The Senate approved a bill (HB 1397) on Thursday by a 31-7 vote. The measure passed the House on Tuesday but must return to that chamber, because of changes made by the Senate, and could still make another visit to the Senate if the House makes more changes. Friday is the final day that all non-budget legislation must be passed in this year’s session.
Oh Canada
The 2017 Global Marijuana March: This weekend around the world
Two weeks after many cities celebrated 4/20, people in cities around the world will take to the streets on Saturday for the 2017 Global Marijuana March (GMM, in some places known as the Million Marijuana March) as a protest to end cannabis prohibition in each of the countries where the march takes place. Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to participate around the world, in dozens of countries. Originally organized by activist Dana Beal in New York City, the event became a global phenomenon in 1999, making this the 19th edition. Since then, over 800 cities across over 70 countries have participated.
As the Rehoboth Beach, Deleware event site described it, “The GMM is a celebration embracing marijuana culture as a personal lifestyle choice. Participants unite to discuss, promote, entertain and educate both consumers and non-consumers alike.”
According to organizers, the main demands of the march are: stop arrests for cannabis use and possession, allow the medical use of cannabis, stop propaganda about marijuana, and “end the prison state.”
Here are some of the major cities hosting a march, with wording from their websites about what the march will entail. If you know of others where you leave, email us and we’ll add the details.
USA
New York City
Parade Assembly: 11:00 a.m. | West 31st & Broadway, Koreatown, NYC
Parade Start Time: 12:30 p.m. | Parade will march to Union Square (Route South on Broadway)
Rally: 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. | Union Square South Plaza
“The NYC Cannabis Parade is the longest running public expression of drug policy reform in New York City, with roots as far back as the early 70’s. This event have gone by many different monikers, but our purpose remains the same, to spread awareness throughout the world! In 1999, the Million Marijuana March brand exploded and has since turned into a annual event held in hundreds of cities across dozens of countries.”
Los Angeles
High Noon.
“We will be gathering on the SW corner of Adams & Crenshaw. From there we march south on Crenshaw until we arrive at Leimert Park. You are cordially invited to march along with the people or deck out your automobile in a Cannabis Hemp theme & join us in that way. This is a community event, children & friendly four-legged friends (on-leash) are encouraged to attend. Bring signs. Once we get to the park, we will gather there & continue to celebrate this most wonderful plant.”
Rehoboth Beach, Delaware
2:00 p.m.
“Starts at Surfside Park and North Boardwalk, in Rehoboth Beach. Ends with a Rally and Call to Action at the Bandstand. Speeches by local reform advocates and leaders, Give-a-ways, Raffles, DJ, Photobooth, and more. Afterparty – Rehoboth Ale House at 8pm.”
Canada
Toronto
Queen’s Park
High Noon – gathering. 2pm launch
“The Toronto chapter has participated in the March from the beginning and is expected to once again organize the largest march in the Canada. With over 20,000 marchers in Toronto, and and with impending Canadian legalization the atmosphere around G.M.M this year is sure to be lively. The march will travel north from Queens Park to Bloor, east to Yonge street, Yonge to Wellesley and west back to Queens Park. Unfortunately there will be no festival components such as washrooms, staging or legal vendors at Queen’s Park as no permit has been granted by the City. A ticketed pop-up event will happen after the march with an entertainment and vendors village at a location to be announced at the march. The peaceful celebration has never had an arrest in the event’s 19 year history. The GMM is the City’s largest spring outdoor gatherings generating millions of dollars to the local economy.”
Follow at Twitter: @gmmlive
Vancouver
9 AM
Vancouver Art Gallery, 750 Hornby Street
“Come experience voluntary association and transaction, peaceful civil disobedience, culture, and community at the Cannabis Farmer’s Market. We will have a farmers market and at 4:20 after we smoke we will march around the art gallery for an hour, then back to the market. The licensed producers (LPs) want a monopoly on selling cannabis in Canada. The Liberal government is eager to cooperate, by setting harsh punishments for anybody who grows or uses cannabis outside this regime. To ensure this does not become a reality, a free, fair, and open market has arisen organically here in the Vancouver area. There is no better model for access to cannabis than the Farmer’s Market. Come to the source and talk to the farmers and extractors directly – KNOW how it was grown and processed. By coming together as a grassroots community at a cannabis farmers market, we can help keep the market free and competitive.”
Calgary
2:30 PM – 5 PM
Calgary City Hall, 800 Macleod Trail Southeast
“March and protest down Stephan Avenue. There will be speeches, 50/50 raffle and other prizes.”
Latin America
La Paz, Bolivia
May 5 at 9 AM to May 6 at 9 PM
Plaza del Bicentenario La Paz
“We have something special planned for this year. We asked special permission for the local government to do a fair in the center of the city to give information about forbidden plants, sell eco-friendly products and a stage for local artists to play during the 5th and 6th of may.”
São Paulo, Brazil
https://www.facebook.com/events/742852039211094/
2:20 p.m. – 8:20 p.m.
MASP – Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand
Avenida Paulista, 1578
(Translated) “On May 6, we will once again occupy the streets of São Paulo for the legalization of marijuana and the end of the drug war. Diversity is our hallmark and we will gather from all over the city to say: No more War! Respect our rights! It will be beautiful!”
Mexico City
1:35 PM – 6 PM Rally, 6pm March
Plaza De La Ciudadela Centro Histórico Ciudad De México
(Translated) “Rally with speeches, debates and assemblies alternating with music. The city of Mexico City is lending sound equipment. At 6pm, we march to the Senate for the liberation of the marijuana in Mexico.”
You can also try checking this list of participating cities.
No march near you? Perhaps you’d like to partake in a bit of plant care on World Naked Gardening Day.
Marijuana legalization bill squeaks through Vermont House
MONTPELIER, Vt. — By a margin of only four votes, the Vermont House passed a bill that could legalize recreational marijuana statewide, allowing citizens to grow and possess small amounts of marijuana. The bill will now move to the Senate, where it is unlikely to be brought up for debate until next year.
The bill would make it legal for adults age 21 and older to possess up to one ounce of pot, two mature plants and four immature plants. It does not create a regulatory system for legally selling and taxing pot. The measure passed by a vote of 75 to 71, following hours of debate.
This is a separate bill than the one passed in April by the Senate, which would regulate, tax and legalize small amounts of marijuana.
Republican Gov. Phil Scott has expressed reservations about moving ahead with recreational marijuana legislation.
Former NFL OL Eben Britton calls Roger Goodell’s marijuana comments “a big mistake”
Eben Britton, a former NFL offensive lineman and now staunch advocate for marijuana allowance in the league, had heard similar comments in the past but hoped the league and its commissioner, Roger Goodell, had changed its view on marijuana.
“You’re ingesting smoke, so that’s not usually a very positive thing that people would say,” Goodell said in an interview on ESPN’s “Mike & Mike” radio show. “It does have addictive nature. There are a lot of compounds in marijuana that may not be healthy for the players long-term. All of those things have to be considered.”
Goodell said the league’s medical advisers have been studying the issue and “to date, they haven’t said this is a change we think you should make that’s in the best interests of the health and safety of our players.”
Britton, one of many retired players who have been outspoken about marijuana’s potential benefits in treating players’ pain and symptoms from head injuries, said Goodell’s comments are “dumb” and “a big mistake.”
“The fact that he portrays it in this light, as if has to be smoked, it feeds into the stigma of it rather than understanding that this can be used as a tincture, a capsule. It can be provided in many different forms,” Britton said.
“There’s a lot of positive movement, and that’s why it’s so ridiculous to see Roger Goodell’s statements. Like, you’re living in the Stone Age and it makes you look like you don’t (care) about the players. This is something that could really have a positive impact on the No. 1 issue you’re facing — the No. 1 and No. 2 issues: concussions and (chronic traumatic encephalopathy), and then this opioid epidemic. Stop saying these dumb things because then you have uneducated people reading things like that and saying, ‘Oh, the commissioner of the NFL says this thing is really bad.’ No.”
The NFL Players Association has vowed for months to propose a more lenient approach to the way the league handles marijuana use among players, but its suggested changes to the substance-abuse policy have yet to be presented to the league and the specifics remain unknown.
DeMaurice Smith, the union’s executive director, appeared on ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” on Tuesday to address the topic and Goodell’s comments, and said: “We intend to present a proposal to the league that probably has more of a therapeutic approach to those who test positive for marijuana. The idea is simply to make sure that we understand whether a player is suffering from something other than just a desire to smoke marijuana. I think all of us would want to have a process where, if there was truly a problem, we’re treating the problem instead of just treating a symptom.”
Although Britton is not privy to the specifics of the proposal, he took the “therapeutic approach” to mean the union wants players to be granted access to medical marijuana through a therapeutic use exemption, just as he was allowed to obtain Adderall, a banned substance.
“I went through a team doctor and then I was referred to a team psychiatrist who put me through a litany of tests and basically said, ‘Yeah, this guy should be able to use Adderall for therapeutic purpose,’ ” said Britton, who has written extensively of his abuse of Adderall during his playing career. “I think, if anything, that’s a decent step in the right direction. I think even better than that, though, might be to take an approach like the NHL does.”
The NHL does not test for marijuana. NFL players are tested in the offseason and face disciplinary action for a positive test of more than 35 nanograms per milliliter of urine of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive component of marijuana.
Per the current substance-abuse policy, T.U.E.s may be granted by the Independent Administrator of the NFL Policy on Performance-Enhancing Substances and the Medical Adviser for the Policy and Program on Substances of Abuse. However, marijuana cannot be prescribed by a physician because it is federally illegal.
In the 29 states — plus Washington D.C. — that have adopted medical marijuana laws, doctors can issue a recommendation for cannabis to patients. But that leaves nine NFL teams that play their home games in states that have not legalized it for medical purposes. (The Redskins train in Virginia, where medical marijuana is illegal, but play their home games in Maryland, where it is legal.)
The union recently developed a pain management committee to study, among other things, the potential benefits of cannabis for players. Research is still relatively limited on both marijuana and cannabidiol (CBD) products derived from hemp that contain only trace amounts of THC. But anecdotal evidence has grown significantly over the last decade.
Many retired players — including Britton, former Broncos quarterback Jake Plummer and former tackle Eugene Monroe — have preached cannabis’ pain-relieving qualities and believe it’s a safer alternative to the habit-forming painkillers team physicians often prescribe.
Britton is a founding member of Athletes For Care, a nonprofit organization formed to help players transition to retirement and offer support groups and awareness of addiction. The organization has teamed with the Lambert Center for the Study of Medicinal Cannabis and Hemp at Thomas Jefferson University to continue to raise awareness and push for research.
“I think today’s players are more and more cognizant that these long-term issues are going to be things that we have to deal with,” Britton said of pain and brain injuries from football. “We’ve chosen this life and it’s come with a ton of reward, but it comes with a really high price.
“You have to be taking proactive steps to take care of yourself before it’s too late, before you’ve slipped into the dark pastures of addiction. You’re trying to do the best you can to keep your body as healthy in the moment as possible so down the line you’re not getting hit with a ton of bricks with all these ailments that are creeping up on guys.”
Is smoking marijuana on your front porch “public use”? A lingering legalization debate in Colorado
The question of where you can consume cannabis in Colorado continues to stress lawmakers, even as the state approaches five years of legalization.
The state Senate and House approved different versions of a measure to define the prohibition on “open and public” consumption, and a panel of lawmakers failed Wednesday to strike a compromise just days before the legislative session concludes.
The sticking point is whether you can smoke marijuana on a front porch in public view — one of the most enduring debates since legalization in 2012.
“Welcome to the jungle,” quipped Rep. Dan Pabon, a Denver Democrat and one of the negotiators. “This has been an issue that we have discussed and debated since the inception of Amendment 64.”
Senate Bill 184 would forbid marijuana consumption in any place where “a substantial number of the public” has access without restriction, such as a park or sidewalk. The latest version debated Wednesday took it a step further to prohibit consumption in “a place not protected from unaided observation lawfully made from outside its perimeter.”
Two House Democratic lawmakers expressed worry about banning pot on front porches, but state Sen. Bob Gardner, R-Colorado Springs, suggested such protections are needed in certain areas.
“My concern continues to be that in urban and suburban areas property lines are so close that children walking up and down sidewalks that are not 15 feet from (a home),” he said. “And frankly it is a crime in Colorado to do a lot of things on your front porch, no matter how much you own that property.”
Sen. Lois Court, a Denver Democrat, said she supported the language. “I’m a child of the 60s so I am familiar with contact highs,” she joked, before turning serious: “But that leads to the impact on kids and I’m really concerned about that.”
Pabon and Rep. Mike Foote, a Lafayette Democrat and prosecutor, voted against the compromise version and blocked it from moving forward. Both sides pledged to keep working on the issue, but it remains unclear whether they can reach agreement before adjournment May 10.
Without the bill, the role of defining “open and public” will remain with local governments, said Kevin Bommer, deputy director of the Colorado Municipal League. But he wants to see a statewide definition. “This is something we’d like the General Assembly to address,” he said.
Judd Golden, an attorney representing NORML, an organization that supports marijuana legalization, said property rights trump in this situation.
“We have a constitutional right here — we absolutely have private property rights and those should prevail over the possibility that someone might be offended” by marijuana, he said.
An earlier version of the legislation allowed local governments to regulate pot clubs, but that provision was stripped from the bill after facing opposition from Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper and others.
Other Roots: Seed breeder Edward Clarizio has patient’s perspective on medical benefits of cannabis
Editor’s note: In our Other Roots series, we share the stories of the underrepresented individuals in and around the marijuana movement — women, ethnic minorities and others whose voices aren’t as prevalent in the conversation surrounding legalization. If you’d like to suggest an individual to the Other Roots team — an activist, a budtender, a regulator, an executive — give us a jingle.
Edward “Swerve” Clarizio, founder of The Cali Connection seed bank, was diagnosed with five eye diseases and multiple sclerosis by the age of 30. After battling the side effects of his prescribed medications, he turned to medical marijuana as an alternative.
Then he started developing some of today’s most coveted marijuana seeds. His personal success in pain management led him to found The Cali Connection. Today, the $3 million-a-year company employs 10 people and has amassed dozens of industry awards, and Clarizio is a well-known advocate for medical cannabis.
Clarizio, who calls himself the “Johnny Appleseed of weed,” says many people use his products “medicinally, to get relief from chronic pain, not to get high.” He claims his products have much less damaging effects than hardcore legal pharmaceuticals prescribed for pain, such as Fentanyl, OxyContin and Vicodin.
He got into this line of work out of necessity. He has battled five eye diseases over the last 30 years.
“I always had eye issues since I was younger. At age 9, I had cryogenic surgery for a detached retina. I had my first major surgery at 16, they removed a vitreous tumor.”
Clarizio suffers from macular degeneration, uveitis, glaucoma, macular edema and pars planitis. Constant hospitalization was the norm for him for years. Clarizio is 75 percent blind in one eye, meaning he is technically half-blind.
In 2010 Clarizio was diagnosed with MS, which his mother and older sister are also living with.
“You get by. It could be worse.”
He became a pioneer in the cannabis industry and began breeding custom strains 15 years ago to alleviate symptoms of MS. He was working as a video editor and “fell back on a side experiment I was doing.” He was one of a handful of people providing high-end genetic clones to medical marijuana collectives in the Los Angeles area.
Today Clarizio has multiple farms in Northern and Southern California, personally has a hand in the grow operations, and continues to push the boundaries to create more strains.
“My father, being old-school Italian, did not initially support the business,” he says. “After I told him that I own the world’s largest seed company, my dad realized his son is a businessman.”
His business began with pain relief, he says. “You’re not going to cure anything, especially with MS. All we can do is prolong life and alleviate symptoms to the best of our ability.”
He has strong feelings about the current weed bureaucracy: “In the end, it becomes the old boys at the top of the food chain, the pharma companies. They make billions, with a ‘B,’ off pharmaceuticals.”
In his case, “I have to take a huge infusion of Rituxan (medication used to treat certain autoimmune diseases and cancers) until there’s more scientific work and tests to prove marijuana can fight disease.”
He believes the Drug Enforcement Administration will eventually loosen regulations on research but will not reclassify cannabis.
“I predict after the Trump presidency we will see marijuana become full-fledged legal. There’s too much money for it not to be. It makes more money than corn or tobacco.”
To pave the way to full legalization, he says more side-by-side comparisons to socially-accepted alcohol are needed.
His theory on how to proceed in the next four years under Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who famously said “good people don’t smoke marijuana “:
“We should do exactly what we’ve been doing in the Bush-Ashcroft era,” Clarizio said. “Stay true to what we do. We need to be smart about this. It’s a business. We as an industry have been fighting to get to this point, where banks will loan to (cannabis businesses) and take our money, where unions will work with us.”
How do you consume cannabis?
I dab. I smoke. Eating (infused edibles) just puts me to sleep.
How do you describe yourself?
I’m a conflict of interest. I have old-school views on certain things, I’m rebellious on other things. I’m from an old-school Italian family, Roman Catholic.
What’s your greatest fear?
Lately, death. My MS likes to go crazy.
What do your parents say about your career?
Dad has come around. He now understands it’s beneficial for my ailment. We’re not raging drug addicts or lazy stoners.
What’s been most surprising about marijuana legalization?
All the old-schoolers coming out of the woodwork. It’s been interesting to be sitting with people my parents’ age, smoking with me.
What quality don’t you like in yourself?
Stubbornness.
What quality don’t you like in other people?
An inability to listen.
What’s your greatest extravagance?
Food. I’m a sucker for Kobe beef. My wife’s Japanese. (They have two kids under the age of 6.)
How do you talk about your work with the kids?
I explain it from the standpoint this is something than can help you, something you do not abuse, like alcohol. Don’t take more than you need. I explain it is medicine up front.
What’s the next trend for the cannabis market?
Disposable pens and edibles.
What’s an overrated virtue?
Willingness.
Where and when were you happiest?
When my son was born.
What talent would you like to have?
I wish I had the talent to draw or play guitar.
If you could die and come back as a person or thing…?
I’d come back as a border collie or golden retriever that everyone loves.
If you could have dinner with anyone, living or dead, who would you choose?
Living, Warren Buffett; dead, Gandhi. Polar opposites.
What’s your greatest regret?
I regret not being honest years ago. I was more focused on me becoming a weed celebrity than on other people.
What’s your favorite possession?
My genetics — my seeds, my strains.
What’s your favorite meal?
Pasta: Grandma’s Orecchiette with rapini.
Your favorite music?
Classical and jazz.
Your motto?
“It all starts from a seed.”