Reader: Who Cares If Cannabis Workers Consume on the Job?
A recent study found that many workers are high at work. But some readers argue that means nothing.
A recent study found that many workers are high at work. But some readers argue that means nothing.
Herbert Fuego visited the Coffee Joint, Denver’s first licensed pot lounge that allows consumption, but readers want more.
In the hip, liberal enclave that is Denver, it’s hard imagine that anyone could still be oblivious to the difference between hemp and marijuana.
Colorado’s senators wanted the feds to protect the state’s pot laws. But they didn’t get any respect.
The concept of a pot lounge might give you an image of a heady cafe in Amsterdam with pot brownies and bongs at the tables for your leisure, but that’s not how this works in Denver.
You all could figure out your THC tolerances and consume responsibly — but I realize that’s asking a lot of college kids.
The Colorado Department of Transportation is making good on its promise to involve the public’s opinion as it seeks solutions for drivers impaired by cannabis.
The study found most Colorado cannabis employees were happy with their jobs, but it also concluded that a sizeable portion of them were high at their jobs.
Granola Funk isn’t a jam band that opens for Phish or Umphrey’s McGee, but it might be in the same ballpark.
The model would come with more purchasing and consumption limits than its brewery counterparts, and the tasting areas would only be allowed next to recreational stores, not medical dispensaries.
Probably not at a dispensary — at least not that anyone would admit.
He’s been trying to protect state-compliant cannabis businesses since Jeff Sessions rescinded nine years’ worth of federal pot protections in January.
Sweet Leaf is in the middle of a city hearing that will determine the fate of its licenses.
The author argues that it’s time to get serious about the issue about where and when people can consume cannabis.
The hearing has since been extended for two more days into next week, and it could take longer than that as hearing officer Suzanne Fasing decides upon Sweet Leaf’s fate in Denver.
At 11 a.m. today, March 16, at the State Capitol, assorted legislators will be gathering for the introductory meeting of the Colorado Cannabis Caucus, a new group envisioned as a version of the federal Congressional Cannabis Caucus, except for state representatives. According to an executive of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), which played a role in organizing the gathering, the caucus will likely be the first of its kind in any state, but it won’t be the last.
One of my favorite YouTube dens of nostalgia and stupidity is anti-marijuana commercials and public service announcements from yesteryear.
Most of America wasn’t concerned with how the 2018 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would affect the legal cannabis industry, but it might create an economic boon.
Brighton City Council banned medical dispensaries and recreational shops before 2014.
The licenses have been suspended since law enforcement raided seven Sweet Leaf locations in Denver and one in Aurora on December 14, 2017.
Hercules is becoming increasingly popular around Denver, but as with Gorilla Glue, its qualities can vary from grow to grow, and it’s known to have a number of phenotypes.
Although the rules were adopted “immediately,” according to Colorado officials, cannabis businesses will have a little time to make the switch.