Gov. Inslee sends letter detailing state's legal pot plan

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee sent U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder a letter this week detailing the efforts the state is taking as it moves forward with creating rules for a voter-approved legal market for marijuana.
Inslee wrote the "the world is watching" both Colorado and Washington as the two states implement last fall's votes that approved the recreational use of marijuana
"We intend to do it right," he wrote. The letter was sent Tuesday, but released by Inslee's office publicly on Thursday.
Voters in Washington state and Colorado in November approved measures legalizing the recreational use of the drug, allowing use by adults over 21 and the creation of state-licensed systems of growers, processors and retail stores that sell heavily taxed pot.
But because the creation of those regulatory schemes poses a possible conflict with federal law, which outlaws marijuana, the states have been moving ahead with implementation without certainty of whether the federal government will try to block them.
Inslee and Attorney General Bob Ferguson met with Holder last month, but they weren't given any clarity on how the federal government will respond, if at all.
However, Inslee said he promised Holder that he would give him further details on how the state might prevent Washington-grown marijuana from being diverted to other states.
In his letter, Inslee noted that Washington state officials are in discussion with officials from Colorado about that state's current system of regulating medical marijuana.
Inslee also wrote that he is exploring digitally tracking legally grown plants and processed marijuana to preclude large-scale diversion. He mentioned that apples in the state can already be traced from individual orchards, "through packing houses and distributors, and ultimately to market."
Inslee wrote that the state Liquor Control Board, charged with regulating marijuana under Washington's measure, is still in the midst of ruling on rules for the process. He said that while the process is still ongoing, "our goals include creation of a system that minimizes the illicit market through price, access and convenience while simultaneously controlling the product."
Inslee said the agency already performs background checks of potential licensees, but that those checks will likely be expanded to include fingerprinting, allowing access to both the Washington State Patrol and FBI databases.
The governor wrote that inventory control, packaging and labeling and recording keeping and audits would all have high standards and rules to ensure proper control over the marijuana that is grown, processed and sold in the state.
The Liquor Control Board has already held a series of public forums on the rulemaking process, and a draft of proposed rules for producer licenses is expected to be filed by mid-April. Under their timeline, the board said that producer licenses would be effective in August, and processor and retailer licenses would become effective on Dec. 1.
Inslee wrote the "the world is watching" both Colorado and Washington as the two states implement last fall's votes that approved the recreational use of marijuana
"We intend to do it right," he wrote. The letter was sent Tuesday, but released by Inslee's office publicly on Thursday.
Voters in Washington state and Colorado in November approved measures legalizing the recreational use of the drug, allowing use by adults over 21 and the creation of state-licensed systems of growers, processors and retail stores that sell heavily taxed pot.
But because the creation of those regulatory schemes poses a possible conflict with federal law, which outlaws marijuana, the states have been moving ahead with implementation without certainty of whether the federal government will try to block them.
Inslee and Attorney General Bob Ferguson met with Holder last month, but they weren't given any clarity on how the federal government will respond, if at all.
However, Inslee said he promised Holder that he would give him further details on how the state might prevent Washington-grown marijuana from being diverted to other states.
In his letter, Inslee noted that Washington state officials are in discussion with officials from Colorado about that state's current system of regulating medical marijuana.
Inslee also wrote that he is exploring digitally tracking legally grown plants and processed marijuana to preclude large-scale diversion. He mentioned that apples in the state can already be traced from individual orchards, "through packing houses and distributors, and ultimately to market."
Inslee wrote that the state Liquor Control Board, charged with regulating marijuana under Washington's measure, is still in the midst of ruling on rules for the process. He said that while the process is still ongoing, "our goals include creation of a system that minimizes the illicit market through price, access and convenience while simultaneously controlling the product."
Inslee said the agency already performs background checks of potential licensees, but that those checks will likely be expanded to include fingerprinting, allowing access to both the Washington State Patrol and FBI databases.
The governor wrote that inventory control, packaging and labeling and recording keeping and audits would all have high standards and rules to ensure proper control over the marijuana that is grown, processed and sold in the state.
The Liquor Control Board has already held a series of public forums on the rulemaking process, and a draft of proposed rules for producer licenses is expected to be filed by mid-April. Under their timeline, the board said that producer licenses would be effective in August, and processor and retailer licenses would become effective on Dec. 1.
The current methodd of obtainingg pot is mainly illicit and anonymous. Why would someone go to a "State" store to buy a inferior product, that is highly taxed and tracked and the person buying it will be Tracked. Not a chance in hades.
Rediculous
If we could get more people using pot than alcohol, the world WILL be a better place.
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/39938704/ns/health-addictions/#.URvGGmdZ3Ow
All of the people who voted for this should be more worried about the Federal Goverment. Wa State voters may have made it legal in this state but its still illeagal in this country. State law never supercedes federal law so i hope all these so called legal growers get busted for breaking the law. Then they will be crying but its legal here i didnt know! As far as employment goes and pre-employment drug testing i wonder whats going to change there. How safe is it to work around a person while running a machine or driving a forklift while stoned?  People say stoned people just want to veg and eat dont really sound safe to me.
With that being said my only issue with it other than its still illegal and i cant be around it and dont want to be around it.
@Bonner These morons who continue to preach the evils of weed, and have probably never had a puff of it in their lives, never cease to amaze me.Â
Inslee says...
Bwahahaha...
We screwed the pooch when we voted for this, and again when we voted for him.
NOTHING good will come of this.
@bobalouieNOTHING?!?!?!?!?!?!?! Well I guess you're right, I mean, it sure as hell caused a lot of problems in Michigan, oh wait, no, no it didn't. In fact, it brought in nearly $10 million dollars to the sate. Oh, and this is just medical marijuana we're talking about here. Also, NONE of the 124,417 medical cards given were taken away, which means that there was no (caught) wrong doing state wide.Â
So, if you think that having no criminal problems and $10 million dollars being pumped into a states economy is no good, then yes, you are right, nothing good will come from this. But maybe you should look into what you are talking about before you go on running your mouth.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/02/06/michigans-medical-marijuana-tax-revenues-exceed-10-million/
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130206/POLITICS02/302060383
Here's one more fun fact for you to look at. I am going to think it is safe to assume you occasionally like to have a sip of alcohol, or if not, that you are not opposed to those that do. Funny thing about alcohol use is that it has caused more deaths than marijuana use ever has. In fact, ZERO deaths have occurred due to marijuana use, compared to the 24,518 deaths caused by alcohol. (http://www.drugwarfacts.org/cms/Causes_of_Death)
That's just one of many examples, though. The point is you are a voting adult, and as such you have the obligation to be informed about both side before you go off spouting such definitive statements such as "NOTHING good will come of this."Â
@walterwhite @bobalouie 10 million? Not even a drop!
@WhatdidIsay?not even a drop? So you're saying that having $10 million come in with virtually no negative factors isn't good? Sure compared to a states total budget that isn't a huge percentage, but you'd be bitching and moaning just as much if that $10 million had to be made up in tax payer's money...
@bobalouie And what good has come from the sales of alcohol? Millions of dead at the hands of a drunk driver, Many broken families, people who spent the rent money on on a rack of beer,lots of lost jobs,suicides, children beaten at the hands of their parents.... at least most users of pot are content with getting high, eating a sack of Doritos and crashing in the bed.Â
It wasnt until this law was passed that the media reported on offenders who were driving STONED, coincident..I think not
@nwlib @bobalouie So you think this is going to fix all that? Two wrongs doesn't make one right!
@WhatdidIsay?@nwlib@bobalouie It's not about two wrongs making a right. It's about prohibition causing more damage to peoples lives than the substance that is prohibited does.
From what I have seen and heard in the last several months Pot is Now Legal and on the othe hand Not Legal. It seems a district court in seattle is still hammering defendants saying it is illegal on the Federal Level and that particular Court judge is not enforcing the voters wishes. So what to do: Serve him a Writ of mandamus or perhaps a Writ of Quo Warranto about his authority to circumvent the peoples law/
 Next we have other problems dealing with auto insurance on pot smokers, State industrial Insurance and Job Site safety. What a mess we all created and the costs are going to be staggering in the future and yes I voted for the legalization and I do not smoke it.
 So now we are going to see more bootlegging in the same aspects of Bootleggers as it will be more practical to stay off the radar and blackmarket prices will be worth the effort to circumvent whatever plan Inslee comes up with..Good Luck.
It isn't going to be the people who already smoke pot rushing out in droves to legally buy it, it will be the people who didn't smoke before because they didn't want to break the law or simply didn't have a source to buy from. Personally, I'd much rather buy from a store legitimately than get it from some guy in a parking lot or some acquaintance's house who wants me to hang out for a few hours. I don't know why everyone is all for buying from dealers. I don't care what you say, unless they're your friend, nobody likes the buying process. Nobody. I'll pay extra for the convenience. You can have your growing gear and your uncomfortable interactions with lowlifes.
I'll stick with homegrown for now and see what the prices are later and then make a decision.Blaze on  ; )_
Jay's no fool. He know's more folks voted for 502 that did for him as governor and it wasn't close. Considering the comments McKenna made during the debates on this issue, Jay is the right guy to move forward and acknowledge the will of the voters.
Well if the pot is priced well below what it sells for on the street then they might put the illegal growers out of business. I would buy from the government then.
It's probably imposable to undercut the street price considering the rate they are planing to tax it.
@jd94b Prices never go down when government is involved. Haven't people learned that yet???
@Paul @jd94b ummm the druggies promised to pay the taxes when they voted yes.
@Common Sense @Paul @jd94b Just like the drunks promised to pay the taxes when they sided with Costco.
I think I'll just stick to home grown.
Just look at those lovely buds!
If, and only if, they are able to bring it below street price, my thoughts will go out to the lonely local bad kids who will be forced out of work!Â
Back in the "pot-years", buying from your dealer was a social event, where you got to hang out with all your friends at his house waiting for him to bag it up.Â
We supported the "sons behind the mom and pop shops". These big box pot shops are going to ruin the community, yeah, thanks Obama!
i really like that Jay inslee is so for this, and is working on making it work. the ONLY flaw in all this is their tax %. one goal of all this was to take it away from the black market, but with a 25% tax implementation, i think im just going to keep going to my dealer.
if the price is right, you wont have any fear of the weed leaving the state, because Wa is going to buy it ALL...
ps. i hope they have good growers, and not sell us BS @ premium price.
@overeazie Its actually a 75% tax because its taxed at 25% at 3 different levels, Grower, dispensary,buyer. Just going to drive it back underground.Â
@overeazie Don't worry about the tax; the price will come down so much that even with the tax, it will be cheaper than buying privately - the problem with this is the tax revenue figures are way off, so the revenue won't be as expected. This is why the medical marijuana people didn't like this law, they liked the price they were getting; they know the price will drop.Â
@aerddot Medical Growers get their friggin' weed free and next to free for those reliant on providers if they're smart......
@Funky-Munky Highly recommend people get their own medical authorization and grow for themselves. You still don't need to have an authorization to grow for medical reasons but you better have some good medical records on hand to back up your claim. And its still not actually legal for medical patients to grow, They never changed any of that. It just gives you a legal defense to argue in court. Cops can still legally arrest any medical cannabis patient.
@overeazie You will have chronic bud possibly at double or as close to double the costs you pay now is where this is heading so far..... me thinks. :(
tracking will give minimal help in controlling where the plant goes. They could easily list a large crop as destroyed because of bug infestation or mold and then just sell it somewhere else. Just going to help to price poor people out of the ability to buy. Regulation was never the answer, deregulation is.Â
@Blindman I think you're right. If they try to bust all the people that are going to grow or sell outside the system nothing has changed.
@Blindman Nope, we live in a country that declared war and is still waging war on a social health problem at best....
I think the joke here is that many of the people who smoke pot grow it themselves and their friends buy it from them. What they really wanted was not to have it be a criminal act to be smoking pot, especially on your own property.
@patcat58 Yep, there's that or basic math.... $240.00 an ounce.... Tax Free!
@Funky-Munky @patcat58 You're over paying. $200 tops.Â
@Hachee_Bungwhy Really? $200 an ounce after 75% tax plus security and quality testing. BS
@Crosscut Thank you for sharing!
Hey Gov. Why not take the taxes received from the sale of POT to pay for the roads budget that the so-called 40 Mayors wrote a letter to you about?Â
I cannot afford 1.5% taxes on my car every year in the tune of $150 for the $10,000 value. My car is close to 15 years old. At that rate, I'll never afford a new one, nor would I want to. The taxes in this State are killing us.
@ObsidianOne Move
@ObsidianOne  In the hands of politicians the money will go somewhere alright...... UP IN SMOKE!!!!
What the idiots don't understand is that the people smoking pot will buy it from the same place they do today! Nobody will pay double for the heavily taxed stuff!
@WhatdidIsay? When the state, feds and others get their cut you're looking at close to twenty bucks a gram and up is my guess... ridiculous. If they cannot beat street prices then this will all be an absolute waste of time for many will be my next guess.
@Funky-Munky I am with you 100% on that! But the ONLY reason the law passed was the promise of all those tax money! Some people are just worse than sheeps!
Yeah and next they're gonna demand that you pay with a Debit or Credit card so they'll be able to track the pot all the way to the pipe or bong.
I don't smoke pot but come on. Do they track every ear of corn,head of broccoli, tomato, and potato that goes to market?? Â
@Seahawker They do, so if there is a health recall, like with brocolli a little while back, they can let people know which batches were effected.
@Seahawker Currently because of the nature of the produce being discussed, tracking is very essential. Perhaps if it became legal nationwide there would no longer be the need to track it.