Pot Cola, Sodas Coming to Medicial Marijuana Outlets

Canna Cola is the new spoonful of sugar to help the medicine go down.

The beverage combines soda and THC, a psychoactive ingredient found in marijuana, to create a drink that co-brand-developer Clay Butler calls “medibles,” edible medicine.

“A lot of people simply don’t want to smoke,” says co-brand developer Clay Butler. “It’s very easy to take your medication in the form of a cookie, soda or brownie and you can do that without drawing attention to yourself.”

Why soda pot? “Some people prefer medibles because it’s better on the body than smoking or prescription drugs,” says Butler. The use of marijuana-infused cola “allows them to stay away from the prescription pain killers.”

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110 medical marijuana businesses apply for Boulder license

About half of Boulder’s active medical marijuana businesses submitted an application for a license by Monday’s deadline.

Sarah Huntley, a spokeswoman for the city, said 110 applications for operating licenses were turned in to the city by 5 p.m. Monday. All Boulder marijuana businesses, both dispensaries and growing operations, were required to submit applications for a medical marijuana business license by the deadline — and pay a $3,000 application fee — to continue to operate legally.

City officials have said that the city has issued about 300 sales and use tax permits for medical marijuana businesses and more than 200 of those are active, meaning that the businesses are remitting the taxes.

New regulations from the state and the city — such as those that forbid convicted felons from running a medical pot shop or licensing fees that can reach tens of thousands of dollars — have pressured some dispensary owners out of the industry in recent months.

Dispensary owners also have said the city’s application requirements weren’t clear, prompting the city to extend the deadline earlier this year for the extensive application packets. City officials said confusion over the process led to mostly incomplete or inaccurate information.

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CA Cities Sued Over Medical Marijuana Ordinances

By Amanda Bronstad, The National Law Journal 
Source: National Law Journal 

California — Medical marijuana dispensaries have filed lawsuits against California cities, including Los Angeles, challenging ordinances that effectively threaten the existence of their businesses.

Besides the dispensaries, the plaintiffs include medical marijuana users and organizations that promote the use of medical marijuana. Vincent Howard, founding partner of Howard | Nassiri, based in Anaheim, Calif., who represents at least 10 dispensaries in Los Angeles, expects more suits to be filed.

“As long as cities want to turn a blind eye and pretend like this isn’t coming, there’s going to be a lot of lawsuits and a proliferation of dispensaries,” he said.

“We continue to see in California dispensaries trying all sorts of creative ways to try to establish their legality under cities’ municipal codes,” said Jeffrey Dunn, a partner in the Irvine, Calif., office of Best Best & Krieger. He is defending Lake Forest, Calif., in several suits. “To date, none of them has been successful.”

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Don’t Call It Pot in This Circle It’s a Profession

By Jesse McKinley
Source: New York Times

Oakland, Calif. — Like hip-hop, health food and snowboarding, marijuana is going corporate.

As more and more states allow medical use of the drug, and California considers outright legalization, marijuana’s supporters are pushing hard to burnish the image of pot by franchising dispensaries and building brands; establishing consulting, lobbying and law firms; setting up trade shows and a seminar circuit; and constructing a range of other marijuana-related businesses.

Boosters say it is all part of a concerted effort to trade the drug’s trippy, hippie counterculture past for what they believe will inevitably be a more buttoned-up future.

“I don’t possess a Nehru jacket, I’ve never grown a goatee, I’ve never grown my hair past the nape of my neck,” Allen St. Pierre, the executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws said. “And I don’t like patchouli.”

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Panel Will Study Medical Marijuana

By Tony Leys
Source: Des Moines Register

Iowa — Iowa legislators plan to keep the medical marijuana issue moving forward, a leading lawmaker said Tuesday.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy said the Legislature intends to set up a committee of experts to consider how marijuana could safely be allowed for patients with legitimate medical needs. If that committee comes up with a workable plan, he said, legislators will give the matter serious discussion in their 2011 session.

Last week, the Iowa Board of Pharmacy unanimously recommended legislators reclassify the drug in a way that could make it legal for medical purposes. The board also recommended the state set up an expert task force, including patients, health care professionals, state regulators and law enforcement representatives, to design a system.

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AP Newsbreak: New medical marijuana policy issued

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration will not seek to arrest medical marijuana users and suppliers as long as they conform to state laws, ScreenHunter_10 Oct. 26 01.16under new policy guidelines to be sent to federal prosecutors Monday.

Two Justice Department officials described the new policy to The Associated Press, saying prosecutors will be told it is not a good use of their time to arrest people who use or provide medical marijuana in strict compliance with state laws.

The new policy is a significant departure from the Bush administration, which insisted it would continue to enforce federal anti-pot laws regardless of state codes.

Fourteen states allow some use of marijuana for medical purposes: Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.

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California Senate Urges New Federal Policy on Medical Marijuana

Sacramento, CA — The California Senate voted 23-15 yesterday on a resolution that urges the federal government to end medical marijuana raids and to weekly_03 Aug. 31“create a comprehensive federal medical marijuana policy that ensures safe and legal access to any patient that would benefit from it.” Recent federal enforcement activity underscores the need for Senate Joint Resolution (SJR) 14, introduced in June by State Senator Mark Leno (D-San Francisco). Although President Obama has signaled a willingness to change federal policy on medical marijuana, his Administration has yet to come forward with an actual implementation plan.

In a previous statement, Senator Leno stated that, “Patients and providers in California remain at risk of arrest and prosecution by federal law enforcement and legally established medical marijuana cooperatives continue to be the subjects of federal raids.” Once passed, “this resolution will clearly state the Legislature’s opposition to federal interference with California’s medical marijuana law and support for expanded federal reform and medical research,” continued Leno.

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