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Cannabis industry org forms to “be ready” for national legalization
The Cannabist ^ | June 16, 2017 | Alex Pasquariello

Posted on 06/17/2017 12:05:51 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Cannabis is joining the ranks of the financial, advertising, real estate and alcohol industries with the formation of its first self-regulatory organization.

The National Association of Cannabis Businesses (NACB) launched Thursday with a powerhouse leadership team and an ambitious plan: Develop and enforce national standards that will increase compliance and transparency, spur growth, and shape future federal regulations. The NACB’s slogan is “Be ready,” in anticipation of federal legalization of cannabis.

The cannabis industry is on a historic growth trajectory even as its businesses operate in a fractured regulatory environment and in the face of uncertain federal policy, NACB president Andrew Kline told The Cannabist.

“What we’re saying is, ‘Let’s take control,'” he said. “Let’s set our own standards so we’re not limited by varying state regulations or subject to what the feds come up with.”

“The formation of NACB is absolutely a coming of age moment for cannabis,” said Ean Seeb, co-founder of Denver Relief Consulting and a member of the group’s advisory panel. “The industry has reached a stage where businesses are no longer only beholden to state regulations and obligations. It’s time to take the next step to be proactive so that when – not if – marijuana is legalized, we’re prepared.”

Self-regulatory organizations (SROs) are industry-financed, non-governmental groups working to supplement and replace regulatory activities that might otherwise emanate from local, state, and/or federal agencies.

Kline brings decades of experience operating in highly regulated environments, having previously served as a special counsel in the Federal Communications Commission’s enforcement bureau. Prior to that, he was a senior advisor to Vice President Joseph Biden; he also was an assistant U.S. attorney.

A D.C. insider and self-described “student of history,” Kline said he was drawn to the position because, “Cannabis legalization is the purest form of democracy I’ve ever seen.”

Colorado businesses and the they’ve lessons learned from the state’s “mature” regulatory regime will play an important part in the NACB’s initial efforts, Kline said.

“The state has been at it longer than anybody else, so it provides the largest window into what works and what hasn’t worked,” he said.

As the NACB concept developed over the last three years, the group enlisted two prominent players in Colorado’s cannabis industry to serve on its six-member advisory panel: Ean Seeb, co-founder of Denver Relief Consulting, and Adam Orens, co-founder of Marijuana Policy Group.

Seeb cited Colorado’s pesticide testing and enforcement as an example of a state-developed system that could be exported to a national level. “The state recognized early that clean cannabis was a public safety issue,” he said. “And the testing standards it developed are replicable in other states as we see in Oregon, for instance. But it’s also scalable to a national level,” he said.

Three Colorado businesses are among the NACB’s seven founding members: Boulder’s Green Dot Labs, Denver’s Local Product of Colorado and Pueblo’s Mesa Organics.

The founding businesses are models of state-level compliance and they’ll be pioneers in the NACB’s development of a first-of-its type digital compliance certification platform, NACB chief legal officer Douglas Fischer told The Cannabist. The technology is being built in partnership with IBM and will provide member businesses with real-time compliance management and supply chain tracking.

“It will create an auditable and transparent trail of data for consumers, state regulators, investors and — someday — federal agencies, that shows the business is compliant now and has been compliant historically,” he said.

Beyond providing financial institutions with the data to complete their due diligence, developing a national compliance regime and digital compliance platform that is efficient and effective has the potential to unleash the cannabis industry, said Jim Parco, owner of Mesa Organics and an economics professor at Colorado College.

“Compliance is expensive and time-consuming,” he said. “We’re not in the cannabis business; we’re in the compliance business. If we do it right, we get to sell some cannabis. You wouldn’t believe what I go through to get a clone from my greenhouse to our store, for instance.”

Jumping into the type of self-regulatory environment favored by the financial, advertising and alcohol industries doesn’t faze Parco. He said he was encouraged that the industry would look to Wall Street where the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) regulates the New York Stock Exchange, the NASDAQ and the American Stock Exchange.

“Cannabis cannot be so insular that we miss an opportunity to learn from other highly regulated industries how to make our own (industry) better,” he said.

A cannabis SRO could learn from the history of the Distilled Spirits Council, Seeb noted. That SRO formed in 1970 when three Prohibition-era alcohol-industry groups merged.

“Similar to cannabis, those founding SROs represented a substance that was legal and then made illegal through prohibition,” Seeb said. “When prohibition was overturned, these groups helped spirits navigate the new regulatory and taxation landscape.”

Ultimately, cannabis has been legalized at the state level because voters have approved of doing so in a regulated fashion, Kline said. The nascent cannabis SRO is a logical next step in nationalizing standards to help shore up that consumer and voter confidence.

“It’s an exciting time and a rare opportunity where an industry with such amazing growth potential is on the verge of professionalizing,” he said. “If we do this right, we can take the industry to a place where national standards and regulatory certainty allow businesses to do what they do best.”


TOPICS: Agriculture; Business/Economy; Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: cannabis; economy; legalization; marijuana; medicine; pot; potheads; wod
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To: NobleFree

My county, which has the highest mj grows; if not highest, way up there.

I and others who live in legal MJ areas know what’s going on and it is far from pretty.


61 posted on 06/17/2017 12:25:36 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Half the truth is often a great lie. B. Franklin)
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To: NobleFree

Where mj is legal, illegal drug grows increase. Including CO. Also, other drugs such as meth and heroin use increase too.


62 posted on 06/17/2017 12:27:17 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Half the truth is often a great lie. B. Franklin)
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To: gunsequalfreedom

It does by default till a new potus

Like the border


63 posted on 06/17/2017 12:49:10 PM PDT by wardaddy (Eff You I'm Millwall!)
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To: heterosupremacist

I’ve not lit up since 90

And not daily since 84

Nor do I drink or anything else except speedballs

(Joke)


64 posted on 06/17/2017 12:50:18 PM PDT by wardaddy (Eff You I'm Millwall!)
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To: little jeremiah

I have a sister in law that lives in Boulder, CO. She’s been there for 20+ years and has told us she has observed zero problems in here area since the legalization of cannabis.

She doesn’t use cannabis and is very a active with the various schools her kids are in. If there were negative consequences in her area I’m sure we’d have heard about it.


65 posted on 06/17/2017 12:56:43 PM PDT by TheStickman (And their fear tastes like sunshine puked up by unicorns.)
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To: Delta 21

66 posted on 06/17/2017 12:57:04 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You cannot invade the mainland US. There'd be a rifle behind every blade of grass.)
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To: little jeremiah
My county

Which county is that, if I may ask?

Don't worry - I live in Illinois, so won't be showing up on your doorstep. ;-D

67 posted on 06/17/2017 12:57:39 PM PDT by NobleFree ("law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual")
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To: NobleFree

I don’t support cartels, I don’t buy it like you. You’re the reason we have such a drug problem in this country. Look in the mirror and see the cartel supporter. If we got rid of illegal drug users like you the drug cartels would leave...no business.


68 posted on 06/17/2017 1:15:58 PM PDT by Mashood
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To: Fightin Whitey

Montana is a really lonely place to live isn’t it? ;^)


69 posted on 06/17/2017 1:36:04 PM PDT by TigersEye (Investigate the Awan brothers and Wasserman Schultz)
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To: Kalamata

That’s what I mean. But the folks that DO want to get high shouldn’t be financing drug lords.


70 posted on 06/17/2017 1:44:04 PM PDT by jdsteel (Give me freedom not more government.)
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To: TigersEye

71 posted on 06/17/2017 2:02:33 PM PDT by Fightin Whitey
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To: little jeremiah
Where mj is legal, illegal drug grows increase.

It's quite likely that any such increase is largely if not entirely an effective relocation of the supply for nonlegalizing states - relocating either from those states or from abroad. One of the downsides of being among the first states to legalize.

72 posted on 06/17/2017 2:05:03 PM PDT by NobleFree ("law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual")
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To: Fightin Whitey

LMAO

“If the women don’t find you handsome, they should at least find you handy.” - Red Green


73 posted on 06/17/2017 2:15:22 PM PDT by TigersEye (Investigate the Awan brothers and Wasserman Schultz)
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To: Mashood
I'm trying to take money out of their hands; why are YOU supporting drug cartels by maintaining their monopoly on the marijuana market?

I don’t support cartels, I don’t buy it

There are two ways to support marijuana cartels: buy their product, and maintain their monopoly by keeping marijuana illegal. You support cartels in that second way.

like you.

I don't buy nor use any drugs, legal or illegal.

If we got rid of illegal drug users

The idea of ending drug use is a utopian fantasy; only liberals base public policy on utopian fantasies.

74 posted on 06/17/2017 2:30:01 PM PDT by NobleFree ("law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual")
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To: TheStickman

Soros is proud of you.

You are his lapdog.


75 posted on 06/17/2017 4:11:58 PM PDT by MarvinStinson
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To: NobleFree

Potheads are always incompetent when it comes to science.

Just like global warming stooges.


76 posted on 06/17/2017 4:13:14 PM PDT by MarvinStinson
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To: MarvinStinson
The National Academy for Science's Institute of Medicine has noted dozens if not hundreds of scientific studies that show medical benefits of marijuana's components.

Potheads are always incompetent when it comes to science.

So your theory is that every author of every one of those studies is a pothead? And the reviewers for the journals in which those studies were published - I guess they were potheads too?

ROTFLMAO!

77 posted on 06/17/2017 4:30:47 PM PDT by NobleFree ("law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual")
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To: MarvinStinson

Ah, Marvin. Did history jump up & ruin your day again?

Remember, Marvin. Lashing out in anger or with insults don’t bring people over to your way of thinking.

Peace be with you Marvin.


78 posted on 06/17/2017 4:40:03 PM PDT by TheStickman (And their fear tastes like sunshine puked up by unicorns.)
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To: grania

just google corporate marijuana growers

It’s amazing


79 posted on 06/17/2017 4:52:29 PM PDT by wardaddy (Eff You I'm Millwall!)
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To: NobleFree

Yes of course, dopers refuse to think there is a single thing negative about mj or legalizing it.

Why would heroin junkies and meth freaks move to OR just because mj is legal?

It’s the ..... read carefully.... DRUG CULTURE. It becomes socially acceptable in general.

The idea that meth tweakers and heroin junkies MOVE here is stupid.


80 posted on 06/17/2017 5:06:41 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Half the truth is often a great lie. B. Franklin)
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