Pubdate: Mon, 28 Sep 2015 Source: Albany Democrat-Herald (OR) Copyright: 2015 Lee Enterprises Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/HPOp5PfB Website: http://www.democratherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/7 POT BANS MAY RECALL PROHIBITION The offices of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission must be busy these days: Not only are employees hammering out the rules under which recreational marijuana will be sold, they're also keeping track of those local governments that are working to ban the pot sales. That list gets longer by the week. Currently, it includes mid-valley communities such as Sweet Home and Brownsville. It also includes seven of Oregon's 36 counties. More governments will join the list, possibly including Albany, where the City Council last week made some noise about maybe pursuing a permanent ban on recreational sales. The topic has been in the news lately because cities and counties have been dealing with a smaller, but related, question: Whether to ban the early sales of recreational pot by licensed medical marijuana dispensaries. In the absence of some kind of governmental action, those dispensaries have the green light to sell recreational pot beginning Oct. 1. But these early sales are just a warmup for the main event, the question of whether to ban recreational sales entirely even after the OLCC works up the rules for governing sales. When we've finally taken stock of these bans, it's likely we'll have a statewide patchwork of regulations that will be reminiscent of how we had "wet" counties and "dry" counties in the years after Prohibition. It will, for example, be difficult to find legal outlets to buy recreational marijuana in the 15 Eastern Oregon counties in which more than 55 percent of voters rejected Ballot Measure 91, the legalization initiative. Governments in those counties can ban recreational sales without taking the issue to the ballot. In other counties - and this includes both Linn and Benton - any ban on recreational sales will have to be approved by voters, most likely in the November 2016 general election. Marijuana advocates argue that communities banning pot sales will be losing their share of the tax revenue that could be generated. But that argument is a nonstarter with government officials: The amount of tax revenue that will be going to the local governments, at least initially, isn't nearly enough to make much of an impact on anti-marijuana sentiment on the local level. At the same time, of course, other communities will be moving ahead with marijuana sales: Attempts to push through any kind of ban in Corvallis and Benton County, for example, simply haven't gotten any traction. This patchwork of bans and differing regulations throughout the state about the sale of marijuana could have at least one benefit: We'll be better able to track how legalized pot plays out in Oregon by comparing what happens in the "dry" counties with what happens in the "wet" ones. (Of course, it will remain legal to smoke pot in all 36 counties.) But history shows that Prohibition wasn't particularly successful during its run. And the federal government's long-running battle against marijuana has little to show for its efforts. Communities that ban marijuana sales are within their rights, and we could learn something useful from their work. But in the long run, they might be swimming against the tide. (mm) - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom