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						 Alaska 
						allows recreational marijuana as campaign spreads 
			
   
            
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		[February 24, 2015] By 
		Steve Quinn 
			
		JUNEAU, Alaska (Reuters) - Smoking, growing 
		and owning small amounts of marijuana became legal in Alaska on Tuesday, 
		as a growing decriminalization movement reached the United States' wild 
		northwest frontier. 
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			 The Republican-leaning state, which narrowly passed the measure in 
			November, followed Colorado and Washington states in allowing 
			recreational use, reflecting a rapidly shifting legal landscape for 
			the drug, which remains illegal under federal law. 
			 
			Anyone aged 21 or older can now possess up to an ounce of marijuana 
			in Alaska and can grow up to six marijuana plants, three of which 
			can be flowering. 
			 
			Smoking in public and buying and selling the drug remains illegal -- 
			though private exchanges are allowed if money is not involved. 
			 
			President Barack Obama's Justice Department has cautiously allowed 
			the experiments to proceed, saying it would look to prosecute a 
			narrower range of marijuana-related crimes, such as sales to 
			children. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			But that could change if a more conservative president is elected in 
			2016, when Alaska's first pot shops are likely to open. 
			 
			Supporters of the measure say it reflects a sense of personal 
			freedom that resonates with residents in Alaska, a state with a 
			libertarian streak. They also argue that legal sales will generate 
			income and jobs. 
			 
			"Alaska now has some of the most sensible marijuana laws in the 
			nation," said Dr. Tim Hinterberger, chair of the Campaign to 
			Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol in a statement. 
			 
			Alaskan officials, and the state's alcohol regulatory board, which 
			is set to meet on Tuesday, still have to fill a number of gaps in 
			the legislation -- for example a definition of the public places 
			where people can not light up. 
			
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			State regulators are still drafting rules covering the taxation and 
			sale of marijuana, which must be adopted by Nov. 24. Applications 
			for the first business licenses will not be accepted until February 
			2016. 
			 
			Police have released regular updates on how they will enforce the 
			law. 
			 
			"Ultimately the concern of the police department is the safety and 
			health of our public," Anchorage police spokeswoman Jennifer Castro 
			said. 
			 
			"We want to make sure that people are not operating their vehicle 
			impaired or under the influence of marijuana." 
			 
			In November, voters in Oregon approved a similar measure, though the 
			drug only becomes legal in July, and a ballot initiative legalizing 
			marijuana possession but not retail sales was overwhelmingly 
			approved in Washington D.C. 
			 
			(Editing by Curtis Skinner and Andrew Heavens) 
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
			  
			
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