Pubdate: Fri, 02 Oct 2015 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2015 Guardian News and Media Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Chris McGreal RECREATIONAL MARIJUANA? 'SOME DAY WALMART WILL SELL IT' The three young men climbing into the pickup close to the Oregon border cheerfully acknowledged they were about to break federal law. Anthony, Daniel and Chris had just bustled out of a marijuana shop in Vancouver, Washington, clutching bags of marijuana as they headed home a short drive over the bridge to Portland, Oregon. Crossing state lines with drugs is a federal offence not that it has discouraged the steady stream of customers from Portland taking advantage of Washington's legalisation of recreational marijuana sales last year. As of yesterday, Oregon joined Washington and Colorado to become the third US state to permit the sale for anyone over 21. "I've been coming across since they legalised it here," said Anthony. "But it'll be closer and it's going to be much cheaper in Portland. And I won't haveh to cross the bridge. Not that I've ever seen the cops lining up to catch us." The open sale of recreational mar marijuana has come more swiftly to Portland than many expected. Legalisation was only approved in a ballot measure last November whereas Washington state took 18 months to open its first shops. To speed up the process, Oregon has approved recreational sales through existing medical marijuana dispensaries, bypassing lengthy background checks that have slowed introduction across the state line. Mike Chappell, owner of Silver Stem Fine Cannabis in Portland, used to own a marijuana store in Colorado, which legalised sales last year. He said that whereas several dozen stores opened on Colorado's first day of legalisation, "in Portland we're looking at 130, if not more, that are eligible to sell recreational marijuana". If Vancouver is anything to go by, Chappell's shop is going to be busy. The three young men were shopping at the New Vansterdam marijuana shop where its marketing director, Shon Harris, said they had about 1,000 customers a day at two outlets. Nearly 300 items are listed on a "menu" from marijuana leaf to an array of edibles including sweets. "People dabble," he said. "People are becoming more open to the idea now that it's been legal in Washington." Outside, the number plates of cars reveal the diversity of its customers. As well as those from Washington are Oregon, Alabama and Utah plates. "We're the closest store to PDX [Portland airport]," said Jim Mullen, coowner of The Herbery marijuana store in Vancouver. "They still have suitcases in the car. Mostly on the weekends, from everywhere. "It's crazy. You have the United States of America but we're not united on this when you can go to jail in Texas for having a joint but come here and buy it freely. You can fly with it out of PDX to any other city in Oregon, legally." But the bulk of Mullen's out-of-state business comes from Portland and the start of open sales in Oregon is a threat to the income of a significant proportion of marijuana shops in Vancouver. Washington imposes a tax of 37% on marijuana sales which brought the state close to $70m (UKP46m) in revenue to July. Oregon will charge 25% when taxes kick in in January. Until then, there will be no tax at all. That is likely to price marijuana in Portland well below that in Vancouver, though legal sales in both places are more expensive than on the black market. Daniel said he could find cheaper marijuana on the black market but it wasn't worth the trouble. "People are tired of being ripped off on the street. And in the shop you get a lot more variety. It's all about the flavour, the selection," he said. Mullen said many people don't want to use the black market. "You've got people who are older that smoked in college and now that it's legal they're getting back into it but don't have any connections to buy. And you've got a great variety of products in the retail stores. You've got edibles. You've got concentrates. You've got flower. You've got 50 different strains of flower. We're like Macy's for marijuana." The marijuana business still faces problems. The drug remains illegal under federal law but the Internal Revenue Service nevertheless wants its share of taxes on the business. Shops cannot claim the normal business deductions. Major banks refuse to deal with marijuana businesses. "There are a lot of people who don't like it," said Mullen. "They are paranoid about it, they think it's still the devil's drug. But there is an inevitability. When states are voting to legalise medicinal use, that's a quantum leap forward from where we've been. It's a new industry. Someday Costco and Walmart will take over." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom