aug/sep 2012
DESCRIPTION
Vol 3 Issue 4TRANSCRIPT
Vol. 3 Issue 4
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IInn TThhiiss IIssssuueePPaaggee 22 CCaannnnaabbiiss CCoonnnneeccttiioonn
Can Medical Marijuana Be Used To Treat Bipolar Disorder?
Access Medical Cannabis Likely To Reduce Use Of Opiates And Other Addictive Drugs
DC Circuit Court To Review Marijuana CSA Classification
Obama's War On Medical Marijuana Just Got Even Uglier
DEA's Marijuana Plant Seizures Down 35 Percent From The Year Before
Washington's I-502 Getting Support
Colorado's Polling At 61 Percent For Amendment 64
National News Nugs - News From Around The Country
Montana Marijuana Initiative Fails
Tax Court Decision Could Haunt Medical Marijuana Distributors Nationwide
OOrreeggoonn NNeewwss
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A Listing of Oregon Clinics, Organizations, and Cannabis Friendly Businesses
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Oregon To Vote On Cannabis And Hemp Legalization
Jim Klahr, Longtime MMJ Activist Is Democrat Nominee For District 1 Seat
State Of Jefferson: Bringing Irie To Southern Oregon
Oregon Initiative Supporter Sues Secretary of State Over Invalidation of Signatures
Feds Strong-arm 3 States On Cannabis Food Stamp Deduction
Oregon's Top Federal Prosecutor Takes Aim At Marijuana Dispensaries
Oregon News Nugs - News From Around The Beaver State
I-Five O - Oregon Marijuana Police Log
10th Emerald Empire Hemp Fest Is A Hit
CClliinniiccss && IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn
Welcome To Paradise: Q & A Cultivation Tips
From Experts at Paradise Supply
Low Stress Is The Secret To High Yields
The Phases Of The Moon For Growing Marijuana
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RReecciippeess
BBQ Ribs With Marijuana Sauce
Cheech and Chong "Nice Dreams" Ice Cream
Nutty Avacado Salad
Bacon Caramels
All On
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Hemp And Economic Recovery
Many Uses Of Hemp
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On July 13th, the Oregon Secretary of State confirmed that the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act 2012 had turned in enough signatures to qualify for the 2012 General Election ballot. It was assigned a measure number...Measure 80! The measure (that's right...it's M 80!) seeks to tax and regulate cannabis for adults over the age of 21, and would allow personal marijuana use without a license and hemp cultivation without restrictions. It would create a commission to regulate the sale of commercial marijuana. The act would also set aside two percent of profits from cannabis sales to promote industrial hemp, bio-diesel, fiber, protein and oil.
On Friday, July 6th, friends and ‘family’ of the 2012 effort for Measure 80, also called the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act 2012 (or OCTA), turned out at the capital in Salem, to witness the final turn in of Petition signatures for what was then called Initiative 9. Organizers gathered from around the state bringing in some 31,000 signatures during the day and ended up turning in a total of 167,845 for the campaign by the 5PM, the deadline. It needed 87,213 signatures by valid
registered Oregon voters' to qualify, and eclipsed that figure by a mere 1,674, garnering 88,887 valid signatures, according to the Secretary of State.
Proponents estimate the act will raise an estimated $140 million a year by taxing commercial cannabis sales to adults 21 years of age and older, and save an estimated $61.5 million on law enforcement, corrections and judicial costs. Groups in support of passing the measure include the Pacific Green Party, Oregon NORML, and United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), Local 555.
Representatives of the UFCW spoke to the belief that regulating the growth and sale of cannabis would help kick start an agricultural hemp industry in Oregon. "From retail to manufacturing to health care, we recognize that a vibrant hemp and cannabis industry in Oregon will create thousands of family-wage, sustainable jobs across the entire state," said union President Dan Clay in a statement. The Union Food and Commercial Workers Union has 19,000 members in Oregon and southwest Washington.
Speakers at the turn-in rally echoed the same sentiments: Madeline Martinez, of Oregon NORML fame, was there speaking as a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP); Jeff Anderson of UFCW Local 555 spoke for the Union; as well as chief petitioner and M80 originator D. Paul Stanford.
“With this we hope to end the prohibition of cannabis hemp, the oldest and most resourceful crop sown, and to promote justice, freedom, and peace with political action and education.” commented Mr. Stanford.
“This versatile plant, cannabis, can be put to use as fuel, fiber, medicine, delicious and nutritious food and thousands of other products” Mr. Stanford continued. “It will resolve many needs and put Oregon on a path to lead the way toward economic and environmental
sustainability. Legalizing hemp and cannabis will create tens of thousands of new jobs, revitalize our farming communities, boost tourism, and create millions of dollars in revenue for the state.”
Ms. Martinez, a former Law Enforcement officer, spoke from LEAPs perspective: “It’s time to look at the bigger picture, it’s more than medical” and pointed out “we can clear the forests of ‘cartel’ gardens”. She concluded with a statement in Spanish to the Latino community.
The Measure 80 website (www.octa2012.org) explains the many applications of cannabis, from biofuel to consumer health products, and says that regulating its growth will not only create jobs, it will also help ensure that marijuana is only sold to adults for approved uses. Proponents say the tax would generate more than $140 million a year.
To Mr. Anderson and UFCW Local 555, who support the measure, “It’s a jobs issue”. By way of example, he relayed a story about being aware of lay-offs at bio-fuel plant because they couldn’t get enough cost-effective materiel – using corn, in this case,
Longtime medical marijuana activist, Jim Klahr became the Democratic nominee for Oregon's First District House seat located along the South Coast, and hopes to defeat Republican Wayne Kreiger in November. Kreiger currently occupies the seat and is openly hostile towards the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program (OMMP).
Most recently known for being a Chief Petitioner for Measure 74 last fall, Klahr has been involved in the movement, and politics, for many years. Growing up in Caldwell, Idaho, Klahr was from a family that was heavily involved in politics. He even ran for City Council himself in 1970 at 18 or 19 years of age, losing on a “Give the young people something to do and you won't have them out on the ditch bank drinking beer,” platform. He has learned a lot in the years since.
Klahr eventually moved to Smith River CA. To be near his ailing parents. While in California, Klahr became involved with the Prop 215 movement, the original California legalization initiative. Oregon's burgeoning medical marijuana movement spurred Klahr to return. “I had heard about Oregon measure 67, but it didn't even have a measure number yet," he said.
Cont. on Page 7
(L to R) Paul Stanford of OCTA (M-80), Madeline Martinez of LEAP, and Jeff Anderson of UFCW Local 555 speaking at the capital July 13th.
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Oregon To Vote On Cannabis And Hemp LegalizationBy Perry StriplingMercy Center
Jim Khlar, Longtime MMJ Activist, Is Democrat Nominee For District 1 Seat on Coast
By Keith MansurOregon Cannabis Connection
Cont. on Page 6
Oregon District 1 canidate Jim Khlar, speaking with constituents at the Curry County Centennial Parade
Measure 80 - Blowing Up Prohibition
By Keith Mansur ©2012
I will admit, I can be a hard man to please. I have a definite opinion on most subjects, and a critical, yet hopefully objective, view of a wide array of topics. My views of music, as well, are not immune to these forays of analysis. Fortunately, I have found a band that more than survives the scrutiny, they actually give me inspiration. They are State Of Jefferson.
Since starting my paper over 2 years ago, I have been very attune to the music scene in the Southern Oregon region. There are many bands in the region, but State Of Jefferson brings a certain dignity and diversity to the music scene here than most other bands. Their sound is diverse, their cause is just, and their attitude is great. I have grown fond of the band, its members, and what they are doing in Southern Oregon.
In 2001, State of Jefferson was created by Joe Ginet, Ryan Redding, and their friend Duke.. Friends since seventh or eighth grade, Joe and Ryan both lived, and still
do, in Williams, Oregon, which is known for many free thinking transplants from the 60's and 70's (some might say hippies). Joe was playing Country music and Ryan was playing Blues. They eventually melded their creative talents
together to form State Of Jefferson.
Their reggae/country/blues sound developed over time, but was a natural evolution for the band. Ryan Redding, the band's Bassist and vocalist, explained, “I started in a blues band, and he (Joe) started in a country band, and then we had a blues band together...from there we basically did Ska music.” Eventually they drifted to roots style reggae, and have since found their own unique sound, blending reggae, country, blues, folk, R&B, and more into a finger tapping, foot thumping sound.
Their band's name, State Of Jefferson, is purposefully derived from the century old movement in northern California and southern Oregon to obtain autonomy for the region, and provide proper representation of the area's citizens. The citizens represented a maverick lifestyle, which depended of local resources and labor. More than once, the region has attempted to form a new state from a collection of border counties in California and Oregon, and each time “Jefferson” was chosen as the state name.
Joe Ginet, the lead guitarist and vocalist, explained, “It represents this area, and it also has a really cool cowboy history. The history definitely represent mountain living people that aren't necessarily wanting to conform to all the rules that are being sanctioned [by society].” Explaining further, Joe said, “If you read the history of the original State Of Jefferson movement, it is kind of a history of people standing up for their rights...”
One of the first additions to the band was Mikey Stevens, a long haired, long bearded, local hippie that plays the horn and guitar. The trumpet added a delightful dimension that has echoed through their music ever since. When
asked what eventually drew the band to reggae, he jokingly remarked, “What these guys wont tell you about the reggae music is that we play it because the hippie girls get naked.” Eric said he is their “spiritual guru and lizard keeper”.
Eric Vestnys joined State Of Jefferson in about 2004, providing his own keyboard style to the band. Also from the Williams/Applegate area, Eric quickly became an integral part of the band. With a diverse music background, Eric had a lot to
offer, including his knack for event planning.
One of the defining attributes of State Of Jefferson is the substantial amount of work they do to bring diverse music to the Grants Pass and Southern Oregon area. As early as their second year they started a festival in Riverside Park in Grants Pass, Oregon. Traveling around the West coast festival scene years ago, they saw the potential for a music festival in Southern Oregon.
“Southern Oregon at that time had nothing of that kind [of festival] going on,
everything was pretty generically sponsored by the local banks...not progressive, kind of square, a sort of “back to the fifties” and that kind of shit.” Joe added, “We grew up out here with reggae shows at the Grange and all the great music in the Applegate and Williams was
kind of always there, so we're just trying to bring that into town.”
Now in its tenth year, the State Of Jefferson Music Festival has become a significant music event in the region, providing quality music and support for local charities, most recently the local food bank. Admission every year is free with a few cans of food!
After Eric joined the band, they started focusing even more on bringing a wider variety of music to festivals in the region. He explained, “The diversity we embrace is reflected in our music and also in the type of music that we host and the type of bands that we bring to our events.”
The Oregon Marijuana Policy Initiative (OMPI) filed suit on July 11th in Oregon Circuit Court against Oregon Secretary of State Kate Brown in response to her office’s disqualification of tens of thousands of valid signatures on petitions for Initiative Petition 24. IP-24 is a constitutional amendment to end marijuana prohibition for adults.
The suit was filed by attorney Ross Day on behalf of Wolfe and OMPI in Marion County Circuit Court.
The OMPI lawsuit challenges a range of specific methods and reasons used by Brown’s office to disqualify individual voter signatures and entire sheets of up to 10 voter signatures each in a sampling process conducted in June, before the final deadline for signatures on petitions last week. That sampling process invalidated nearly 48% of the 122,000 signatures submitted by May 25 for IP-24, resulting in a historically low validity rate and damaging the initiative’s chance to make the ballot. Other measures submitted at the same time are suffering similarly low validation rates.
“Under the policies of Kate Brown, the Oregon Elections Division works hard to remove every possible signature from initiative petitions and for reasons that make no sense,” said Wolfe. ”Instead, they should be working to include as many
signatures as possible, thus preserving citizen access to the ballot through the initiative system, as demanded by the Oregon Constitution.”
The OMPI lawsuit seeks to reopen the state’s validation work on IP-24 so that the measure can legitimately qualify for the November ballot based on a fair count of valid signatures
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State of Jefferson: Bringing Irie To Southern Oregon
Oregon Initiative Supporter Sues Secretary Of State Over Mass Invalidations Of Signatures
Cont. on Page 6
By Keith MansurOregon Cannabis Connection
State of Jefferson, playing at the first Jefferson State Hemp Expo, collaborators joining them.
Joe Ginet playing 2012 Applejam in Provolt, near Williams, OR
Bob Wolfe, speaking to the Media in Salem during the 2011 session..
By Keith MansurOregon Cannabis Connection
Cont. on Page 9
Ryan Redding, playing at the 2010 Hempstalk in Portland
Eric Vestnys, Keyboards, playing at the Provolt Grange, OR
Mikey Stevens, playing his trumpet at the 2012 Applejam
Oregon, New Mexico and Maine will no longer allow certain applicants for food stamps to deduct medical marijuana expenses from their incomes after federal officials threatened to slap the three states with penalties.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture issued a nationwide memo to regional directors of the food stamp program after newspaper The Oregonian contacted the agency about the deductions on July 13th. The newspaper surveyed the 17 medical marijuana states and found that Oregon, New Mexico and Maine allowed deductions for the cost of medicinal cannabis.
In deciding whether a family is poor enough to receive food stamps, the three states had allowed applicants to deduct medical expenses from their incomes. Since all three states have legalized the medicinal use of marijuana, they had counted the cost associated with buying medical cannabis as a qualifying medical expenses, reports Noelle Crombie.
Only elderly or permanently disabled Oregonians who qualify for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) could claim the medical marijuana deductions.
The change is only expected to affect a tiny percentage of food stamp recipients, but it is seen as a symbolic blow for medical marijuana advocates.
"It's a sad day when we have to see this kind of retreat based on what appears to be federal pressure and federal intimidation," said Kris Hermes of
Americans for Safe Access (ASA), a medical marijuana advocacy group. "It makes one wonder when the federal government is going to come around and realize this is indeed a public health issue and address the problem accordingly. It's a problem only in the sense that the federal government is creating the problem."
The Oregon Department of Human Services last Tuesday received the memo from the USDA ordering it to discontinue the medical marijuana deduction. The memo states that under federal law, marijuana "has no currently accepted medical use and cannot be prescribed for medicinal purposes."
"States that currently allow for the deduction of medical marijuana must cease this practice immediately and make any necessary corrections to their state policy manuals and instructions," sternly instructed Lizbeth Silbermann, director of the USDA's Food and Nutrition Service's
program development division.
"States that are not in compliance may face penalties for any over issuance of SNAP benefits," she scolded.
Gene Evans, spokesman for the Oregon Department of Human Services, said his agency forwarded the memo
to the Oregon Justice Department for review. The department advised his agency to immediately drop the practice of allowing the deductions.
The department of Human Services on Thursday told agency staff that Oregon will stop allowing medical marijuana deductions on food stamp applications. New Mexico and Maine officials also told The Oregonian on Thursday that they, too, have been scolded by federal authorities and will no longer allow the marijuana deductions.
The director of the Oregon Department of Human Services admitted in a Thursday email to The Oregonian that out-of-pocket medical expenses are a challenge for low-income elderly and disabled food stamp recipients.
As of April 2012, there were 55,807 patients registered under the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act. Indeed, since the inception of the OMMA in 1998, the initiative has proven to be very popular.
While popular with Oregonians, perhaps the OMMA is a little too popular for prosecutors. According to the new U.S. Attorney for Oregon Amanda Marshall, many dispensaries operating within Oregon have been illicitly shipping and selling marijuana, a practice she intends to curb through aggressive enforcement. The pressure is mounting on dispensary operators throughout Oregon, and even those simply seeking to provide medical cannabis to cancer victims and other deserving patients may not be safe from drug distribution charges.
U.S. Attorney's Office Claims Oregon-Grown Marijuana Headed for Sale Out Of State Marijuana growers working within the confines of the OMMA are shielded from prosecution under state law. However, federal law still prohibits the possession and distribution of marijuana in any amount for any purpose, even for those whose doctors have recommended marijuana to provide relief from debilitating diseases.
Even though all medical marijuana dispensaries operate outside of federal law, former U.S. Attorneys in the state have not focused intensively on bringing down small scale grow operations that stay safely within the OMMA and where the exchange of money is very small and focused solely on the cost of production and not profit. As Amanda Marshall
settles into her new role (she took office last October), that might be changing.
"Pounds and pounds and pounds of marijuana are being shipped out of Oregon, not to sick people needing cards but to drug dealers who are selling it, who are laundering money, who are evading taxes," said Ms. Marshall in a recent interview with the Associated Press. Her office estimates that Oregon hosts at least 100 marijuana dispensaries, most of them in the Portland area.
A flurry of media attention and criticism accompanied the announcement of Ms.
Marshall's apparent increasingly hard-line stance on Oregon marijuana grow operations. In response, she issued a statement, saying in part that her office has never applied its resources to prosecute "small scale users of marijuana, who are clearly and unambiguously compliant with Oregon law." Yet, in nearly the same breath, her statement noted that "unless and until" the U.S. Congress changes its stance on marijuana, she would uphold federal laws banning even small amounts of the drug, and that her office is considering civil and criminal action against both dispensaries that operate at a profit and the landlords who harbor them.
Mixed message? Some Oregonians wouldn't even call it that, and see it more as an all-out campaign against marijuana dispensaries. If you are involved in a marijuana grow operation, even a slight deviation from OMMA standards could bring federal scrutiny and serious criminal liability; the freedom of growers across the state may be at stake. If you are a cultivator of cannabis, it is important to speak to an experienced marijuana lawyer as soon as you become aware of pending charges.
Article provided by The Law Office of Steven J.
Sherlag
Visit us at www.sherlaglaw.com
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Feds Strong-Arm 3 States On Cannabis Food Stamp Deduction
By Steve ElliottToke Of The Town
Oregon's Top Federal Prosecutor Takes Aim at Marijuana DispensariesBy Steven J. SherlagAttorney at Law
Cont. on Page 7
US Attorney for Oregon, Amanda Marshall. Not Dwight Holton, but not much better.
They also saw division and competition they felt was unneeded at other festivals, often between cannabis activists or businesses vying for notoriety. They envisioned a local festival that would hopefully “bridge the gap” between adversaries, avoiding the politics. Ryan explained they wanted to, “bring the communities together...try to get a like minded group of people down here together.”
They eventually organized the Jefferson State Music Festival and Hemp Expo (See the program on pages 11 – 14), which has brought 30 to 45 bands each year to the region. In its third year, the festival now attracts 5,000 people, and nearly 100 vendors near the end of August each year. This year it will be August 24, 25, and 26 in Cave Junction, Oregon. It has become the regions premiere music festival every year.
In addition to the festivals, the band also plays with a wide variety of musicians from the region. They have a collaborative work ethic, which shows in their music. A wide variety of musicians regularly perform with them, and participate on their recordings.
Their first album was “Live In Hawaii”, done in 2006. A few years passed and they released “State Of Jefferson Family Sampler” in 2011, which features a variety of artists in a collaborative effort. With
their own recording studio, they can record many takes with other artists they meet at music events, and use the best ones on the record.
Eric explained, “We get friends that we meet to record with us. It's mainly spearheaded by Joe and Ryan, collecting these recordings and using their original music, then bringing it to these artists and have them
compile their ideas [together] and come out with a CD featuring 15 to 20 different artists.”
The most recent album, “Hooserdrumi”, is a great album. They have a wonderful mix of styles, with a reggae flavor throughout. “America” and “The Water Song” are two of my favorites. “Country Me” has a great folk sound and “Two Is Betta” is a rousing tribute to “the reefer”. It is a collaboration, as well, featuring Scottie “Onedrop” Valpey on drums, and folk musicians Joe Craven and James Green.
I tried to figure out the albums title using Google© and other internet references, to no avail. As it turns out, the albums title refers to their propensity to go through drummers. “ We're State Of Jefferson, we play at five o'clock, all you guys just got done, who's your drummy? Can we use him?,” Ryan said. “We went to gigs without a drummer for a long time.”
Luckily, they have found a
solid drummer in Michael St. John. Joining the group a few years ago, he has been a solid presence for the band. With musical knowledge and talent beyond the drums, Michael has been a welcome addition, and has been their longest tenured drummer.
Jim Matheson, a founding member of the Herbivores, is now jamming with the band. He brings a serious reggae foundation to an already diverse band. Jim, who moved here from the Seattle region, has been in the area for a while, and enjoys the people, climate, and herb from the best growing zone in the Northwest!
State Of Jefferson's next album is another “Family Sampler” record, which they enjoy doing. Eric explained, “That's really something that we feel encompasses a lot of what we do...we're always featuring different artists.” It is a compilation of songs they have done with many other artists. They are just finishing the final master and preparing to release it later this year. It will feature Michelle Belamy, Jared Masters from the Illies, Maacho, Vince Herman of Leftover Salmon, to name a few.
You can find more information about State Of Jefferson at www.stateofjefferson.org and the Jefferson State Hemp Expo at www.jeffersonstatehempexpo.com. Their album, Hooserdrumi, can be found on Amazon, CD Baby, and iTunes . They also do recording and staging for events, and you can reach their company, Southern Oregon Backline by visiting www.southernoregonbackline.com .
SOJ is also looking for interns to help with marketing, social networking, web design, and more. Interested people should email the band through either website.
Klahr has served on the Advisory Committee on Medical Marijuana (ACMM) from its inception, and also helped Oregon Green Free get off the ground many years ago. He helped them organize a plan of action, and also, to help obtain federal 501c3 non-profit status, which is a difficult process, especially for any medical marijuana organization.
Klahr's positions extend beyond medical marijuana and Hemp. He is concerned about the region where he lives, and wants to do what he can to help. He considers himself a progressive. Some of his views are to reduce prison populations, mainly through the ending of drug prohibition and the incarceration of non-violent drug offenders and start treating them for their addictions instead, He believes in health care reform, and tort reform, and also opposes coastal dredging, a cruise ship port, or any other ecologically destructive projects.
Krieger has a very conservative voting record in Salem, and has been a vocal opponent to the current OMMP program. A former law enforcement officer, he has no affinity for medical marijuana. As for Klahr's views on Krieger, he said, “Krieger is an almost 20 year incumbent now, he's a 27 year law enforcement veteran, and he's a Republican. Basically he's got a horrible voting record, and he got a score of “Zero” from the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union).”
To support Jim Klahr for the Oregon Assembly or for more information, visit www.jimklahr4rep.com.
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State of Jefferson
Klahr, standing in a old Redwood snag, off the Winchuck river.
Cont. From Pg. 4
Jim Klahr For District 1
Cont. from Pg 3.
State of Jefferson at the 2012 Applejam. (L to R) Eric Vestnys, Mikey Stevens, Jim Matheson, Joe Ginet, and Ryan Redding, ( Drummy Michael St. John is behind Joe)
Michael St. John on drums (Applejam as well)
Jim Matheson, having serious fun at Applejam
(don't let the look fool you)
got to be too expensive. “So, these jobs alone could have been saved by having a viable alternative like hemp, which OCTA would allow in Oregon.” He also pointed out it would actually take it off the streets – make it less available - for minors.
Here is the Measure 80 (OCTA) ballot title, question and summary that will appear on our state's ballots, for a vote in Oregon on November 6, 2012:
Allows personal marijuana, hemp cultivation/use without license; commission to regulate commercial marijuana cultivation/sale
Result of a "Yes" Vote: "Yes" vote allows commercial marijuana (cannabis) cultivation/sale to adults through state-licensed stores; allows unlicensed adult personal cultivation/use; prohibits restrictions on hemp (defined).
Result of a "No" Vote: "No" vote retains existing civil and criminal laws prohibiting cultivation, possession and delivery of marijuana; retains current statutes that permit regulated medical use of marijuana.
Summary: Currently, marijuana cultivation, possession and delivery are prohibited; regulated medical marijuana use is permitted. Measure replaces state, local marijuana laws except medical marijuana and driving under the influence laws; distinguishes "hemp" from "marijuana"; prohibits regulation of hemp. Creates commission to license marijuana cultivation by qualified persons and to purchase entire crop. Commission sells marijuana at cost to pharmacies, medical research facilities, and to qualified adults for profit through state-licensed stores. Ninety percent of net goes to state general fund, remainder to drug education, treatment, hemp promotion. Bans sales to, possession by minors. Bans public consumption except where signs permit, minors barred. Commission regulates use, sets prices, other duties; Attorney General to defend against federal challenges/prosecutions. Provides penalties. Effective January 1, 2013; other provisions.
According to Mr. Stanford, the petition drive has been largely financed by profits from clinics he owns that help people qualify for medical marijuana cards in Oregon and several other states. He reports he has spent about $300,000 so far and expects significant help from national reform interests, hopefully to the tune of a couple of
million that will be needed. You see, it is not just for the campaign, but also things like the federal challenge expected to follow it’s hopefully successfulNovember vote-in.
“We anticipate being held up like Death With Dignity”, commented Mr. Stanford on the issue, “so we wrote in the preamble that these are findings by The People based on legal, historical and scientific facts. Also, our specific text dealing with is taken from the International Single Convention treaty and there is a clause in the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) – citation 21.USC.903, to be exact – that we believe will make a difference.”
Measure 80 will also set aside two percent of the profits from the sale of cannabis in adult-only stores for two new state committees that will promote Oregon industrial hemp bio-diesel, fiber and food. It will also legalize the sale, possession and personal private cultivation of marijuana. People who want to cultivate and sell marijuana, or process commercial psychoactive cannabis, would be required to obtain a license from the state. Adults could grow their own marijuana and the sale of all cannabis strains' seeds and starter plants would be legalized with no license, fee nor registration. The profits from the sale of cannabis to adults will add hundreds of millions of dollars into the state general fund, as well as drug treatment and education.
OCTA began as a bill to regulate marijuana and restore hemp in 1988, which was initially called the Oregon Cannabis Control Act. Today, the Act has been through over 200 revisions, with input included from over a hundred people. As the name changed to the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act in the early 1990s, OCTA was circulated extensively three times, but filed more. It was first filed in 1990 for the 1992 election cycle as the Oregon Cannabis Control Act, but never went into circulation for signatures. In 1993, we began the first signature drive and gathered about 60,000 signatures, but not enough for qualification. Each of those three 1990s campaigns were primarily volunteer, but had a small paid drive funded by wife and my student loans and my disabled veteran's benefits.
OCTA circulated in the 2008 to gather sponsorship signatures for the 2010 election cycle Late in 2008, they decided to withdraw the 2010 version of OCTA that was filed in 2008, and it was completely withdrawn early in 2009. In 2009, they revised the 2010 version of OCTA and filed it again. People in the Measure 74 campaign filed challenges to OCTA's ballot title in late 2009, and subsequently, OCTA 2010 was not approved for circulation until March 2010.
Given numerous reasons, but mostly due to the fact that there was only 3 months left to qualify, and it was clear that M-74 was going
to qualify, OCTA organizers decided that the time was not right to launch a paid petition drive and OCTA 2010 never did. They decided to wait on OCTA for the 2012 election cycle.
“The truth is that marijuana is a bellwether issue for the future of freedom” explains Mr. Stanford. “Unless we legalize hemp and cannabis and firmly expand natural individual rights to include a right to privacy and to include freedom of thought, freedom of consciousness, and the freedom to get high, in the not-to-distant future, the exponential
expansion of genomic bio-tech, nanotechnology and artificial intelligence will enslave us and the future of humanity is grim. Hemp fuel, fiber, food and medicine can realign our economic system and make this less likely; OCTA was written to be upheld in federal court and make that happen.”
“It is about the plant that makes more fuel, fiber, food and medicine than any other. It is about stopping and reversing the continued centralization of economic and political
control inherent in cannabis prohibition. It is about restoring and celebrating the symbiotic relationship between humanity and cannabis. It is about stopping the destruction of lives and families by the wrongful and destructive penalties for cannabis upon the altar of a squeaky clean America,” Stanford said.
For more info, contact the Measure 80 (OCTA) Campaign Headquarters by writing - 2712 NE Sandy Blvd Portland, Oregon 97232, stopping by - Office Hours: Mon. - Fri. 9am-6pm; calling the Campaign Telephone number: 503-473-8790, or visiting -- http://octa2012.org/http://octa2012.org/
"While we recognize that Oregon voters have declared marijuana to be medicine, this new guidance from the federal government sets clear direction on allowable medical expenses under federal law," Erinn Kelley-Siel wrote.
She said state officials will stop approval of any new medical marijuana deductions on food stamp applications; correct the state policy manual to reflect the change; and provide new instructions for staff and food stamp recipients about medical marijuana deductions (as in, there won't be any more of them).
In Oregon, about 33,000 food stamp recipients are elderly and qualified for Social Security, thus they were eligible for the marijuana food stamp deduction. That represents only about eight percent of the total food stamp caseload.
Reprinted by permission from www.tokeofthetown.com. © 2012 The Village Voice Media
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Cont. From Pg. 5
Cont. From Pg. 3
When the Oregon legislature raised the annual fee for Oregon Medical Marijuana Program (OMMP) cards from $100 to $200, it did so in a sneaky way and with hopes that public health budget shortfalls would be solved. Last year, Jennifer Alexander reported on comments from Bob Wolfe of Oregon Marijuana Policy Initiative on the fee increases, when he said, “Medical marijuana patients are ill, disabled, and often poor. This stealthy budget item is a de facto tax on vulnerable people. I’d like to know which scurrilous legislator or bureaucrat is responsible for this disgusting maneuver.”
Well, based on budget numbers released by Oregon Health Authority , the state's budget for the 2011-13 biennium anticipates a total of $12 million in revenue from the program, with $5.3 million supporting the marijuana program, and $6.7 million supporting other public health programs.
According to a report published by The Marijuana Policy Project last fall tracking the financial details of medical marijuana programs in all states that have them, Oregon's program has brought in as much as $3.3 million per biennium since the program was adopted. Since fees increased last fall, the revenue from the program has more than doubled. Between October 2011 and June of this year, the state has made more than $7.5 million from medical marijuana card fees. The majority of that money will go to programs other than the OMMP.
The Oregon Secretary of State has dismissed two fines of $75 against Medford's current and former police chiefs which we reported on in the Oregon Cannabis Connection last year. Tim George and
Randy Schoen were both fined for violating state election laws by allegedly recommending in the Mail Tribune voters not support Measure 74, Oregon's failed Medical Marijuana measure in 2010. An administrative law judge ruled that the Elections Division failed to meet its burden of proof of election law violations.
Both were pleased with the result. "The bottom line is the administrative law judge did not feel we violated election law," George said to the Medford Mail Tribune.
Partly in response to a complaint filed with the Secretary of State by Laird Funk, former Advisory Committee on Medical Marijuana member and Oregon cannabis activist, they were notified in August 2011 they had gone too far. In a Medford Mail Tribune article a month before the election in 2010, Schoen was quoted as saying, "I'm concerned about how it could effect neighborhoods," and "this measure doesn't go far enough to control who can run a dispensary. A convicted felon can run a dispensary." George was also quoted in the article, saying the measure was "rife with problems and the potential for abuse."
Funk filed complaints against Medford police Deputy Chief Tim Doney and Oregon State Police Sgt. Erik Fisher. Doney and Fisher each received warnings from the Elections Division for comments they made in Mail Tribune articles but were not fined. George and Schoen opted to fight their $75 fines and testified before Senior Administrative Law Judge Ken L. Betterton in April in Salem.
The judge ruled the state had not proven that George's statements were made about Measure 74, specifically, or that then police chief Schoen's comments were
made in his official capacity. The Secretary of State's Office concurred that the Elections Division did not meet its burden of proof, and "declines to adopt the reasoning of the proposed order and elects to dismiss the alleged violation."
From The Weed Blog
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) Hospital in Portland, Oregon has eased restrictions on marijuana use among people looking for organ transplants. The previous policy required six months of negative drug screens, and possibly rehab for an applicant that tested positive for cannabis. The new policy allows cannabis users who meet all other criteria to be allowed in the program. The new policy applies to liver, kidney, pancreas and heart transplant procedures.
“If you had a beer last weekend, no one would say you are an alcoholic,” Dr. Willscott Naugler said according to KPIC. “You might be. But it doesn’t mean you are. We have taken the same approach to marijuana. If you had it last weekend, you may not have an abuse problem.”
There are no federal guidelines or standards for medical cannabis and the organ transplant screening process. In Oregon, 137 people are on the waiting list for a new liver, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing.
“It’s been more in the conversation than ever before,” said Mike Seely, OHSU’s administrator for transplant services, according to The Oregonian. “It’s been our responsibility to see what’s reasonable.”
Jim Klahr, a 60 year old liver patient from Brookings, Oregon (and a congressional candidate!) feels that the new policy doesn’t go far enough. “It leads to the same place,” he said. “New people and myself cannot use it without the fear of being taken off the program.”
A working study released by Montana State University, the University of Oregon and the University of Colorado Denver found that medical marijuana "had no statistical significant impact" on teen marijuana use, but had a negative impact on the consumption of cocaine, which declined 1.9 percent in areas that had legalized medical marijuana.
The data [covering 13 states from 1993 to 2009] was collected from the Center for Disease Control’s annual Youth Risk Behavior Survey, which is often cited by the nation’s top law enforcement officials when discussing drug policy.
The study contradicts Gil Kerlikowske, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, who recently claimed that medical marijuana sends the “wrong message” to high school students.It also contradicts U.S. Attorney John Walsh crusades against Colorado medical marijuana dispensaries located within 1,000 feet of schools.
The researchers concluded: “Our results are not consistent with the hypothesis that the legalization of medical marijuana caused an increase in the use of marijuana and other substances among high school students.”
The study, currently in draft form, was published June 18th by the Bonn, Germany Institute for the Study of Labor.
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There are now 17 legal medical marijuana states in the U.S.A. 3 States have full legaliztion initiatives on the Nov. ballot: OR, WA, & CO.
Oregon
News Nugs
Higher OMMP Fees Net Over 7.5 Million in 9 Months
Leo Fines by Elections Division Thrown Out
Medford Police Chief Tim George
Legal MMJ Has No Effect On Teen Use
MJ Restrictions Eased For Organ Transplant Canidates in Oregon
As suspected, the number of I-Five-0 entries is way down. Typical during the summer months, which are the driest months of the year, as most cannabis aficionados know! The entries will pick up in the Fall, I am sure. Only Eastern Oregon this issue, which was a surprise.
Lakeview
June 5th - Burns (OSP)
An Emmett, Idaho man is facing felony marijuana-related charges after a traffic stop by an Oregon State Police (OSP) trooper west of Burns, Oregon led to the discovery of over 3 pounds of marijuana inside the rented car. The OSP Drug Enforcement Section is continuing the investigation.
On June 5, 2012 at approximately 10:43 p.m. an OSP trooper stopped a rented 2011 Chevrolet Impala displaying Idaho license plates eastbound on Highway 20 near milepost 114 for traveling 91 mph in a 55 mph speed zone. The lone
occupant in the car was identified as a resident of Emmett, Idaho.
Subsequent investigation during the traffic stop led the trooper to discover approximately 3 1/2 pounds of marijuana in the car's trunk. Estimated value of the seized marijuana is $9,000.
The suspect was arrested without incident and lodged in the Harney County Jail for Unlawful Possession, Distribution, and Manufacture of a Controlled Substance - Marijuana.
June 11th Klamath Falls - OSP
Oregon State Police (OSP) arrested a Califronia man during a traffic stop north of Klamath Falls when an OSP trooper found approximately 57 pounds of marijuana concealed in a rented car. The OSP Drug Enforcement Section is continuing the investigation.
On June 11, 2012 at approximately 8:08 a.m. an OSP trooper stopped a rented 2012 Subaru Impreza displaying Ohio license plates northbound on Highway 97 near milepost 265 for hazardous traffic violations including speeding. The driver was identified as a 24 year old man from from Chico, California.
Subsequent investigation during the traffic stop led the trooper to discover approximately 57 pounds of marijuana concealed in the car's trunk. Estimated value of the seized marijuana is $142,500.
The suspect was taken into custody and lodged in the Klamath County Jail for Unlawful Possession and Delivery of a Controlled Substance - Marijuana. According to Klamath County Sheriff's Office, paid his bail that same date and was scheduled for an later appearance in Klamath County Circuit Court.
from Oregon voters.
In total, including the final signature turn-in on July 6, IP-24 sponsors have submitted more than175,000 signatures to the Secretary of State, far above the 116,284 valid voter signatures required to qualify the constitutional amendment. If just 66% of the signatures were deemed valid, IP-24 would hit the November 2012 ballot. But with just 54.1% of signatures found valid in the June sampling process, IP-24 is facing an uphill battle.
“The recently developed policies of the state and of Kate Brown reduce access to the initiative process and make it the province of only the wealthiest special interests,” Wolfe said. “A win for IP-24 would help restore ballot access to all petition sponsors. It is time to shine a bright light on the undemocratic policies and actions of Oregon’s Secretary of State.”
Wolfe expects a hearing before mid September and hopes that I-24 can still qualify for the general election ballot in November. Whether or not it makes it, Wolfe plans to fight the arbitrary rules that seem to be applied recently in the initiative process in Oregon. Wolfe says it has become a right of free speech, and that we should not be unduly encumbered when trying to make changes to the constitution.
Willamette Valley NORML put on their 10th annual Emerald Empire Hemp Fest on July 20, 21, and 22 at Maury Jacobs Park in Eugene, OR. A “free to the public” event in their third year at this location, the weather was dry, the music was good, and the people had a great time. As usual, the “Ganja Goddesses” collected donations, as did volunteers at the entrance.
Dan Koozer, the event organizer, did another bang-up job this year, arranging dozens of bands over the three days. Dank, as Koozer is known, did have a lot of help from a volunteer crew, as is the case every year. Special shout-outs to Nan, who is a huge help to Dank, and Normal Bean, who handles all the aspects of the stage and music.
Dozens of vendors were there, selling their wares, handing out information, and feeding the crowd. From oven fired pizza and BBQ, to medical marijuana information and tie dyes. Visitors had plenty of shopping and food to keep them busy, and a number of informed speakers to educate them.
Speakers included Paul Stanford, author of Measure 80 (OCTA), Doug McVay of Voter Power, Bradley Steinman of Lewis and Clark Law School's Students for Sensible Drug Policy, and more.
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Cont. on Page 22
10th Emerald Empire Hemp Fest Is A Hit
By Keith MansurOregon Cannabis Connection
OMPI Sues SoS
See our Industrial Hemp Section on
page 20!
I-Five-O FIVEO
Oregon Marijuana
Police Log
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In late July, the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit agreed to hear oral arguments in Americans for Safe Access v. Drug Enforcement Administration, a lawsuit challenging the federal government's classification of marijuana as a dangerous drug with no medical value. Ten years after the Coalition for Rescheduling Cannabis (CRC) filed its petition, the courts will finally review the scientific evidence regarding the therapeutic value of marijuana. The D.C. Circuit is scheduled to hear oral arguments on October 16th at 9:30am.
"Medical marijuana patients are finally getting their day in court," said Joe Elford, Chief Counsel with Americans for Safe Access, the country's
leading medical marijuana advocacy group. "This is a rare opportunity for patients to confront politically motivated decision-making with scientific evidence of marijuana's medical efficacy," continued Elford. "What's at stake in this case is nothing less than our country's scientific integrity and the imminent needs of millions of patients."
ASA filed its lawsuit in January, challenging the July 2011 Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) denial of the CRC petition, which was filed in 2002. The DEA is the final arbiter on petitions to reclassify controlled substances, but other agencies are also involved in the review process. Patient
advocates claim that marijuana is treated unlike any other controlled substance in that rescheduling petitions are encumbered by politics and therapeutic research is subjected to a unique and overly rigorous approval process.
The announcement of oral arguments comes just weeks after a study was published in The Open Neurology Journal by Dr. Igor Grant one of the leading U.S. medical marijuana researchers, claiming that marijuana's Schedule I classification is "not tenable." Dr. Grant and his fellow researchers concluded it was "not accurate that cannabis has no medical value, or that information on safety is lacking." The study urged additional research, and stated that marijuana's federal classification and its political controversy are "obstacles to medical progress in this area." Marijuana's classification as a Schedule I substance (along with heroin and methamphetamine) is based on the federal government's position that it has "no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States."
For more than a year, the Obama Justice Department has been escalating its attacks in medical marijuana states, including dozens of new federal indictments and prosecutions. Though U.S. Attorneys often claim that the accused have violated state law in some way, defendants are prevented from using any medical evidence or a state law defense in federal court. If the rescheduling lawsuit is successful and marijuana is reclassified, federal defendants will then gain the basis for a medical necessity defense.
The ASA appeal brief asserts that the federal government has acted arbitrarily and capriciously in its efforts to deny
Over a month ago, Eric Holder testified before Congress that the Dept. of Justice is only targeting medical marijuana businesses that violate their state's laws. Anyone who didn't realize it was a lie should be getting the message right about now.
The federal government is moving to shut down the nation's largest and highest-profile medical marijuana dispensary operation, filing papers to seize properties in Oakland and San Jose where Harborside Health Center does business.
Copies of the federal Complaint for Forfeiture were taped to the front doors of the two dispensaries July 10th, alleging that they were "operating in violation of federal law."
Medical marijuana advocates, as well as some state and local officials, decried the action, saying it hurts patients in legitimate need of the drug and breaks repeated promises by President Obama's Justice Department that it was targeting only operations near schools and parks or otherwise in violation of the state's laws.
They're not even pretending it's about state law anymore. Harborside has a permit from the City of Oakland and pays millions in taxes to the state of California. They've been covered extensively in the press, and featured on the Discovery Channel program "Weed Wars". Everyone knows exactly what goes on inside Harborside because we've seen it with our own eyes: they provide high-quality
medical cannabis and other services to qualified patients. This is the definition of a legal and well-regulated medical marijuana dispensary.
So how are the feds justifying their attempt to shut down the most responsible business in the industry? They are claiming, I kid you not, that it's just too successful:
“I now find the need to consider actions regarding marijuana superstores such as Harborside. The larger the operation, the greater the likelihood that there will be abuse of the state’s medical marijuana laws, and marijuana in the hands of individuals who do not have a demonstrated medical need. – U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag”
This is beyond outrageous and it flies in the face of even the most recent excuses put forward by the Attorney General and the President himself when attempting to justify their escalating war on medical marijuana.
By targeting Harborside solely on the basis of its reputation as the nation's "biggest" medical marijuana provider, DOJ forgets something rather important: it's the biggest because it's the best. Harborside is a model of safe, secure, patient-oriented medical marijuana services. It's also a model of legal compliance, and any
effort to shut its doors simply obliterates the Attorney General's recent claims that DOJ is merely upholding local laws. He really should stop saying that.
It boggles the mind to imagine what sort of perverted logic is driving Obama's vicious assault on a voting block that helped elect him four years ago. What little the President has said on the matter in recent months is now even more obviously false, and if it isn’t about upholding state laws, then the question of the Administration's true agenda is something about which we can only speculate. It isn't
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Cont. on Page 17
DC Circuit Court To Review Marijuana CSA Classification
From Americans for Safe Access (ASA)
Obama's War On Medical Marijuana Just Got Even Uglier
By Scott MorganStop The Drug War
Dr. Igor Grant, M.D. is the Director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research at UCSD.
Cont. on Page 17
US Atty. Gen. Eric Holder, with US Atty. for California Melinda Haag
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Official Schedule
Event Sponsors
www.southeroregonbackline.com
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Check Inside For Bands, Performance Times, Hemposium Schedule, and More!
Friday, August 24th
IndicaStage
Saturday, August 25th
SativaStage
IndicaStage
SativaStageTime
Sunday, August 26th
IndicaStage
SativaStage
Hemposium Schedule
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Time
Michael Annotti
Jack Fallsrock
Matt Hill
541 Syndicate
Free Drifters
Ngaio Bealum
Outpost
Stingshark
The Illies
Unified Culture
State of Jefferson
Craig Chaquico
Grandpa's Chill
Faraji
The Bones
The T-Club
Willy and the Poor Boys
Jen Ambrose
Takilma
Kids Parade
Matt Hill
Harri & Friends
Craig Wright
Michelle Bellamy
The Rodeo Clowns
Michelle MacAfee
Philly's Funkestra
Synrgy
100 Watt Mind
Anthony Melendez
Jared Masters
Eastern Sunz
Glimpse Trio
Rosie Burgess Trio
Sol Seed
Frankie Hernandez
Only Natural
Kids Parade
The Herbal Crew
Blind Lion
Ras Cricket
Adrian Xavier
Smokin' Rogues
Dropa
State of Jefferson
Karrgo Bossajova
Jagen Jones
420 FREE JAM
Stereotype
420 FREE JAM
420 FREE JAM
Skunk Funk
Medium Troy
Organik Time Machine
Oneironauts
Blackalicious
11:0012:001:002:003:004:005:006:007:008:009:0010:0011:00
Jack Fallsrock
Jah Sun
Event Map on next page
Windsong
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Know and Protect Your Rights
Legal Q & A Panel
Students For Sensible Drug
Policy Forum
Safe Access Points, the Future
Industrial Hemp Facts and Q & A
Display Time for
Presenters/Vendors
12:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
7:00
11:00
12:00
1:00
3:00
4:00
5:00
7:00
11:00
12:00
1:00
3:00
5:00
OR State and Federal
Restrictions on Marijuana
Legislative Canidates
Measure 80 Discussion with
Paul Stanford
Industrial Hemp and Measure 80
Industrial Hemp Discussion
Outdoor Grow Panel and Q&A
Display Time for
Presenters/Vendors
Cooking With Cannabis with
Earth Dragon Edibles
OMMP Qualifying Q & A
Indoor Grow Panel and Q & A
Industrial Hemp Discussion
To Be Announced
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Here is an interesting and enlightening assortment of hemp facts:
1) Hemp is among the oldest industries on the planet, going back more than 10,000 years to the beginnings of pottery. The Columbia History of the World states that the oldest relic of human industry is a bit of hemp fabric dating back to approximately 8,000 BC.
2) Presidents Washington and Jefferson both grew hemp. Americans were legally bound to grow hemp during the Colonial Era and Early Republic. The federal government subsidized hemp during the Second World War and U.S. farmers grew about a million acres of hemp as part of that program.
3) Hemp seed is nutritious and contains more essential fatty acids than any other source, is second only to soybeans in complete protein (but is more digestible by humans), is high in B-vitamins, and is a good source of dietary fiber. Hemp seed is not psychoactive and cannot be used as a drug (learn more at TestPledge.com).
4) The bark of the hemp stalk contains bast fibers, which are among the Earth's longest natural soft fibers and are also rich in cellulose. The cellulose and hemi-cellulose in its inner woody core are called hurds. Hemp stalk is not psychoactive. Hemp fiber is longer, stronger, more absorbent and more insulative than cotton fiber.
5) According to the Department of Energy, hemp as a biomass fuel producer requires the least specialized growing and processing procedures of all hemp
products. The hydrocarbons in hemp can be processed into a wide range of biomass energy sources, from fuel pellets to liquid fuels and gas. Development of bio-fuels could significantly reduce our consumption of fossil fuels and nuclear power.
6) Hemp can be grown organically. Only eight, out of about one hundred known pests, cause problems, and hemp is most often grown without herbicides, fungicides or pesticides. Hemp is also a natural weed suppressor due to fast growth of the canopy.
7) Hemp produces more pulp per acre than timber on a sustainable basis, and can be used for every quality of paper. Hemp paper manufacturing can reduce wastewater contamination. Hemp's low lignin content reduces the need for acids used in pulping, and its creamy color lends itself to environmentally-friendly bleaching instead of harsh chlorine compounds. Less bleaching results in less dioxin and fewer chemical by-products.
8) Hemp fiber paper resists decomposition, and does not yellow with
age when an acid-free process is used. Hemp paper more than 1,500 years old has been found. Hemp paper can also be recycled more times than wood-based paper.
9) Hemp fiberboard produced by Washington State University was found to be twice as strong as wood-based fiberboard. No additional resins are required due to naturally-occurring lignins.
10) Eco-friendly hemp can replace most toxic petrochemical products. Research is being done to use hemp in manufacturing biodegradable plastic products: plant-based cellophane, recycled plastic mixed with hemp for injection-molded products, and resins made from the oil, to name a very few examples. Over two million cars on the road today have hemp composite parts for door panels, dashboards, luggage racks, etc.
About Hemp Prohibition - From the Hemp Industries Assoc
During the years 1916-1937, William Randolph Hearst created a yellow journalism campaign to associate hemp with marijuana. Even though smoking hemp, like most fibers, will just make you sick, Hearst, along with his friend Pierre DuPont, succeeded in outlawing hemp in America. They actually robbed the world of an environmental cash crop. Why would they do such a thing? Because instead of using hemp for paper, clothing, fuel, oils, resins, medicines, and many other uses, we now use trees and synthetic petrochemicals. Hearst owned huge forests and interests in lumber mills. DuPont made synthetic fuels and fibers (nylon, rayon, plastics) from petroleum.
About Marijuana Prohibition -
"There are 100,000 total marijuana smokers in the US,and most are Negroes, Hispanics, Filipinos and entertainers. Their Satanic music, jazz and swing, result from marijuana usage. This marijuana causes white women to seek sexual relations with Negroes, entertainers and any others."
Harry J. Anslinger, Americas first "Drug Czar" in testimony to Congress, 1937
"Knowledge will forever govern ignorance: And a people who mean to be their own Governors, must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives."
James Madison, Fourth U.S. president & Father of the Constitution
Jefferson State Hemp Expo, held at Hope Mountain Farm this coming Aug. 24-26 is an annual music festival and educational hemp exposition produced by Jefferson State Music Festival LLC, an entertainment company founded by local State of Jefferson band, in cooperation with
local community business leaders and patrons ofthe arts. The Hemp Expo's musical programing, event vendors, and
educational hemp forum will run from10AM until 10PM all three days and features over fifty musical performances on three stages.
Jefferson State Music Festival is proud to bring the Hemp Expo back to Hope Mountain Farm for our third year. Sponsors
and event coordinators are committed to bringing quality community entertainment to the rural communities of the Rogue and Illinois Valleys.
The Jefferson State Hemp Expo is founded on the belief that through awareness, education, and the cooperation of citizens and public officials, many complex social issues can be solved. Hemp Expo hosts a world class, affordable, music event that provides outlets for cannabisadvocates to educate the public on the many potential benefits of the cannabis plant. This includes religious,medicinal, industrial, agricultural, economic, environmental, and other practical applications.
Jefferson State Hemp Expo has reached out and brought together organizations and community businessesleaders such as Lori Duckworth, the co-founder and executive director of the Southern Oregon CannabisCommunity Center. “I encourage everyone in the Rogue and Illinois valley communities and beyond to come outand join us for a weekend filled with facts,
food and fun. I am proud to be a main sponsor for this event this year,which brings a great deal of education and awareness to Southern Oregon.” Says Duckworkth, who will be hosting the Cannabis Information and Forum Area at Hemp Expo.
Main event sponsors are Southern Oregon Alternative Medicine, Northern Light & Garden Stores, Dragon's LairGlass, Southern Oregon Cannabis Community Center, Profound Entertainment, Oregon Cannabis Connection, Singing Bird Family Farm, X-Traktor Filtration Systems, and Southern Oregon Backline.com
In addition, to the diverse musical line-up and support from local sponsors, the festival will have beer and wine catered by The Wharf Restaurant.
The Jefferson State Hemp Expo is all ages and family friendly. Tickets for Jefferson State Hemp Expo 2012, are priced at $5 per person for day admission. Camping at the
event site is $50 per person for a weekend camping pass and admission to the festival. Free admission for children under twelve, accompanied by an adult.
Camping Passes and general admission tickets are on sale now at area outlets; Operation Pipe Dreams and Southern Oregon Alternative Medicine in Medford, Dragons Lair Glass and The Hemp and Cannabis Foundation in Grants Pass, and at the Williams General Store.
About the Jefferson State Music Festival & Hemp Expo
Facts About Hemp
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Hemp field in Canada today
Hemp fields in America before prohibition in 1937
Total seizures of cultivated cannabis plants fell an estimated 35 percent between the years 2010 and 2011, according to statistics provided by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and published in the Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics.
Data for the year 2011 indicates that some 6.7 million cannabis plants were eradicated nationwideunder the DEA’s Domestic Cannabis Eradication/Suppression Program, which is active in all 50 states. This figure represents the lowest total of cultivated plants eradicated since 2006, and is a 35 percent decrease from 2010, when the DEA reported eradicating some 10.3 million marijuana plants.
The year-to-year drop was largely a result of a decline in the total number of plants eradicated in California. In 2010, the DEA reported eradicating some 7.4 million plants in California. That number fell to just under 4 million plants in 2011.
Overall, approximately 60 percent of all of the marijuana plants eradicated in the United States in 2011 were from
California plots.
The DEA further reported having seized over $11 million in assets associated with its eradication efforts in California. Nationwide, the agency reported seizing over $42 million in assets associated with its Domestic Cannabis Eradication/Suppression Program.
According to a July 2012 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, the Justice Department’s asset forfeiture fund under President Barack Obama is the largest on record, having grown from $500 million in 2003, to $1.8 billion in 2011. According to the GAO, the fund paid out approximately $79 million to California law enforcement agencies, the most in the nation, for their participation in federal raids and seizures.
In recent months, the Justice Department has targeted numerous properties in California for civil asset forfeiture – including Harborside Health Center, the largest and most prominent medical marijuana dispensary in the state.
Washington state's Initiative 502, which would legalize and tax marijuana and sell the herb through state-licensed stores, got a big funding boost in July, receiving $1.25 million in new donations. The funds allowed I-502's backers to buy a $1 million TV advertising blitz in August, according to campaign manager Alison Holcomb.
Meanwhile, a new statewide poll, paid for by Seattle TV station KING 5, found that a healthy 55 percent of Washington voters support I-502 ,with just 32 percent opposed.
The first marijuana legalization initiative to ever make the state ballot in Washington, I-502 raised the $1.25 million from just four deep-pocketed donors, including matching $450,000 contributions from Progressive Insurance founder Peter Lewis -- well-known for his financial support for drug policy reform -- and from the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance (DPA), reports Jonathan Martin at The Seattle Times.
The measure, which will be on November's general election ballot, would legalize possession and sale of up to one ounce of marijuana. It would place a steep excise tax on marijuana and cannabis-infused products at newly created state-licensed marijuana stores, and would allow a few government-regulated pot farms.
Before the weekend's contributions, I-502 had raised a total of $1.7 million since the beginning of the campaign.
Holcomb said the new donations, which will be officially reported by the campaign next week, included $250,000 from travel writer/TV personality Rick Steves, who had already given $100,000, and $100,000 from the ACLU of Washington, which is the group behind New Approach Washington, the sponsors of I-502.
A number of Washington state marijuana legalization advocates, along with some in the medical marijuana industry, oppose I-502, primarily because it includes a new DUI limit of five nanograms per milliliter (5 ng/ml) on active THC in the bloodstream. Advocates argue that such a low -- and scientifically unsupported -- limit would effectively criminalize all driving by medical marijuana patients.
Advocates also complain that I-502's possession limit of just one legal ounce is too low, calling it "decrim on steroids," and object to the measure's ban on all home cultivation of cannabis.
"I-502 will NOT legalize marijuana," said prominent Seattle-based medical marijuana activist Steve Sarich of CannaCare. "It doesn't remove ONE criminal penalty for growing or possessing marijuana from the state law....none...zero."This is a scam being played on the public by some big money people from outside Washington State who think we're all stupid enough to buy off on their scam," Sarich said. "I-502 adds criminal penalties to the state law -- and it doesn't remove the existing ones. Still these people have the nerve to call it 'legalization.' Please don't be fooled by this new form of prohibition!"
A new group opposed to I-502, the Safe Access Alliance, will file with state campaign authorities this week, according to cannabis activist Philip Dawdy, who has been involved with past legalization efforts in Washington.
"I-502 made a serious miscalculation," Dawdy told The Seattle Times. "They calculated that getting the votes of soccer moms were more important than medical marijuana patients."
According to Dawdy, the excise taxes imposed by I-502 would dramatically increase costs on medical marijuana patients.
Reprinted by permission from www.tokeofthetown.com. © 2012 Village Voice Media
A statewide poll released in recently by Rasmussen Reports provides strong evidence that Colorado may likely become the first state to re-legalize and regulate the personal use of marijuana this November.
On June 6th, Rasmussen Polling conducted a survey of likely voters in Colorado and found majority support for marijuana legalization. Sixty-one percent of those surveyed supported legalizing marijuana if it were regulated like alcohol and cigarettes. Only 27 percent of respondents are opposed to legalization and 12 percent remain undecided.
This is great news for Amendment 64, a 2012 statewide ballot initiative to end marijuana prohibition and regulate marijuana like alcohol, which will appear on the Colorado ballot this November. Rasmussen’s recent survey shows support shifting upwards from previous polling. In December 2011, Public Policy Polling reported that 49 percent of Coloradan’s believed that marijuana use should be legal versus 40 percent who believed it should remain illegal.
Lately, the mainstream media has caught on to the important role that Amendment 64 will
play in this fall’s presidential election. This poll is just further proof of that claim’s validity. During the same time period, Rasmussen polled Colorado voters on their presidential preference and respondents were split, 45 percent for Obama and 45 percent support for Romney.
Amendment 64 promises to turn out greater numbers of independent minded and youth voters in November, if either candidate embraced rational marijuana policy reforms, this important battleground state could be theirs to win. If neither does, it remains to be seen if they will lose these potential votes to the third party candidate, Libertarian Gary Johnson, who advocates for marijuana egalization as a part of his platform. The marijuana issue is one that the two major parties can continue to ignore, but they are now doing so at their own peril.
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Preotesters march when Obama came to California campaigning in July
DEA’s Marijuana Plant Seizures Down 35 Percent From The Year Before
Colorado Polling at 61% for Amend. 64by Erik AltieriNORML Communications Coordinator
Washington's I-502 Getting SupportBy Phillip SmithStop The Drug War
Uruguay’s president José Mujica, 78, unveiled a proposal decriminalizing marijuana. Under the proposal marijuana would be sold and taxed by the government to adults, users would be tracked in a government database to quash the resale of marijuana on the black market, and the taxes will be spent on drug rehabilitation. The measure comes after a recent rash of gang and drug crime in the ordinarily peaceful nation.
Mr. Mujica plans to control the sale and distribution of marijuana through a state network. This is one of the measures the government wants to use to combat the abuse of cocaine and pasta basica, a drug akin to crack, diverting Uruguayan drug users toward marijuana instead. Mr. Mujica said that drug users “are enslaved by an illegal market. They follow the path to crime because they don’t have the money, and they become dealers because they have no other financial means to satisfy their vice.”
Critics contend the government won’t stop the black market or stop users from moving on to harder drugs. Doctors, political rivals, marijuana users and security officials have all expressed concern about how marijuana would be managed and whether legalization would make addiction and crime worse.
Michigan cities and townships cannot bar the cultivation and use of medical marijuana, a state appellate court has decided in a case involving an ordinance adopted by the city of Wyoming and challenged by a patient there.
In an opinion released this morning, a unanimous three-judge panel of the court said the local ordinance was clearly pre-empted by the medical marijuana state law, and that local governments could not use the federal prohibition on marijuana as an excuse to ban it.
The appeals ruling is a significant victory for advocates of medical marijuana, who claim that cities and townships have been attempting to thwart the law, approved by state voters in 2008. Similar legal challenges have been brought against other communities, including Livonia, Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills, which enacted similar ordinances.
The appeals court said Michigan and federal law did not conflict because the voter-approved statute expressly acknowledged the federal marijuana prohibition while providing an exemption for its cultivation and use under state law.
By Steve Elliott - Toke Of The Town
The New Hampshire Legislature on June 27th narrowly failed to overturn Gov. John Lynch's veto of a proposed medical marijuana bill.
SB 409, which would have allowed people with certain qualifying medical conditions to grow and possess limited amounts of marijuana with doctors' recommendations, was approved by the House and Senate earlier this month. That was the first time a Republican-led legislature sent a governor an effective medical marijuana bill.
Gov. Lynch vetoed the bill June 21st, citing law enforcement concerns that advocates had previously amended the bill to address. The veto came as no surprise. Lynch vetoed similar legislation in 2009, after which the House voted by more than two-thirds to override the veto, but support in the Senate fell two votes short of the necessary two-thirds.
Although a total of 16 senators voted for the
bill this year, the Senate did not reach the necessary votes to override the veto. The vote was 13-10, and 16 votes were needed.
Used by permission from www.tokeofthetown.com . © 2012 The Village Voice
By Americans for Safe Access (ASA)
After more than four years of attempting to craft a medical marijuana dispensary ordinance, despite dozens of regulatory examples across California, the Los Angeles City Council voted 13-1 July 24th to ban outright against the facilities. The ban was passed despite more than ten thousand letters sent by medical marijuana patients and their supporters over the past few weeks urging the council to adopt sensible regulations. Advocates expressed outrage at this vote and have vowed to seek a referendum to reverse the new law.
