Marijuana Weekly News Roundup

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By Paul Ausick Updated Published
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California governor Jerry Brown last week signed legislation authorizing hefty fines for marijuana farms that foul the environment by dumping wastewater and chemicals, cutting down trees, and killing animals. The legislation is taking aim at the rising number of illegal marijuana farms that have sprouted since the state passed a law in 1996 allowing medical marijuana sales.

A report in the Los Angeles Times noted that investigators have found more than 135 dams and diversions in the state’s rivers and streams resulting in the theft of about 5 million gallons of water for marijuana growing operations. Under the new law fines for dumping hazardous materials into the state’s waters may go as high as $40,000, with fines of up to $10,000 for cutting trees or killing animals.

Here’s a rundown on other stories related to marijuana that made news this week.

Cannabis: Silicon Valley Hot New Sector
Wearing a straw hat and a big grin, farmer Casey O’Neill is busy greeting customers at a Saturday farmers’ market in Mendocino County, Northern California. “Another day in paradise,” he calls out, as one approaches. Fresh broccoli, courgettes and spring onions are on display on his table, all grown at his farm.

Next to the vegetables is a different kind of crop: mason jars full of marijuana buds, bearing handwritten labels such as “Lemon OG” and “Ogre Berry”. A bong sits at the front of the table, for sampling. “Wow, is that really grown outdoors?” says one shopper who takes a hit. Cannabis-infused honey, lip balm and chai tea are for sale at nearby stands.

Read More at the Financial Times.

NYC Sees Surge in Use of Synthetic Marijuana, Complicating Efforts To Deal with the Homeless
Ignoring the police officers standing down the block and the disingenuous fine print on the foil packet peeking out of his front pocket — “Warning: Don’t Smoke” — a homeless man openly lit up a synthetic marijuana joint and explained why it’s not like the real thing.

“It’s a zero-to-60 high,” said the 47-year-old, who gave his name only as J.C. because of his frequent run-ins with the law. “I’ve done plenty of drugs in my life, and it only compares to dust,” he said, referring to PCP. “But it doesn’t last as long.”

Read more at FoxNews.

DEA Admits Heroin Is More Dangerous than Marijuana, Congressman Blumenauer Urges Reclassification
Congressman Earl Blumenauer has been one of the most prominent elected officials fighting for sensible marijuana laws for over forty years, going all the way back to his state legislator days in the early 1970s when he helped Oregon become the first state to decriminalize cannabis. Portland’s Representative certainly hasn’t slowed down on his support for cannabis law reform, if anything he has been ramping up his responsible approach, sponsoring important legislation and introducing good idea after good idea. Representative Blumenauer has done a great job working across the aisle and the political spectrum to work on needed reforms, such as expunging old marijuana convictions, taxes, banking and ending federal prohibition of marijuana. I am very excited to get to ask Rep. Blumenauer about the very latest in federal marijuana reforms at the Oregon Medical Marijuana Business Conference as he is always very informative, entertaining and he provides great tips to activists on how we can help his work federally and across the country.

Read more at Marijuana Politics.

Nobody Knows What To Do About Pesticides in Legal Marijuana
The marijuana plant’s worst enemy is so small it’s practically invisible. On weed farms around the country, spider mites attack leaf cells one by one, sucking out chlorophyll like teeny tiny green vampires. If the mites kill enough cells, the whole plant is a goner—an expensive problem considering a single mature marijuana plant is worth as much as $4,000. That’s why more and more, farmers have turned to pesticides. Lots and lots of them.

Unchecked pesticide use has long been the status quo in the anything-goes world of illegal weed farming. But as states legalize marijuana for both recreational and medical use, they’re trying to crack down on the toxic chemicals. In late April, Denver officials quarantined 60,000 plants—worth millions—at a single grower, the latest in a string of punishments for growers using dangerous pesticides. “There was 30 or 60 day period where we were receiving multiple complaints a week” says John Scott, pesticide program manager at the Colorado Department of Agriculture. But exactly what constitutes a dangerous or even illegal pesticide is a tricky, tricky question.

Read more at Wired.

State Lawmakers Want Feds To Respect Their Marijuana Laws
State lawmakers agree: The federal government should not interfere with states that set their own marijuana laws.

The National Conference of State Legislatures, a nongovernment organization composed of state lawmakers and their staffs, passed a resolution Thursday urging the federal government to amend the Controlled Substances Act and other federal laws “to explicitly allow states to set their own marijuana and hemp policies without federal interference” and to refrain from undermining state marijuana and hemp laws.

Additionally, the resolution acknowledges that lawmakers in different states will have differing views on how to treat the plant, but the NCSL members agree that “states and localities should be able to set whatever marijuana and hemp policies work best to improve the public safety, health, and economic development of their communities.”

Read more at The Huffington Post.

Photo of Paul Ausick
About the Author Paul Ausick →

Paul Ausick has been writing for a673b.bigscoots-temp.com for more than a decade. He has written extensively on investing in the energy, defense, and technology sectors. In a previous life, he wrote technical documentation and managed a marketing communications group in Silicon Valley.

He has a bachelor's degree in English from the University of Chicago and now lives in Montana, where he fishes for trout in the summer and stays inside during the winter.

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