In Case You Missed It
Below for our readers who were out clipping or packaging during today’s LCB meeting, here is the LCB statement:
Board Approves Filing of Proposed Rules to Implement Initiative 502
Recreational marijuana market to be tightly regulated to prevent diversion, impact to minors
OLYMPIA – The Washington State Liquor Control Board (Board) today approved the filing of proposed supplemental rules that, if ultimately enacted, will help govern Washington State’s system of producing, processing and retailing recreational marijuana. The Board earlier this summer filed proposed rules on July 3, 2013. The Board chose to revise and re-file its rules after receiving public input at five public hearings across Washington.
“These rules fulfill the public expectation of creating a tightly-regulated and controlled system while providing reasonable access to participation in the market, said Board Chair Sharon Foster. “Importantly, we believe these rules meet the eight federal government enforcement priorities within Thursday’s guidance memo from the Department of Justice.”
Key Public Safety Elements
Public safety is the top priority of the Washington State Liquor Control Board.
· All grows must meet strictly controlled on-site security requirements;
· Strict surveillance and transportation requirements;
· Robust traceability software system that will track inventory from start to sale;
· Criminal background checks on all license applicants;
· Tough penalty guidelines for public safety violations including loss of license;
· Restricting certain advertising that may be targeted at children.
Key Consumer Safety Elements
The proposed rules provide a heightened level of consumer safety that has not existed previously.
· Packaging and label requirements including dosage and warnings;
· Child-resistant packaging for marijuana in solid and liquid forms;
· Only lab tested and approved products will be available;
· Defined serving sizes and package limits on marijuana in solid form;
· Store signage requirements to educate customers.
Revisions to the Rules
Below are selected highlights found in the revised rules.
Production Limits
· Limits the total amount of marijuana to be produced at 40 metric tons
· Sets the maximum amount of space for marijuana production at two million square feet
Production Tiers
· Creates three production tiers based on square footage
o Tier 1 – less than 2000 square feet
o Tier 2 – 2000 to 10,000 square feet
o Tier 3 – 10,000 to 30,000 square feet
Market Control Limits
· Limited any entity and/or principals within any entity to three producer or processor licenses
· Limited any principal and or entity to no more than three retail licenses with no multiple location licensee allowed more than 33 percent of the allowed licenses in any county or city
On-Site Product Limits
· Established the maximum amount of marijuana allowed on a producer licensee’s premises at any time based on the type of grow operation (indoor, outdoor, greenhouse)
1,000 Foot Buffer Measurement
· Changed the way the 1,000 foot buffer is measured from to “along the most direct route over or across established public walks, streets, or other public passageway between the proposed building/business locations to the perimeter of the grounds of the entities listed”
Definitions
· Added a definition for “plant canopy” to clarify what area is considered in the square footage calculation for marijuana producers
· Revised the definition of “Public Park” to include parks owned or managed by a metropolitan park district. Clarified that trails are not included in the definition of “Public Park ”
· Revised the definition of “recreation center or facility.” Added the language “owned and/or managed by a charitable non-profit organization, city, county, state, or federal government”
Advertising
· Added language requiring all advertising and labels of useable marijuana and marijuana infused products may not contain any statement or illustration that is false or misleading.
Retail Stores
In addition to the revisions to the rules, the Board today also identified the number and allocation of retail stores. Per Initiative 502, the WSLCB applied a method that allocates retail store locations using Office of Financial Management (OFM) population with a cap on the number of retail stores per county.
Using OFM population data as well as adult consumption data supplied by the state’s marijuana consultant – BOTEC Analysis Corporation — the Board allocated a maximum of 334 outlets statewide. The most populous cities within the county are allocated a proportionate number of stores and at-large stores available to serve other areas of the county.
Timeline
December 6, 2012 Effective date of new law
September 4, 2013 File Supplemental CR 102 with revised proposed rules
October 9, 2013 Public hearing(s) on proposed rules (time and location TBD)
October 16, 2013 Board adopts or rejects proposed rules (CR 103)
November 16, 2013 Rules become effective
November 18, 2013 Begin accepting applications for all three licenses (30-day window)
December 1, 2013 Deadline for rules to be complete (as mandated by law)
December 18, 2013 30-day window closes for producer, processor and retailer license applications
Public Hearings
One or more public hearings on the proposed rules will be scheduled soon. The WSLCB will post the dates and locations on its website at www.liq.wa.gov
What Isn’t Here?
During the after-meeting comments by LCB members, two interesting points were raised. First, Chair Foster reminded us that this is a “once in a lifetime, first time…only place on the planet…” that a state is implementing rules for recreational use. (let’s remember Colorado, which is actually ahead of us…but anyway), and Board member Marr’s most salient point, which had nothing, or little to do with the new set of rules. Marr has been talking about the money issue lately. Not the amount, but how to handle it. As in, if a financial institution has any federal deposit insurance, federal charter, or bundles loans for a federally insured or chartered “bundler”, it is probable that the transaction is “illegal” under federal law. With years of real business experience, Marr raises a key point. Where do licensees take their money, cash or otherwise? Where does Department of Revenue take the revenue proceeds? Where does the State Treasurer take the deposits? Ah, the next hurdle.
Your support matters.
Public service journalism is important today as ever. If you get something from our coverage, please consider making a donation to support our work. Thanks for reading our stuff.