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Tuesday, August 17, 2010

ADHD and Marijuana

(FYI: I feel that this article is bullshit. Marijuana is not dangerous.)

By Richard Zwolinski, LMHC, CASAC, SAP, ADS and C.R. Zwolinski, PsychCentral - Tuesday, August 17 2010
Source: http://psychcentral.com/lib/2010/adhd-and-marijuana/

Recent research shows that marijuana may relieve some of the symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The debate rages on, but many people, both kids and adults, are reporting the alleviation of their symptoms with marijuana usage. It helps slow down the progression of rapidly firing thoughts—something that plagues those with ADHD and makes it hard for them to focus.

Still, I take a firm stand against the use of marijuana for the treatment of ADHD and I’ll explain why. ADHD is believed to be caused by five different factors or combinations of these factors:

* genetics
* brain injuries
* environmental factors
* food additives
* sugar

Because we don’t yet really understand what causes ADHD and only have a partial understanding of its effects, we may be missing the boat in terms of treatment.

Currently the most popular treatments include Adderall XR, Concerta, Daytrana, Desoxyn, Dexedrine, Dextrostat, Focalin XR, Metadate ER, Metadate CD, Methylin, Ritalin, Ritalin SR, Ritalin LA, Strattera, and Vyvanse. Dexedrine and Ritalin, probably among the most name recognizable of these treatments, seem to have a paradoxical effect in those with attention deficit disorder. Rather than cause the brain processes to speed up and out of control, when given to those with ADHD these amphetamines may cause enhanced focus. But these and other medications come at a cost.

Some of the possible side effects include decreased appetite, sleep problems, nervous tics, and sometimes personality changes. Other treatments such as behavioral therapy have actually helped children change their behavior. Anger management, reflecting, and impulse control can be taught but therapy may not help alleviate many of the uncomfortable symptoms.

So if marijuana appears to be working, what’s the problem? Marijuana is known as a gateway drug among chemical dependency counselors. This old-fashioned term actually has quite a bit of merit. Statistics show that those who use marijuana, are far more likely to try harder drugs such as cocaine and heroin than those who don’t. Though this may be related to social rather than chemical reasons, is it a risk worth taking?

It is a myth that marijuana isn’t addictive. That has been categorically proven to be untrue. There are even withdrawal symptoms from giving it up.

Another prevailing myth is that marijuana is safe. It is considered in the popular imagination to be less harmful than cigarettes or alcohol. But that simply isn’t true. Whether it is inhaled, smoked or baked into brownies it is highly toxic. There are many poisonous chemicals in marijuana and they are dangerous to your health.

Another problem with marijuana is that it is proven to cause short-term memory loss and inattention — which are the same symptoms that many people with ADHD need to eliminate. Even if a paradoxical effect occurs and memory and attention are temporarily enhanced, the longer-term effects are proven. Marijuana “burns out the brain,” hence the term for regular marijuana users, “burnouts.”

Marijuana is classified as a hallucinogenic depressant. Depending on the individual, marijuana can cause visual and auditory hallucinations and possibly those of taste, touch and smell — that is, sensing things that simply aren’t there or sensing in a distorted fashion things that are indeed there.

The depressant piece also can be a big problem, especially for those with ADHD. Anxiety and depression often co-exist with attention deficit disorder, whether they are caused by chemical changes in the brain or by the pressure of coping with the disorder and others’ response to it. Marijuana is proven to cause both anxiety and depression over the long term as well as sleep disturbances. It also can cause kids to take dangerous risks, including risks while driving and with promiscuous sexual activity.

Another problem with taking marijuana for ADHD is that it can effectively mask other conditions that might co-exist with ADHD. Learning disabilities, conduct disorders, bipolar disorder, Tourette’s syndrome and oppositional defiant disorder are just a few. If they are masked, they cannot be differentially diagnosed or treated.

So, knowing the potential problems of marijuana use in those with ADHD, what is the illicit (not prescribed) drug of choice of those with ADHD? Marijuana! An extremely high percentage of teens who smoke marijuana have ADHD. This does support the belief of those who say that marijuana medicates ADHD symptoms. But as someone who has worked in the field of mental health and addictions for over two decades I say it isn’t worth the risk. I have seen kids and families accrue far more losses than gains due to the use of pot.

City On Target with Marijuana Ordinance

LSJ Editorial - Tuesday, August 17 2010
Source: http://www.lansingstatejournal.com/article/20100817/OPINION01/8170311/-1/newshome

Lansing is doing the right thing by bringing medical marijuana care-givers under its ordinance for home businesses. Doing so will allow the city to set requirements that protect neighborhoods, preserve public safety and also provide a clear framework for those choosing this relatively new type of business.

Since Michigan passed its medical marijuana ballot proposal in 2008, patients have been able to seek a doctor's approval and then register with the state. Doing so makes them eligible to either grow plants for themselves or find a state registered care-giver, who will grow the plants and prepare the marijuana for use.

But what the ballot proposal didn't do was create a structure for dealing with a wide array of businesses that support the new medical marijuana industry, such as medical marijuana dispensaries or home-based medical marijuana caregivers.

Lansing is working on ordinances that address both the dispensaries, which would locate on commercially zoned property, and the home-based care-givers, who would be permitted to operate in residential neighborhoods, but only if they meet certain criteria.

While there has been concern in some parts that local government or local law enforcement would make it difficult for medical marijuana entrepreneurs, Lansing's approach to date has been right on the mark.

As City Attorney Brig Smith recently commented about the home occupation ordinance:

"The goal is to regulate this occupation just like we would regulate others, whether the home occupation is growing tomato plants or medical marijuana."

That's more than reasonable. And a review of the ordinance finds it fairly straight forward as well.

The ordinance prohibits such businesses from operating within 1,000 feet of public or private schools, colleges, youth centers, arcades and public swimming pools. That's reasonable, given that marijuana is still a controlled substance. The ordinance also parallels state rules in requiring that marijuana be kept in an enclosed, locked space.

The majority of Michiganians voted in favor of medical marijuana, wanting this treatment option for those who may benefit. Lansing is on the right path to create a clear set of laws for entrepreneurs involved in serving these patients while at the same time protecting its residents.

An LSJ editorial

Monday, August 16, 2010

Swimming in Weed

By Paul Fattig, Mail Tribune - Sunday, August 15 2010
Source: http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100815/NEWS/8150320

From above, the bushy green plants in backyard after backyard resemble English topiary gardens, neat and tidy.

But a closer look at the gardens hidden from passersby behind tall fences tell a different story: cannabis crops mushrooming under the umbrella of the 1998 Oregon Medical Marijuana Act.

A helicopter flight this month with U.S. Rep. Greg Walden revealed numerous cannabis crops growing adjacent to homes in every community in Jackson and Josephine counties, ostensibly to service the area's more than 7,000 medical marijuana cardholders.

"Shocked and stunned — I had absolutely no idea the breadth and scope of these backyard grows," exclaimed Walden.

"I cannot imagine most Oregonians who voted for this law and are sympathetic toward people who are sick and in pain would believe what has happened as a result of this law," added Walden, 53, a Republican from Hood River.

whose 2nd Congressional District includes Jackson County and a portion of eastern Josephine County. "I don't think people understand how out of control this has gotten."

But down on the ground among his cannabis plants in the Ruch area, licensed marijuana grower James Bowman, 50, believes the pot patches are healthy indicators of Oregon's changing culture.

Although he acknowledges the 1998 law may need fine-tuning, he looks at it as an important turning point in state history.

"I think it's going fairly well — probably the best in the nation at the time when it was approved," he said.

"There is nothing people should be afraid of with this, no more than they should be afraid of the vineyards you see around here.

"We are a regular farm like any other," he added. "Cannabis should be considered a commodity like anything else."

The law allows medical marijuana cardholders to possess six mature plants, 18 starts smaller than 12 inches tall and 24 ounces of processed, usable marijuana.

It permits a caregiver to cultivate cannabis for up to four cardholding patients, allowing a registered caregiver to grow up to two dozen adult plants at a time. Growers say the law doesn't limit the number of growers who can work cooperatively.

For instance, Bowman has a medical marijuana card for himself and is a registered caregiver, meaning he can grow for up to four other patients. At his site, multiple caregivers are working together, growing cannabis for 70 patients.

"We have 70 patients, so that would allow us 350 budding plants to have at one time," he said, though he says his site always contains about 100 fewer plants than the legal limit to err on the side of caution. His site currently has fewer than 200 mature plants, he said.

Many police officers say the law has too many loopholes, and they question the legitimacy of most of the medical marijuana patches.

"We either have a lot of sick people or a huge abuse problem — I would say it's the latter," said Medford Police Deputy Chief Tim George.

"All the law enforcement officers in the state are shaking their heads over this situation," he added. "Nobody in law enforcement is arguing that cancer or glaucoma patients shouldn't have it if they need it. But most people don't need marijuana for medical reasons."

Noting that someone with a green thumb can grow a large plant that produces five to seven pounds of "high grade bud" worth some $2,500 a pound on the street, George said it wouldn't be unusual to produce a plant whose harvest exceeds $15,000.

"I don't want to sound callous about sick people, but this is really about the money," he said. "Our problem with law enforcement is how to keep track of all this. It's off the charts."

Like other police departments in the region, his officers regularly deal with medical marijuana growers who are out of compliance, he said, though statistics were not immediately available.

"I am swimming in weed," he said, describing it as a controlled substance that is out of control. George, an outspoken critic of the 1998 law, fears it will only get worse if Oregonians approve a measure on the Nov. 2 ballot that would establish medical marijuana dispensaries.

"You can't have a Vicodin tree in your backyard," he said, referring to a prescription pain medication. "This (1998) law was one of the biggest mistakes the state has ever made."

During his flight, Walden met with the seven county sheriffs in the region who are part of the Southern Oregon Multi-Agency Marijuana Eradication & Reclamation group organized by Jackson County Sheriff Mike Winters.

The sheriffs, including Winters, told Walden that the marijuana issue is overtaxing law enforcement efforts. They also expressed concern that today's marijuana is much more powerful than your parents' pot back in their college days.

"Medical marijuana is a joke," said Josephine County Sheriff Gil Gilbertson in an interview with the Mail Tribune. "The amount of people who have those cards is ludicrous. My understanding is that only about four percent of the cardholders have legitimate ailments.

"This is creating a nightmare for law enforcement," he added. "Who is going to knock on all those doors to check if they are legal? It would take several full-time deputies just to do the checks. We don't have the resources for that."

His department frequently receives calls from people alleging that individual medical marijuana growers have too many plants, he said.

"When that happens, we have to take a deputy off another case to check it out," he said. "It's time-consuming."

Williams resident Laird Funk, 65, a longtime marijuana advocate and a member of the Oregon Department of Human Services' Advisory Committee on Medical Marijuana, doesn't believe growers purposefully ignore the law.

"I wouldn't be concerned even if they were," he said. "But I don't think anyone is stupid enough to overtly grow more than the limit."

Instead, he believes law enforcement agencies are going out of their way to find reasons to bust medical marijuana growers.

"I think people are cognizant of the fact police are still playing gotcha with sick people," he said.

Bowman, who said he hopes Walden will someday visit his medical marijuana operation in Ruch, said he understands the dilemma police face.

"I feel like the police are in an awkward spot," Bowman said. "The law is very gray so the police are left to make individual interpretations of it.

"The problem is you don't have a clear law that all the cops can follow," he said. "The Medford cops, they interpret a different way than the sheriff might. They see it from the traditional crime point of view. The cops have been addicted to the money they get from the war on drugs."

Bowman said he has no major issues with the enforcement being done by both Winters and Gilbertson in regard to the medical marijuana law.

In fact, the Jackson County Sheriff's Department helped avoid an "armed invasion" four years ago at his site, he said.

"They called us up out of the blue and said, 'Hey, we need to talk. We've got this information and we would like to prevent something bad from happening,' " he said, noting that several people had apparently planned an attempted theft of pot grown on his property.

"I'm really indebted to them and see that as the future of how we can all work together, rather than this rhetoric of 'how bad the cops are,' " he said.

However, theft isn't a paramount concern like it was just a few years ago, he said.

"Theft is still an issue but not as much because cannabis growing is becoming more prevalent," he said.

Although his property covers five acres, only two acres are in cultivation, he said. About 30 volunteers help care for the cannabis, he said.

"One of my concerns about the law is that none of the workers can legally be paid," he said. "The law specifically says all expenses can be reimbursed except for labor."

He would like to see that aspect of the law changed.

Bowman said he supports the eventual full legalization of marijuana.

"Take cannabis off the controlled substance list — alcohol, caffeine, cigarettes aren't on it," he said, although cautioning it should be used in moderation.

He also sees it as a potential major source of tax income for the state, as well as an employment opportunity for Oregonians.

"We grow better cannabis than anywhere else in the world — without a doubt," he said. "Southern Oregon is renowned for its cannabis, as well as its red wine."

He figures some three-dozen sites in the region, from Glendale south, could be used for processing centers.

"They could easily hire 100 people at each center," he said. "That would be new jobs right now. We're asking for the economy to be set free and let the Rogue Valley benefit from this to grow this industry.

"Let's go beyond the medical argument and go to legalization," he added.

Meanwhile, Bowman doesn't much like it when a helicopter flies overhead and hovers, apparently checking out his crop.

"And that's even though we are doing everything we can do to be legal," he said. "They fly 100 feet or so above us. You can see their faces. It makes you wonder what are we doing that deserves that kind of treatment. The law enforcement agencies need to use their resources on something else — gang intervention or whatever.

"But by the same token I like the fact they can use that technology so they aren't bugging us down here every other day," he added.

Walden, whose helicopter did not hover over Bowman's grow site, indicated he would take Bowman's invitation into consideration. However, the lawmaker is adamantly opposed to legalizing marijuana.

"Mark me down as old-fashioned, but I don't think that would be helpful to our communities or families," Walden said, who believes the use and production of cannabis is linked to other crimes.

"This is not the ditch weed of the '70s," he said.

"Somebody needs to do an independent review of this law so we can understand how the law is being used or misused," he said. "But it's clear there are very few prosecutions now of illegal backyard grows. It's the Wild West of marijuana out there now."

Reach reporter Paul Fattig at 541-776-4496 or e-mail him at pfattig@mailtribune.com.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

14 States Legalize Medical Marijuana


By Christina Rogers, The Detroit News - Monday, August 9 2010
Source: http://www.detnews.com/article/20100809/LIFESTYLE03/8090318/14-states-legalize-medical-marijuana

After decades of marginalization, medical marijuana is gaining greater acceptance across the country and is becoming big business in states that have embraced it as a gentler, more natural medication for patients suffering from illnesses such as cancer, glaucoma and HIV.

Fourteen states, including Michigan, have legalized the drug for medicinal use, and another dozen are considering bills to start medical marijuana programs. The nation's capital could join their ranks since the District of Columbia's council in May unanimously approved legalizing and regulating the pain-soothing, appetite-inducing drug.

The Obama administration and the U.S. Department of Justice said last year they would no longer pursue cases against medical marijuana patients and suppliers who are abiding by state laws. Use of marijuana is still illegal under federal law, something the Bush administration vigorously enforced.

In some states, medical marijuana has become a sizable part of the economy -- even when the industry's expansion has largely fallen in the gray area of the law. In California, marijuana is considered among the state's leading cash crops. In Colorado, medical marijuana dispensaries outnumber Starbucks locations 3 to 1.

In other states, such as New Mexico and Oregon, heavier regulations have limited growth.

"It hasn't become a Wal-Mart type of business," said Jeffrey Miron, a Harvard University economist who studies the marijuana trade. "But it's gone beyond a mom-and-pop sort of activity."

California was the first state to legalize pot for medicinal use in 1996, spawning an industry that grew rapidly and remains among the nation's most loosely regulated.

The state is home to marijuana-growing superstores, where patients can get cannabis cards that certify their eligibility to use medicinal marijuana, as well as equipment for growing the plant. A publicly traded company, Medical Marijuana Inc. based in Marina del Rey, provides consulting services.

And a dispensary in Oakland, Harborside Health Center, hopes to establish the nation's first medical marijuana franchise. A dispensary is a place where state-approved growers, known as caregivers, can sell off excess pot and patients can buy it by showing their certification card.

The industry's swift growth, however, has prompted many states, including Colorado, to tighten the rules. Some also have begun taxing medical marijuana sales. That has helped limit or reduce the number of medical marijuana businesses.

In Los Angeles, a new law caps the number of dispensaries at 70.

Colorado, which has about 1,100 dispensaries, requires facility owners to pay licensing fees and follow local zoning ordinances, said Mike Meno, a spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group.

Some industry experts estimate the stricter rules could prompt about half of the state's dispensaries to close, Meno said.

"The trend is that people are going to follow Colorado," Meno said. "They're going to realize you can't have this industry operate in the gray area. ... People need to know what's legal and what's not."

In Michigan, state medical marijuana laws are still vague in many areas, such as on how patients are to obtain the drug and what growers are supposed to do with excess marijuana.

In this gray area, dispensaries have opened to meet the needs of patients.

Without stricter regulations, their numbers could proliferate, experts say. But that's unlikely to happen. Some local governments already are looking for ways to stiffen the rules on medical marijuana commerce.

"I wouldn't be surprised," Meno said, "if Michigan joins the states that are retroactively regulating their industries."

In DC, No Such Thing as Too Poor for Medical Pot


By Jessica Gresko, Associated Press - Thursday, August 5 2010
Source: http://www.cannabisculture.com/v2/content/2010/08/05/DC-No-Such-Thing-Too-Poor-Medical-Pot

No one should be too poor to buy pot if they live in Washington, at least if the marijuana is for a medical condition. That's the conclusion of a new medical marijuana law enacted in the nation's capital.

The District of Columbia passed a law earlier this year that allows residents to legally obtain the drug for medical reasons. But it also includes a provision unlike the 14 other states with medical marijuana laws, requiring the drug to be provided at a discount to poor residents who qualify. Who will get the reduced-price marijuana and how much it will cost, however, is still being worked out.

"Obviously because there's no roadmap on how to do this, it may require some tweaking over time," said David Catania, a D.C. councilman and the chairman of the city health committee that drafted the law. "We may, in fact, set an example for other states."

The first round of regulations implementing the law is expected to be released Friday. It may answer some questions about how low-income residents will be treated, but the regulations will also be revised over several months, and patients aren't expected to be able to purchase medical marijuana in the city until 2011.

Right now the law says that patients "unable to afford a sufficient supply of medical marijuana" will be able to purchase it "on a sliding scale." Low-income patients will also get a discount on a required city registration fee. Dispensaries, meanwhile, will have to devote some revenue to providing marijuana to needy patients.

The range of what the drug will ultimately cost low-income residents is anyone's guess. On the illegal market, an ounce of marijuana can range from about $100-$140, according recent police estimates. City officials have estimated that an ounce from a dispensary will cost about $350 and that the average user will purchase about that much a month, though up to two ounces would be permitted. While one city report suggests 300 people would buy marijuana in the first year - a number some consider low - no one knows yet how many would qualify for a reduced rate. One guess is 30 percent, about the same as the percentage of the district's population that is on Medicaid.

Allen St. Pierre, the executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, a Washington-based nonprofit that advocates for the legalization of marijuana, said the city will have to be careful that dispensary prices aren't too different from what it costs to buy marijuana illegally, a price he estimated ranges from $200 to $500 an ounce. If buying marijuana at a dispensary costs more, some people - poor patients in particular - may just keep buying illegally.

No other states require dispensaries to provide the drug at a discount, though in November residents in Berkeley, Calif., will vote on a ballot measure that could require dispensaries there to provide free marijuana to poor patients. A number of California dispensaries already voluntarily do that for patients who can prove hardship.

"I think that ethic of taking care of people who can't take care of themselves has been part of the medical cannabis movement from the beginning," said Steve DeAngelo, the executive director of Harborside Health Center in Oakland, Calif., which until recently had a program that gave out free weekly "care packages" to about 600 patients on unemployment or pensions.

For Washington residents, qualifying for a reduced rate may also be tied to the federal poverty level. The city has among the highest poverty rates in the nation - only Mississippi is substantially higher - and more than 1 in 3 residents get some form of health care assistance.

Teresa Skipper, an HIV-positive resident who uses marijuana to stop frequent nausea and help her eat, said she hopes the new law will make getting the drug easier for her since she is a Medicaid patient. She would like to get the drug legally, but she says she can't and won't pay more than the $50 an ounce she pays on the illegal market.

"People under the poverty level and below shouldn't have to pay anything," said Skipper, who uses about an ounce a week. She's waiting to see what officials will decide, but she said it may not change much for her.

"Marijuana is like gas and food to me. It's in the budget," she said.

-Article from KOMO News.

Weed Goes Mainstream


By Peter Hecht, The Sacramento Bee - Sunday, August 8 2010
Source: http://www.sacbee.com/2010/08/08/2944518/weed-goes-mainstream.html

John Wade, 43, a San Francisco commercial lighting specialist, takes a quick hit from a marijuana cigarette on the golf course to steady himself before putting.

Sarika Simmons, 35, of San Diego County, sometimes unwinds after the kids are asleep with tokes from a fruit-flavored cigar filled with pot.

And retiree Robert Girvetz, 78, of San Juan Capistrano, recently started anew – replacing his occasional martini with marijuana.

"It's a little different than I remember," he says. "A couple of hits – and wooooo. … "

As California voters prepare to decide in November whether to become the first state to legalize marijuana for recreational use, a new Field Poll conducted for The Sacramento Bee reveals that weed already is deeply woven into society.

Those who use the drug, and their reasons for doing it, may be as diverse as the state itself.

Forty-two percent of adults who described themselves as current users in the July poll said they smoke pot to relieve pain or treat a health condition. Thirty-nine percent use it recreationally, to socialize or have fun with friends.

Sixty percent say marijuana helps them relax or sleep. Twenty-four percent say it stimulates their creativity.

Historically, marijuana use in California remains lower than during peak years of the late 1970s. But voters' approval of Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act – which made the state the first to legalize medical marijuana – is changing the social dynamic, according to poll results and interviews with users in 15 counties.

"It's certainly likely that post-Proposition 215, it has become more mainstream and the base of users has broadened," said Craig Reinarman, a UC Santa Cruz sociology professor who has studied marijuana in society.

Other measures back the Field Poll findings:

• More than 400,000 Californians use marijuana daily, according to the state Board of Equalization. And state residents consume 16 million ounces of weed a year, from legal and illegal sources.

• More than 3.4 million Californians smoked pot in 2008, according to the latest research by the National Survey on Drug Abuse and Health.

And, in the Field Poll, 47 percent of registered voters said they have used marijuana at least once in their life. That exceeds the registration of any political party in the state.

Breaking stereotypes

Marijuana use in California extends well beyond any stoner stereotype.

"I don't walk around in Bob Marley T-shirts or have a marijuana flag in my room," said Kyle Printz, 44, a Marin County software engineer.

Printz occasionally smokes pot after writing computer code – "and dealing with zeros and ones all day long." He said, "It alters your state of mind a bit and does help you relax."

Deborah Pottle, 56, a disabled former state corrections officer from Modesto, has a physician's recommendation for marijuana for her back injuries and a precancerous condition. She prefers cannabis in lozenges and brownies and melds pot flakes into spaghetti sauce and high-protein meals.

"I find it better by a long shot than … trying to keep pills down," said Pottle, who sees marijuana only as a medical remedy – not recreation.

Nationally, more than 100 million Americans have tried marijuana, and 10 states – led by Rhode Island, Vermont and Alaska – have higher per capita use than the Golden State.

But in California, a proliferating industry of medical cannabis dispensaries, offering exotic strains such as "Blue Dream," "Train Wreck" or "Green Crack," helps supply a vast market, including many people who never venture inside a pot shop.

According to the state Board of Equalization, California marijuana dispensaries – intended to serve bona fide medical users, including AIDS, cancer and chronic pain sufferers – produce up to $1.3 billion in marijuana transactions for people reporting a vast range of ills.

"I'm sure there are people who suffer from any number of maladies that seek therapy from marijuana use," said Sacramento County Sheriff John McGinness. "But for at least as many, I think it's a ruse for healthy people who enjoy the effects of marijuana.

"That's how they obtain it without hassle."

Illegal trafficking persists

Ngaio Bealum, editor of West Coast Cannabis, a 50,000-circulation lifestyle publication that bills itself as the Sunset magazine of weed, says the dispensary evolution and sophisticated growing techniques are changing California's pot culture.

But he said illegal marijuana trafficking lives on to satisfy the demand.

"The old-school weed man still exists, but he's had to step his game up," Bealum said. "Now when you go to the clubs (dispensaries), you've got 50 different kinds" of pot strains. "The weed man now has to offer a few different kinds – and start making brownies, too."

California decriminalized marijuana use and possession 34 years ago. People caught with less than an ounce face a misdemeanor that carries a $100 fine. Those with medical recommendations now can legally possess up to 8 ounces.

Bealum says readily available weed – and the reduced stigma and penalties – make people less wary of consequences.

"As the boomers get older, those guys realized it is really no big deal," he said. "And the younger kids don't think it's a big deal, because their parents used to do it."

The July Field Poll shows plummeting support for tougher marijuana laws and increased backing for softer penalties. Yet marijuana arrests continue to rise.

In 2008, California authorities cited 61,388 people on misdemeanor pot offenses and 17,126 for felonies such as illegal trafficking, cultivation or possession for sale. Total arrests were up by nearly one-third since 2003.

According to the Bee-commissioned poll, current marijuana use is most prevalent in the Bay Area and Northern California, including North Coast and Sierra Nevada counties with pot-receptive climates and cultures. Use is lower in the Central Valley and lowest in San Diego/Orange counties.

And, following previous trends, reported pot use is higher among whites than African Americans, Latinos and other ethnic groups.

All ages and lifestyles

Marijuana has found niches in the California lifestyle with young people starting their careers, affluent baby boomers and urban professionals.

Ryan Issaco, a 21-year-old San Jose college senior bound for law school, says he gets marijuana from friends with medical cards or from acquaintances who bring weed from North Coast pot-growing regions to the Silicon Valley.

He lights a water pipe and explores "different avenues on the issues" with companions. "I love to talk politics when I'm a little high," Issaco said.

Californians age 40 to 49 – people who grew up a decade or more removed from the hippie era and the Summer of Love – are most likely to have used marijuana at some point in their lives, the poll showed.

Though current use is highest among people between 18 and 29 and earning less than $40,000 a year, pot also is finding a significant foothold among many reaching their prime career earning years.

Steven Keegan, 40, a Los Angeles sporting goods designer, earns more than $100,000 marketing to Fortune 500 companies. He says he smokes pot before a typical weekend day spent with his girlfriend at L.A.'s Zuma Beach.

At bedtime, he relaxes with "Woody Harrelson" – a popular cannabis strain named for the actor, an outspoken booster of marijuana use.

"I can come home from work and if I'm up at night thinking about various projects, I'll just take a hit and … I can go to sleep," Keegan said.

John Wade, who does lighting and production for weddings and corporate events, uses his "one hitter" – a miniature pipe that looks like a cigarette – to sneak smokes at Giants baseball games, on ski lifts – and on the golf course.

"You don't want to smoke too much because it can make the game worse," he said. "But I've taken a hit and gone off and had a couple of good holes. I seem to be able to focus on my putting better."

According to the Field Poll, the overwhelming majority of current pot smokers prefer to use it at home or a friend's house. Smaller numbers say they enjoy it at parties, concerts or outdoors.

Simmons, of San Marcos, sometimes retreats to a patio to relieve stress once her three daughters are asleep and won't notice.

"I don't even like the smell of it on my hands or body," she said. "I'm very discreet about it."

Some share 'medical pot'

Dawn Sanford, a call center data entry worker from Sacramento, said she rarely buys marijuana herself. But she reaches out to friends with a ready supply or a medical recommendation.

Sanford has never seen a physician for a pot referral but suffers occasional panic attacks. Sometimes, she said, she calls a female friend who uses marijuana for anxiety to ask, "Can we do this please?"

The potential for pot purchased at medical dispensaries to be diverted for recreational use is prompting efforts to prevent patients from reselling or giving away pot.

Purchasers are limited to 2 ounces a week at Harborside Health Center, which serves 48,000 medical users through its Oakland and San Jose dispensaries. The Oakland outlet alone handles $20 million a year in marijuana transactions, according to the center.

Harborside bans cell phones or money exchanges on dispensary premises. It looks for people whose approach – such as buying up particular pot strains or purchasing in multiple quantities – suggest they may be planning to resell it.

"We've trained our staff to identify transactions that may be suspicious," said Harborside Director Steve DeAngelo. "When you have dual markets, one legal and one illegal, existing side-by-side, you're going to have the issue of diversion."

Many marijuana users have friends who bring home dispensary pot as easily as picking up the groceries.

So in Riverside County, Annette Drennan, 30, an amateur astrologer who is taking a class on meditation, enjoys smoking with her boyfriend – a pot patient – because "when I get stoned I can really feel the present."

Sociologist Reinarman said, "The line that separates recreational use from medical use is blurred" by the infusion of medical pot into California's popular culture.

"There is no contradiction from people who sometimes use it for pain or sometimes use it for sleep or sometimes use it because it is fun and or stimulates their creativity," he said.

The notion offends Lanette Davies, who runs Sacramento's Canna Care dispensary, which serves 5,000 registered marijuana patients.

Davies believes many illicit marijuana users may be self-medicating for undiagnosed medical conditions. But she said, "I don't support people using strictly for recreation. If you want to take Vicodin simply because it feels good, that doesn't make it OK."

While many dispensaries pitch exotic pot strains, such as "Grandaddy Grape Ape" and "Brainstorm Haze," as if they were prize-winning vintages of wine, Canna Care rejected the common name of one popular variety. It changed "Green Crack" to "Green Lady" to avoid an appeal to recreational users.

"We will not put up 'crack,' " Davies said.

Marketing approaches vary

Pot marketing is booming with the burgeoning medical marijuana industry.

MediCann, a California physicians network that has overseen referrals for more than 200,000 patients, portrays medicinal marijuana use as a mainstream experience.

Its "typical stoner" ad campaign features photos of real estate agents, marketing executives, veterans, community volunteers, professors and plumbers who find relief for anxiety, arthritis, nausea, sleeplessness or back pain.

By contrast, an advertisement for Los Angeles' Grateful Meds dispensary appears to pitch mind-altering rewards.

"The place where patients are high-spirited!" says an ad in a Los Angeles pot culture magazine. With depictions of semi-nude women, the advertisement offers free joints or pot brownies for each new "patient."

"This is what we've come to," said John Redman, executive director of Californians for Drug Free Youth. Such appeals attract young adults and make a drug culture attractive to teens, he said. "How is it that we as a society cannot look at that?"

Redman contends depictions of pot as a cool and natural alternative to other drugs are akin to the Joe Camel ads that were blamed for drawing kids to cigarettes.

According to national drug survey data, one-third of current California marijuana users are 18 to 25. Twelve percent – nearly 425,000 – are ages 12 to 17.

Lure surprises some

The complexity and lure of the contemporary pot market surprises even some veteran users such as Wade, who started smoking as a teenager.

As a grown-up, he cithttp://dazydays.forumn.net/forum.htmed occasional hives and rashes to get a physician's recommendation. That entitled him to shop dispensaries featuring scores of marijuana varieties. They include cannabis sativa plants – said to produce a cerebral high; indica plants – considered body relaxants; and crossbred plants said to offer both medicinal effects.

Some strains pack a greater psychoactive punch than Wade was ready for. "I found them too strong," he said.

Wade has a favorite – "Blackberry Kush," an indica strain he says has "great flavor" and crystal-like texture that "looks like someone took the buds and rolled them in sugar."

The new culture is luring back former pot smokers, too.

Robert Girvetz tried marijuana more than 40 years ago, indulged for a few years and moved on with little nostalgia. But then, well into his 70s and "very much retired" from running a window-covering business, he was reintroduced by friends and relatives.

A cousin gave Girvetz a vaporizer that let him use pot without lighting up. Preferring marijuana to cocktails, he savors it "once every couple of months, just for kicks."

Girvetz did have one notable bad experience. "I ate a whole (pot) brownie when I shouldn't have," he said. "I almost had to crawl out of my chair to get into bed."

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

Oakland Dispensary a Major Force in Medical Pot


By Matthai Kuruvila, Chronicle Staff Writer - Saturday, August 7 2010
Source: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/08/07/MN0K1EOB4N.DTL

Cementing its position as a cannabis capital, Oakland has moved rapidly in recent weeks toward a world of legalized pot, developing permits for what would be some of the largest sanctioned marijuana farms in the world and writing ballot measures that would create a bevy of cannabis taxes.

But at every step, notable opposition came from one group: Harborside Health Center, believed to be the world's largest medical marijuana dispensary.

Harborside says it was fighting for the product's integrity, preserving the vision of state voters when they legalized pot as medicine in 1996. But some saw it as simply a business move for a dispensary that's become a colossus in an industry that hasn't totally moved out of the black market.

"Really, they're just wanting to protect their market share," said Indigo Moonstar, 28, who said he operates a small marijuana grow facility in Oakland and has criticized Harborside at City Council meetings. "They've had a corner on the market."

Marijuana might be mainstream, and its recreational use might become legal in California if voters pass Proposition 19 in the November election. But the profound changes also raise complex issues that industries of the purely legal kind have long wrestled with and complained about: the burdens of taxation, regulation and competition.

If recent Oakland City Council meetings about marijuana were any indication, not everyone is ready for the government to move in.

Harborside unsuccessfully lobbied against the council's November ballot measure to increase the city's existing 1.8 percent tax on pot dispensaries' gross sales to 5 percent. They said the higher operating cost would drive patients to neighboring cities with lower or no taxes.

Harborside also lost its fight against industrial farms, in which it said inevitable corporate ownership and profit-seeking would deteriorate the quality of the medicine.

Harborside's activism is applied to a hodgepodge of pot laws. While federal law bans all marijuana use, state law allows dispensaries to sell to patients who have doctors' recommendations. Large-scale growing is largely illicit, a gap the Oakland City Council last month sought to close by developing regulations and licensing.

At the center of it all is Harborside's leader, Stephen DeAngelo, who wants full legalization but is wary of government overreaching. He said the recent political battles are about more than just Oakland.

"What we've seen is that Oakland is the leader in cannabis regulation," said DeAngelo. "Once Oakland takes a step, typically it's followed by other cities across the state."

$21 million in sales

Harborside might be the world's biggest dispensary, but its central Oakland building has no storefront sign. It doesn't need one.

The 4-year-old dispensary has 54,000 members, 800 of whom come every day. It took in $21 million in sales last year - triple what Oakland's three other dispensaries generated combined. It buys from roughly 500 marijuana growers - rejecting 4,500 other farmers annually.

Its network of growers and patients depends on it, giving Harborside unique clout, from seed to sale.

DeAngelo says his dispensary has thrived because of quality. He prides himself on the knowledge of his staff, cleanliness, strict security and natural light in every room. Concerned that patients couldn't know for sure the purity or potency of their pot, Harborside says it was the first in the state to give patients independent lab tests on their products.

DeAngelo says Harborside operates like a nonprofit. Employees get at least $14 an hour plus health benefits, a 401k plan and a free gram of pot per shift.

Roughly 5 percent of Harborside's revenues are "given back" to the community through services it provides for free, DeAngelo said. That includes things like naturopathy, Reiki and acupuncture. Those who are poor, or perform marijuana activism, can get free pot.

Success and skepticism

Critics don't dispute Harborside's good work or the quality standards it has set. They just question its control of the market.

When Harborside claimed that Oakland's proposed cannabis taxes would hamstring the local pot industry, council members asked for Harborside executives' salaries. They refused, though actual nonprofits are required to disclose.

In the past, Harborside fought increasing the number of dispensaries in Oakland, which has just four. More recently, the dispensary said industrial farms would squeeze out small growers - it enlisted its small army of growers to lobby the council.

Some saw hypocrisy in a dispensary giant that fought to expand competition now saying it is the voice of small farmers against big ones.

"They're totally two-faced on this," said Richard Lee, founder of Oaksterdam University and the key backer of Proposition 19, which would legalize recreational use of marijuana in California.

"For the last four years, it's just fine to have the world's biggest dispensary," said Lee, who owns a dispensary, Coffeeshop Blue Sky. "Now, when (large-scale farming) comes up, all the arguments against it apply to them."

A true believer

DeAngelo said his dispensary fought industrial farms because small growers were "the heart" of Harborside, which now plans to apply for an industrial permit by pairing with those small growers. Some accusations, he said, are born of jealousy.

"You always hear from people who haven't been able to replicate your success," he said.

DeAngelo is a true believer in medical marijuana - viewing it as entirely distinct from recreational use. He estimates that only 10 to 15 percent of the population might be into the drug for fun.

"Everybody gets sick at some point in time," DeAngelo said, explaining why he believes in full legalization. "It's destined to be a household remedy."

He says the fights at the council were critical for the emergent industry.

"Society has a chance to get it right this time," he said. "We didn't get it right with tobacco. We didn't get it right with alcohol. We put those potentially dangerous substances in the hands of corporations who had no interest other than making as much money as possible.

"Do we want those kinds of companies getting their hands on cannabis?"