Legal pot becomes a touchy workplace issue

workplace1
 
DENVER — Last month, Colorado diner owner Mark Rose posted an unusual job description: “Looking for part time experienced breakfast cook. Pays well, must be friendly and a team player, could turn into a full time gig by summer. 420 friendly a must.”
With that public declaration, Rose put himself squarely in the camp of employers acknowledging that marijuana use is perfectly legal in Colorado. Perhaps more significant, it also puts him in the camp of employers who officially don’t care if their employees use pot off-duty. The phrase “420” is shorthand for someone who uses marijuana.
 
Full Article:
http://www.9news.com/story/news/local/2014/04/07/legal-pot-becomes-a-touchy-workplace-issue/7443333/
 

Denver County Fair putting high emphasis on “Pot Pavilion”

By Steve Raabe
The Denver Post

The Denver County Fair draws thousands of attendees to the National Western Complex in Denver.

The Denver County Fair draws thousands of attendees to the National Western Complex in Denver. (Denver Post file photo)
Pot plant-growing competitions. Pot brownie judging. Pipes. Vaporizers. Rolling papers. And oh, by the way, there’s also a county fair taking place.
But excuse the Denver County Fair organizers for making hay with marijuana while public interest is high.
Organizers said Tuesday that the fair’s “Pot Pavilion” will now occupy an entire floor of the National Western Complex during the event Aug. 1-3.
“Originally the pot pavilion was going to take just half of the third floor,” said fair director Dana Cain. “But the response has just been enormous. We’re having to turn away sponsors.”
 
Full Article:
By Steve Raabe
The Denver Post

The Denver County Fair draws thousands of attendees to the National Western Complex in Denver.

The Denver County Fair draws thousands of attendees to the National Western Complex in Denver. (Denver Post file photo)
Pot plant-growing competitions. Pot brownie judging. Pipes. Vaporizers. Rolling papers. And oh, by the way, there’s also a county fair taking place.
But excuse the Denver County Fair organizers for making hay with marijuana while public interest is high.
Organizers said Tuesday that the fair’s “Pot Pavilion” will now occupy an entire floor of the National Western Complex during the event Aug. 1-3.
“Originally the pot pavilion was going to take just half of the third floor,” said fair director Dana Cain. “But the response has just been enormous. We’re having to turn away sponsors.”
 
Full Article:
http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_25522161/denver-county-fair-putting-high-emphasis-pot-pavilion

Uruguay Considers Using Medical Marijuana To Treat Cocaine Addicts In Prison

Matt Sledge Become a fanmsledge@huffingtonpost.com
MEDICAL MARIJUANA
 
NEW YORK — Uruguay is considering using medical marijuana to treat prison inmates addicted to a crude and cheap form of cocaine, one of the country’s top health officials said Thursday at the United Nations.
The South American country made headlines last year when it became the first in the world to legalize the sale of marijuana. Now, as Uruguay prepares to implement its pioneering legislation, health leaders are considering possible uses for medical forms of marijuana — including in prisons, where many of the incarcerated are addicted to drugs.
“Jail is not a very suitable place for someone to safely overcome drug addiction,” Leonel Briozzo, the country’s undersecretary for public health, said in an event at the U.N. Briozzo called for “new strategies for drug addiction treatment, especially for harder drugs like ‘pasta base.’ And in that sense, we harbor a possible hope that medical marijuana can play a role in this as well.”
 
Full Article:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/04/uruguay-medical-marijuana_n_5092773.html?1396639478

Winning the Green Energy Revolution

by HARVEY WASSERMAN
 
c
 
High above the Bowling Green town dump, a green energy revolution is being won.
It’s being helped along by the legalization of marijuana and its bio-fueled cousin, industrial hemp.
But it’s under extreme attack from the billionaire Koch Brothers, utilities like First Energy (FE), and a fossil/nuke industry that threatens our existence on this planet.
Robber Baron resistance to renewable energy has never been more fierce. The prime reason is that the Solartopian Revolution embodies the ultimate threat to the corporate utility industry and the hundreds of billions of dollars it has invested in the obsolete monopolies that define King CONG (Coal, Oil, Nukes & Gas).
The outcome will depend on YOUR activism, and will determine whether we survive here at all. Four very large wind turbines in this small Ohio town are producing clean, cheap electricity that can help save our planet. A prime reason they exist is that Bowling Green has a municipal owned utility. When it came time to go green, the city didn’t have to beg some corporate owned electric monopoly to do it for them.
 
Full Article:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/04/07/winning-the-green-energy-revolution/

Las Vegas – Medical marijuana career fair educates job seekers

Written by Rachel Moore – email
ff
 
As Clark County and the City of Las Vegas prepare to welcome the medical marijuana industry, Compassion Nevada Consulting is getting a jump-start on staffing the dispensaries and cultivation facilities that may start sprouting up.
The consulting firm hosted a medical marijuana career fair to educate and train job-seekers interested in the business.
Compassion Nevada Consulting owner Adam Sternberg said the medical marijuana industry will bring hundreds of jobs to the Valley. He wants to make sure those positions are filled by locals.
 
Full Article:
http://www.fox5vegas.com/story/25173375/medical-marijuana-career-fair-educates-job-seekers
 
cnc JOB FAIR

Thousands attend 43rd annual Hash Bash in Ann Arbor

 

Thousands of people attended an annual pro-marijuana rally today that’s been held on the University of Michigan campus for 43 years.

The event on the university’s campus has historically celebrated marijuana and promotes its legalization. A new group of organizers this year has extended the hours and brought in speakers to cover various topics.

Longtime Hash Bash organizer, and this year’s emcee, Adam Brook said he remains focused on the rallying and campaigning efforts.

“Local ballot initiatives are, in my opinion, the most important thing,” said Brook, who served a two-year prison sentence after police raided his Royal Oak home and discovered more than a pound of marijuana. Many people consider him to be a leader of the movement to legalize cannabis in the state.

“That’s what’s going to change and persuade the legislators,” he said. “That people want the change.”

The Hash Bash began in 1971 after a local activist, John Sinclair, was sent to prison for 10 years for selling two joints to undercover police. He was released after the Michigan Supreme Court ruled the state’s marijuana statutes were unconstitutional.

Full Article:

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20140405/METRO06/304050047?fb_action_ids=618442964907430&fb_action_types=og.recommends&fb_source=feed_opengraph&action_object_map=%7B%22618442964907430%22%3A609632522457795%7D&action_type_map=%7B%22618442964907430%22%3A%22og.recommends%22%7D&action_ref_map=%5B%5D

 

Larry Sanders of Milwaukee Bucks: ‘I believe in marijuana’

ESPN.com news services
LArry Sanders

AP Photo/David ZalubowskiBucks center Larry Sanders, suspended five games for using marijuana, said Friday he has studied it and knows its benefits.
Bucks center Larry Sanders advocated for marijuana’s legalization Friday, hours after it was announced he would be suspended five games by the NBA for its use.
Sanders said the drug’s stigma is rooted in its illegal status and that once its prohibition is lifted “this all will go away.”
“It’s something I feel strongly about, just to let you know something personal about me,” Sanders said in an interview with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel before the Bucks’ 102-90 loss at Chicago. “I will deal with the consequences from it.
 
Full Article:
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/10732646/larry-sanders-milwaukee-bucks-advocates-marijuana-ban

Majority of Law Enforcement Officers Support Marijuana Policy Reform

Photo Credit: RDaniel / Shutterstock.com
 
Though not conducted with the methodological rigor of the  Pew poll that came out yesterday showing 54% of Americans support the legalization of marijuana and two-thirds believe drug policy should focus on treatment rather than prosecuting drug users,  Law Officer magazine has provided LEAP a poll of its own showing an even more surprising finding: a majority of law enforcement officers also support marijuana policy reform.
 
Full Article:
http://www.alternet.org/drugs/majority-law-enforcement-officers-support-marijuana-policy-reform