Story first appeared on MotherJones.com.
Two years ago in Breckenridge, Colorado—on April 20 at 4:20 p.m., to
be precise—Mike Davis opened up a pot lounge. The Club 420 didn't just
cater to medical marijuana patients: Any adult with a bag of weed could
come inside, rent a vaporizer, and smoke out. Citizens of this quaint
snowboarding village had recently voted to decriminalize pot possession,
but local officials figured a pot lounge was a step too far and quickly
shut it down. No matter. Breckenridge continued to be known as
Colorado's most toker-friendly tourist town.
While Breckenridge's tourism boosters have hesitated to embrace that
label—at least publicly—they might change their minds with the passage
last week of Amendment 64,
a statewide measure to legalize the sale and recreational consumption
of pot.
Be that as it may, Breckenridge is approaching pot tourism like an
intermediate skier would scope out a double black diamond: with extreme
caution. Local leaders still talk about the fallout from the town's 2009
decriminalization law, which inspired some conservative groups to call
for a boycott of the town. Fifty percent of people thought we were
doing the work of the devil, and the other fifty percent thought we were
the most enlightened community around. Ultimately, Breckenridge's embrace of pot had no
noticeable effect on tourism.
One believes that the Town Council will probably embrace
legalization—within limits: no cannabis shops in the middle of town, and
no pot-leaf signs or provocative ads. The town doesn't want to scare
away families with kids or attract the wrong kinds of visitors.
Of course, even if Breckenridge were to leave its pot regs up to
Cheech and Chong, local "ganjapreneurs" might hesitate to replicate the
freewheeling Amsterdam scene. The first people through the wall will
get the bloodiest, says the Executive Chancellor of
Oaksterdam University in Oakland, California, which was raided by federal agents after its founder, Richard Lee, led a state legalization campaign in 2010. Federal crackdowns have crimped Oakland's pot tourism plans and scared other cities off of similar ideas.
Given the risks, the first towns to try and normalize the marijuana
trade may be the ones with less to lose—for instance, municipalities in
the grittier post-industrial parts of Washington state, which also voted
on Tuesday to legalize marijuana. Possession of small amounts of weed
will be legal there early next month, and state-licensed marijuana
stores could open by December 2013.
And there's the pipe dream of pot-farm tourism: legalized cannabis
plantations with tasting rooms and u-pick buckets. Don't count on it,
says the owner of
a California-based pot ecocertification program. Some of the dozens of
cannabis farmers he visits each year in the state's Emerald Triangle had
considered the idea for their medical marijuana patients, but set it
aside in the face of amped-up federal raids.
If the feds don't immediately nip legalized marijuana in the bud,
chances are that "green travel" will grow slowly as entrepreneurs and
pot-friendly towns gauge how far they can push matters. Places like
Breckenridge might be the first beneficiaries as they rely on pot stores
to draw additional visitors, but stop short of visibly promoting them.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment