Pubdate: Wed, 16 Sep 2015 Source: Argus Leader (Sioux Falls, SD) Copyright: 2015 Argus Leader Contact: http://www.argusleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/842 Author: Dana Ferguson INVITATION TO MARIJUANA FACILITIES GETS MIXED REACTIONS Governor, Some Legislators Are Choosing Not to Attend Days after a South Dakota tribe sent letters inviting state lawmakers to tour its marijuana cultivation and distribution facilities next month, some remain uncertain about how they'll RSVP. In a copy of the letter, Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribal President Anthony Reider says lawmakers are welcome to tour the facilities and attend a Q & A session next month about the "realities of marijuana in Indian Country" and "the benefits of medical marijuana." Rep. Leslie Heinemann, R-Flandreau, said Tuesday that he hasn't decided yet whether he'll attend. Heinemann represents the tribe as part of the 8th district. "I respect their sovereign right, but I don't agree with their decision," Heinemann said of the tribe's choice to grow and sell the drug. "I do believe the community as a whole doesn't support that decision." Heinemann said he plans to meet with the tribal chairman to discuss constituents' concerns about the facilities. He said the tribe's chairman would have to assure him that the tribe is taking the community's worries seriously before he'd consider attending. "That would be my deciding factor," he said. Eric Hagen, CEO of Monarch America, a Colorado-based company consulting with the tribe on its marijuana venture, said the event is designed to put lawmakers at ease about the tribe's growing and selling efforts. "The main reason for the meeting is to be as transparent as possible with the state," Hagen said. "It's a good starting point to ensure to the state that the tribe is taking every measure possible to secure this side." Rep. Matthew Wollmann, R-Flandreau, who also represents the district, said he wasn't sure he could attend the event due to scheduling issues, but he appreciated the tribe's effort to include legislators in the process. "I think it's a good move on their part to reach out to us," Wollmann said. "And it's important for us to see it firsthand, to be able to see it through their eyes and in their shoes." Tribal president: 'Media frenzy fraught with misinformation' In the letter, Reider writes that since the tribe legalized marijuana in June "there has been a media frenzy fraught with misinformation and speculation." Reider didn't immediately respond to voice messages requesting comment Tuesday. Other legislators had already decided Tuesday whether they planned to take the tour. State Sen. Scott Parsley, D-Madison, who also represents the tribe as part of the 8th district, said Tuesday that he plans to attend the event in his district to better understand what the tribe is doing. He said the growth and sales that occur on the reservation could spill out into the rest of the district. "I want to know what's going on in my district and there might be issues that come out of this that affect people outside the tribe," Parsley said. Rep. Jim Bolin, R-Canton, said he received the invitation, which he called "very nice and cordial," but he doesn't plan to take the tour. "I have a long-standing opposition to the legalization of marijuana," Bolin said. "It's highly unlikely that I would change my mind on this particular subject." Gov. Dennis Daugaard also received an invitation last week, but won't attend, his spokesman Tony Venhuizen said. "The governor believes that the legalization of marijuana, in any part of South Dakota, is a damaging step and he opposes it," Venhuizen said. Among those left off the invite list was South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley. Jackley has said non-tribal members found on the reservation with marijuana as well as tribe members found off the reservation with the drug would be subject to legal action. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom