What happens in Vegas: Nevada puts pot on
the menu for fun-seekers
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[June 30, 2017]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - Nevada, the only state where
both gambling and prostitution are legal, is adding recreational
marijuana to its list of sanctioned indulgences for adults, with sales
kicking off at more than dozen shops beginning on Saturday.
As result of a legalization measure approved by Nevada voters in
November, the state will join four other U.S. states and the District of
Columbia in allowing recreational sales.
Authorized marijuana shops will be able to sell up to one ounce (28
grams) for recreational use by customers 21 years and older, said
Stephanie Klapstein, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Taxation.
Public consumption of marijuana is prohibited, and Nevada has enacted
new regulations against edible forms of pot that could appeal to
children, such as fruit-shaped candies infused with cannabis. Nevada is
also imposing a 10 percent excise tax on pot sales in addition to the
regular 4.6 percent state sales tax.
Nevada has yet to finalize the exact number of stores that regulators
will approve. Sixty applications were submitted from across the state,
according to Klapstein, whose department is overseeing the state's pot
market.
Only medical cannabis dispensaries, which became legal in the state in
2015, are eligible to apply for licenses for recreational sales.
Many of them are expected to open in Las Vegas, Nevada's largest city
and gambling magnet.
"Tens of millions of visitors per year from all over the U.S. and around
the world will see firsthand that regulating marijuana works," said
Mason Tvert, a spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, a group that
backed the November 2016 ballot measure.
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A participant practices rolling a joint at the Cannabis Carnivalus
4/20 event in Seattle, Washington, U.S. on April 20, 2014.
REUTERS/Jason Redmond/File Photo
Voters in three other states - California, Maine and Massachusetts -
have also approved marijuana legalization. In 2012, Washington and
Colorado were the first states to legalize recreational marijuana,
followed by Oregon and Alaska.
Marijuana remains illegal under federal law. Most U.S. states allow
it for medical purposes, but not for recreation.
A U.S. Department of Justice spokesman in an email declined to
comment on Nevada's state-sanctioned marijuana sales and added that
the department is reviewing its policies on marijuana enforcement.
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has long opposed easing
marijuana restrictions. At a speech in March, he described marijuana
as "only slightly less awful" than heroin and said the United States
needed to discourage drug use.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; editing by Frank
McGurty and Taylor Harris)
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