want to sit around and smoke cannabis." "We need to ensure that adults have somewhere they can go," said Mason Tvert, an activist who helped lead the legalization fight three years ago. "We have establishments where adults can go to drink beer, which reduces the likelihood that they'll use it in public. That's what we're talking about here." But Amendment 64, the voter-approved constitutional measure that legalized recreational marijuana, outlaws marijuana that is consumed "openly and publicly or in a manner that endangers others." Some in the marijuana industry favor members-only smoking clubs or Amsterdam-style "coffee shops" for marijuana users. Others envision a future in which people could vaporize marijuana or consume edibles at a downtown bar on Saturday nights as freely as someone sipping a martini. Marijuana advocates have proposed a Denver ballot measure for November that would allow some marijuana consumption in city establishments that cater exclusively to customers over 21. Supporters submitted more than 10,500 petition signatures to put the question to voters. But they have also been talking with city officials and business groups in the hope of drafting a local legislation for limited marijuana use, one that would lead them to withdraw the ballot measure. Some restaurant owners and event planners said they would love to host marijuana-friendly parties, but the Colorado Restaurant Association has come out "adamantly against" the ballot proposal, said a spokeswoman for the group, Carolyn Livingston. Businesses said they worried about their legal liability and insurance risks. "We do not support this in any way, shape or form," Livingston said. And Gina Carbone, an activist who has been working to keep marijuana away from children, said Colorado had approved recreational marijuana, in part, because of promises that marijuana use would happen in private. She said allowing it in bars or clubs would betray part of that promise. "It's just going to increase visibility and further normalize pot use," Carbone said. "And this is just not good for kids." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom