Mj news for 06/25/2015

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7greeneyes

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http://time.com/3935118/vancouver-canada-marijuana-weed-pot-legalization/



(Canada) Vancouver Votes to Regulate Marijuana Stores, but Canada’s Government Isn’t Happy About It





City's move fuels debate surrounding marijuana legalization in the lead-up to October's federal election

Vancouver’s city council has voted to regulate the city’s many marijuana shops, becoming the first Canadian city to take the step, the Guardian reports.

Marijuana is illegal in Canada, but access to medical marijuana is not for those with a prescription. That allows Vancouver’s many pot shops — some say they outnumber Starbucks outlets in the city — to offer weed in a pseudo-medical manner, often with naturopaths on the premises available for consultation.

Municipal authorities in Vancouver will now impose zoning controls and license fees in a bid to get a handle on the trade. The city’s police force is also tolerant, claiming that cracking down on the stores has not been a priority.

Canada’s conservative government has voiced its displeasure, however. Federal Health Minister Rona Ambrose has ordered the council to vote down the policy and the police to enforce the law.

Geoff Plant, the former attorney general of British Columbia, told the Guardian that the federal government was “increasingly out of touch.” He said, “They are stuck in a ‘reefer madness’, non-evidence-based position.”

There is heated debate surrounding marijuana legalization in Canada in the lead-up to October’s federal election. According to the CBC, British Columbia has the highest support for legalization in the country, at around 46%.
 
http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/24/politics/marijuana-study-drivers-impact/






Fed study: Booze impact greater than pot on driving






A new study, funded in part by the federal government, suggests alcohol has a more extreme impact on drivers than marijuana.

Researchers said alcohol "significantly increased lane departures/minimum and maximum lateral acceleration; these measures were not sensitive to cannabis." Researchers also concluded Cannabis-influenced drivers "may attempt to drive more cautiously to compensate for impairing effects, whereas alcohol-influenced drivers often underestimate their impairment and take more risk."

The National Institute on Drug Abuse, the Office on National Drug Control Policy, and federal safety regulator, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration funded the study.

The National Institute on Drug Abus says it used the "most sophisticated driving simulator of its kind to mirror real-life situations."

The participants drank alcohol to reach approximately 0.065% peak breath alcohol concentration, inhaled vaporized marijuana or had a placebo.

The test group consisted of 19 adults. Thirteen of them were men. Most of the participants consumed cannabis more than two times a month but less than 3 times a week. During the 45 minute driving session, inside the driving simulator in Iowa city, researchers zeroed in on how many times the car left the lane, weaving in the lane and the speed of the car. A 1996 Malibu sedan is mounted in a dome with a motion system. "Drivers experience acceleration, braking, steering cues, road conditions like gravel and realistic sounds."

Researchers said "alcohol, but not marijuana, increased the number of times the car actually left the lane and the speed of the weaving."

Although marijuana had a less dramatic effect than alcohol on drivers the study found it still impairs " one measure of driving performance." The drug reduced the drivers' peripheral vision giving them tunnel vision. People driving with blood concentrations of 13.1 µg/L THC, the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, showed increased weaving within the lane, similar to those with 0.08 breath alcohol, the threshold for impaired driving in many states.

Drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana enhanced the effect, so that drivers using both substances weaved within lanes even if their blood THC and alcohol concentrations were below the impairment thresholds for each substance alone. Alcohol, but not marijuana, increased the number of times the car actually left the lane and the speed of weaving.

Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia approved medical marijuana; four states and Washington, D.C., legalized recreational cannabis for adults.

As states continue to loosen restrictions on marijuana safety regulators and law enforcement are struggling to figure out how to establish a legal limit for drivers, just as there is a .08 limit for alcohol.

This new study also presented the challenges in accurately testing drivers and developing a threshold of what's considered too high to drive.

"THC concentrations drop rapidly during the time required to collect a blood specimen in the U.S., generally within two to four hours." Oral tests using the drivers' saliva can be done roadside without a long wait but researchers found oral tests may not "be a precise measure of the level of impairment." The concern is that implementing concentration-based cannabis-driving legislation "will unfairly target individuals not acutely intoxicated, because residual THC can be detected in blood for up to a month of sustained abstinence in chronic frequent smokers."

The study concedes testing marijuana levels that reflect "driving impairment remain elusive."
 
http://rapidcityjournal.com/news/so...cle_07da6705-70ee-5715-b124-3971a112a91e.html





South Dakota Indian tribe signs contract with marijuana growing group






SIOUX FALLS | An Indian tribe in South Dakota that plans to start selling marijuana for recreational and medicinal purposes envisions its single point of sale on the reservation as a facility that will also have a bowling alley, a bar and other entertainment features.

Leaders of the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe on Wednesday unveiled details of their plans to sell cannabis after signing a contract with Denver-based Monarch America Inc., which will be responsible for the design, construction and development of an indoor growing site that will feature a marijuana consumption lounge.

The tribe, which already operates a casino on its land, is looking at the operation as a source of revenue that would allow the community to develop housing, build an addiction treatment center and improve the local clinic, among other projects. Tribal leaders legalized the sale of marijuana on the reservation earlier this month and are estimating a monthly profit of up to $2 million.

"When completed, this economic development project will help to create many important additional new jobs and increase economic stability for the tribe and its many members," tribal President Anthony Reider said. The growing facility alone is expected to be 10,000 square feet.

The plan for the facility's 15,000-square-foot recreational area calls for 10 bowling lanes, arcade games, gambling machines, bar and food service, as well as an outdoor patio and music venue in an existing structure adjacent to the Royal River Casino and Hotel. The tribe intends to host large-scale outdoor music festivals on tribal trust land where on-site marijuana consumption would be allowed.

South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley has said any changes in tribal laws won't affect any non-Indians or any nontribal lands, and therefore, non-Indians smoking marijuana on tribal lands would be breaking state law. Still, the tribe estimates thousands of people — Native and non-Native — will flock to the reservation to consume marijuana.

Reider said traffic studies of interstate highways that the tribe considered before making its decision showed that people would travel to the reservation from Fargo, North Dakota; Omaha, Nebraska; and Rapid City, Sioux Falls and communities in between.

Under the agreement signed Wednesday, the tribe will maintain 100 percent ownership and control over the growing operation, but the company will receive a fixed percentage fee on net revenues for consulting services related to the facility and cannabis-growing advice. The agreement is for five years with two five-year renewal options.

"Our Monarch America team looks forward to utilizing its expertise to design and build a world-class grow facility in Flandreau that can serve as a case study for other federally recognized tribes looking for economic diversification opportunities and considering entering the marijuana or hemp sector," the company's CEO, Eric Hagen, said in a statement.

The prospect of pot on tribal land was made possible after the U.S. Justice Department outlined a new policy in December allowing Indian tribes, which are considered sovereign nations, to grow and sell marijuana on their lands as long as they follow the same federal conditions laid out for states that have legalized the drug.

The company expects to build the facility within the next two months. The tribe plans to begin selling the drug by Jan. 1.
 
http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/national/2015/06/24/372808.htm






(UK) Lloyd’s Stops Insuring Marijuana Firms Due to U.S. Law Conflicts





Lloyd’s of London has stopped insuring marijuana industry firms of any kind due to conflicts between federal and state laws over their legality.

In a May 29 memo addressed “Dear Colleague,” obtained by Insurance Journal, Lloyd’s Director of Performance Management Tom Bolt wrote to U.S. Syndicates that the company has considered various requests with respect to insuring marijuana or marijuana related businesses, either medicinal or recreational in the United States, and has determined that it no longer will support insuring marijuana operations of any kind until the drug is formally recognized by the U.S. government as legal.

Lloyd’s of London has stopped insuring marijuana industry firms of any kind due to conflicts between federal and state laws over their legality.

In a May 29 memo addressed “Dear Colleague,” obtained by Insurance Journal, Lloyd’s Director of Performance Management Tom Bolt wrote to U.S. Syndicates that the company has considered various requests with respect to insuring marijuana or marijuana related businesses, either medicinal or recreational in the United States, and has determined that it no longer will support insuring marijuana operations of any kind until the drug is formally recognized by the U.S. government as legal.

“Any policies of this type that are currently in force should not be renewed and no new business should be written. Existing quotes issued before today should be notified to your Syndicate Underwriting Performance account executive who will consider on a case by case basis whether the quote may be honoured,” Bolt wrote in the memo.

Lloyd’s confirmed the London insurer’s exit through the following statement to Insurance Journal, which contains similar language to the original memo:

“Currently, marijuana is listed as a Schedule 1 drug under U.S. federal law, which means that it is not legal for sale. In addition, cash generated from the sale of marijuana may implicate federal Anti-Money Laundering laws. Nevertheless, a number of states have passed laws that permit the sale of marijuana for medicinal purposes and additionally a smaller number allow its sale for recreational purposes.

Based upon a thorough review of all positions, unless and until the sale of either medicinal or recreational marijuana is formally recognized by the Federal government as legal (as opposed to subject to non-enforcement directives), Lloyd’s has asked that underwriters should not insure such operations in any form (including crop, property, or liability cover for those who grow, distribute or sell any form of marijuana or cover for the provision of banking or related services to these operations) in the United States.”

Lloyd’s said it will continue to monitor developments under U.S. law and will reconsider this position if and when the conflict of laws is resolved.

According to Mike Aberle, senior vice president of Next Wave Insurance Services, which worked with Lloyd’s as MMD Insurance Services from 2002 until February of this year when it began new relationships with three other carriers, the move by the highly-regarded London company that is known for insuring hard-to-place risks seems to have come out of nowhere.

“Did they take a bunch of losses? Nobody knows. That’s the really curious part right now – nobody really knows what’s going on except the guys in London,” he says.

Next Wave, which has offices in San Diego and in Rancho Cordova, California, was notified by one of its two former coverholders about the memo, but did not actually receive a notice from Lloyd’s itself.

One possible clue, Aberle speculated, could be related to the reference in the memo about cash generated from the sale of marijuana “invariably implicates federal Anti-Money Laundering laws.”

Federal law has made it difficult for banks to work with marijuana-based businesses and most have kept their distance as a result out of fear of being seen as participating in money laundering.

But just last year, the Obama Administration said it would not penalize financial institutions that provide banking services to legitimate medical marijuana businesses in states that have enacted medical marijuana laws. The Financial Crime Enforcement Network (FinCEN) also provided instructions to banks last year on how they can both accept marijuana business dollars and still comply with the law and the group has been meeting with bank executives to remind them about the marijuana directive, according to a Bloomberg report.

Aberle says that in light of the federal government’s hands-off position on the banking matter, it seems strange that this would suddenly be a concern of the insurer.

“I’ve never seen anything about banking issues when it comes to insurance and marijuana,” he said.

Bolt also acknowledges in the memo that these concerns are currently subject to non-enforcement policies by the current administration, which has also “adopted a policy of non-enforcement of federal law with respect to both medicinal and recreational marijuana where marijuana is legal in a state, while Congress recently indicated (as part of a temporary spending bill) its intention not to seek enforcement of the sale of medicinal marijuana.”

Meaning for Rest of the Industry?

Aberle says Next Wave’s decision to move its business to other carriers starting February 1 pre-dated the Lloyd’s decision to leave the market and the company “knew nothing about” Lloyd’s move ahead of time. He says his firm currently still has about 50 percent of its policies with Lloyd’s and the rest on the paper of its new carriers, which he said don’t want to be named. He said he has no reason to believe that Lloyd’s will not honor its remaining policies until they expire.

“I am not worried about the policyholders we have that are still on Lloyd’s paper. I think if we had any claims for policies issued before the memo, they would be handled with the utmost professionalism,” he said. “They don’t say that [in the memo] but I believe in Lloyd’s enough that they would honor that.”

Aberle thinks the move by Lloyd’s leaves those who insure marijuana entities a bit on edge while at the same time creating an opportunity for others to scoop up the Lloyd’s business.

“When you hear something like this it has to give you pause… It’s Lloyd’s of London making a decision to do something they have never done before. I am sure every carrier out there has taken pause,” he said. “And anything could still change. Lloyd’s could say why and that could throw the whole market off.”

Aberle says his business is growing and that underwriting by his new carriers is stronger than ever, in part because of Lloyd’s exit.

But he has concerns that the Lloyd’s episode might scare away other insurers at a time when the marijuana industry is poised for growth. “My concerns are that for an industry that is paranoid already and skeptical with offering insurance already, is this going to put a black mark on it?”
 

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