"This is an outrage that the city council would think a reasonable solution to the distribution of medical marijuana would be to simply outlaw it altogether," said Don Duncan, California Director with Americans for Safe Access."We will campaign forcefully to overturn this poor decision by the council," continued Duncan.
In addition to the dispensary ban vote, the city council voted 9-5 to have the city attorney draft an ordinance that would allow for a certain number of city-regulated facilities.
In an attempt to cover for the harmful approach the city has taken on medical marijuana, local officials have referred to the ordinance as a "gentle ban." Duncan took issue with that characterization, saying, "The city is whitewashing their actions by calling this a 'gentle ban,' when in reality it offers patients nothing more than what's already legal under state law, and denies patients the real need to safely and legally obtain their medication." Advocates have long argued that such bans on distribution are not only illegal, but also deprive patients of a legal medication and needlessly push those patients into the illicit market.
Mayor Villaraigosa has 30 days to sign the ordinance into law, and then it will go into effect a few days later, upon publication.
Brooklyn judge Gustin Reichbach passed away July 14th due to stage 3 pancreatic cancer. We reported on his courageous stance in the last issue of Oregon Cannabis Connection.
"My survival has demanded an enormous price, including months of chemotherapy, radiation hell and brutal surgery... Inhaled marijuana is the only medicine that gives me some relief from nausea, stimulates my appetite, and makes it easier to fall asleep," Reichback wrote. “Given my position as a sitting judge still hearing cases, well-meaning friends question the wisdom of my coming out on this issue. But I recognize that fellow cancer sufferers may be unable, for a host of reasons, to give voice to our plight. It is another heartbreaking aporia in the world of cancer that the one drug that gives relief without deleterious side effects remains classified as a narcotic with no medicinal value. “Because criminalizing an effective medical technique affects the fair administration of justice, I feel obliged to speak out as both a judge and a cancer patient suffering with a fatal disease. I implore the governor and the Legislature of New York, always considered a leader among states, to join the forward and humane thinking of 16 other states and pass the medical marijuana bill this year. Medical science has not yet found a cure, but it is barbaric to deny us access to one substance that has proved to ameliorate our suffering.” Under federal and NY state law, Judge Reichbach was a criminal. In the eyes of activists, he was a hero. He will be missed as an advocate for a natural treatment that has been vilified for decades and its users treated like criminals.
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Uruguay May Sell Marijuana Soon
NationalNews Nugs
Image: plazademayo
Michigan Court Defends MMJ Grows
NH Governor's Veto Stands
Medical Marijuana Advocates Rip L.A. Dispensary Ban, Seek Referendum
Pro MMJ Brooklyn Judge Passes Away
marijuana to millions of patients throughout the U.S. ASA argues in its brief that the DEA has no "license to apply different criteria to marijuana than to other drugs, ignore critical scientific data, misrepresent social science research, or rely upon unsubstantiated assumptions, as the DEA has done in this case." ASA is urging the court to "require the DEA to analyze the scientific data evenhandedly," and order "a hearing and findings based on the scientific record." The panel of judges assigned to hear oral arguments includes Circuit Judges Henderson and Garland, and Senior Circuit Judge Edwards.
Seventeen states and the District of Columbia have adopted medical marijuana laws that not only recognize the medical efficacy of marijuana, but also provide safe and legal access to it.Since the CRC petition was filed in 2002, an even greater number of studies have been published that show the medical benefits of marijuana for illnesses such as neuropathic pain, multiple sclerosis, and Alzheimer's. Last year, the National Cancer Institute, a division of the federal Department of Health and Human Services, added cannabis to its list of Complementary Alternative Medicines, pointing out that it's been therapeutically used for millennia.
Further information:D.C. Circuit announcement of oral arguments: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/ASA_v_DEA_Oral_Arguments.pdfASA appeal brief: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/CRC_Appeal.pdfDEA denial of CRC petition: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/CRC_Petition_DEA_Answer.pdfCRC rescheduling petition: http://www.drugscience.org/PDF/Petition_Final_2002.pdf
Montana residents will have a chance to vote on medical marijuana in November, but not on legalization. In a statement on July 20th, Secretary of State Linda McCullough announced that the medical marijuana initiative, IR-124 would be on the general election ballot (even though it had been a done deal since late last year), but that the constitutional amendment to legalize marijuana, CI-110, had failed to qualify.
According to the secretary of state’s office, CI-110 handed in fewer than 18,000 valid signatures. It needed more than 48,000 by the Friday deadline to make the ballot.
“None of the other issues appear to have enough signatures to qualify for the ballot,” McCulloch said as she announced that IR-124 and an unrelated measure had qualified. “We will continue to tabulate all certified signatures, and the totals at the time of qualification will be certified to the governor and released publicly next week.”
“We didn’t make it,” said Barb Trego of East Helena, CI-110s sponsor. “We just ran out of time. We just got going too late,” she told the Missoulian.
Trego said the CI-110 backers had to change the proposal’s language at least three times because of objections by state officials. That delayed their signature-
gathering efforts.
“We’re not giving up,” she said. “When we do it the next time, we’ll be more prepared. We already have the language.”The failure of CI-110 to make the ballot means the final tally of states where marijuana reform initiatives will be on the November ballot is three: Colorado, Oregon, and Washington.
about upholding state laws, then the question of the Administration's true agenda is something about which we can only speculate. It isn't winning him any votes, that's for sure.
Today, anyone who's tried to make excuses for Obama's horrible handling of all this should just stop. Anyone who says this President is secretly a friend of the marijuana reform movement should close their mouth. Anyone who's claimed that "they're only busting bad dispensaries" can cut the crap. This is a war. It's Obama's war. And to my friends who are too afraid of Mitt Romney right now to criticize Obama, I say you're making our President more dangerous by meeting his mistakes with silence.If you don’t want Obama to destroy medical marijuana in America, this would be a good time to speak up about it .
Harborside Health vowed to stay open and fight federal asset forfeiture claims. The federal government can seize property under current drug laws if the property is used in the distribution of a drug--in this case, federally illegal cannabis.
"Harborside has nothing to hide, we have nothing to be ashamed of and we have no intention of closing our doors," said Harborside CEO Steve DeAngelo. "We shall continue to provide our patients with
There was a big federal tax court decision August 6th that will no doubt affect every dispensary in America. The decision in Olive v. Commissioner, 139 T.C. No. 2, a case out of California, disqualifies all medical marijuana distributors from most tax deductions. The ruling by the United States Tax Court, which oversees disputes over federal income tax, was unanimous. A unanimous decision leaves little hope that it will be overturned on appeal.
“The dispensing of medical marijuana, while legal in California, among other states, is illegal under federal law,” Tax Court Judge Diane L. Kroupa wrote. “Congress has set an illegality under federal law as one trigger to preclude a taxpayer from deducting expenses incurred in a medical marijuana dispensary business. This is true even if the business is legal under state law.”
According to Accounting Today, “While his business was legitimate under California law, Section 280E of the Tax Code precludes a deduction of any amount for a trade or business where the “trade or business (or the activities which comprise such trade or business) consists of trafficking in controlled substances … which is prohibited by federal law.””
Robert Wood wrote an excellent article for Forbes, in which he described that some, but not all dispensaries deductions, are still valid. “The IRS and Tax Court must abide by Section 280E of the tax code. However, the U.S. Tax Court has allowed dispensaries to deduct other expenses distinct from dispensing marijuana. See Californians Helping to Alleviate Medical
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Cont. on Page 22
Montana MJ Initiative FailsBy Phillip SmithStop The Drug War
A Recent billboard on the way to Yellowstone National Park
DC Circuit Court
Obamas Drug War
Tax Court Decision Could Haunt Medical Marijuana Distributors NationwideBy Johnny GreenThe Weed Blog
October is right around the corner! This is a Romulan Bud from the editor's 2011 harvest
A recent study conducted in Glen Oaks hospital in New York, showed that marijuana could have a beneficial effect on neurocognitive functions of patients with bipolar disorder. The study was performed on 200 BD patients, 50 of whom have been smoking marijuana. All of them underwent tests that tested their neurocognitive functions (attention span, speed shifting, digits forward and backward tests and trails B test). The results were intriguing to say the least.
Cannabis Use Disorder
However, before we present you with the study’s conclusions, you have to bear in mind that the medical world is full of disorders, some being completely justified and others just being labeled as illnesses for the hell of it. In line with that practice, a frequent marijuana smoker ‘suffers’ from CUD (Cannabis Use Disorder) and is more likely to suffer from a history of psychosis than a person who doesn’t smoke. At least, that’s what the research suggests. Simply put, a BD patient with CUD is only 14% more likely to have a history of psychosis than a BD patient who doesn’t smoke marijuana.
Results
It was concluded that BD patients with CUD had significantly better cognitive tests results than patients who didn’t ‘suffer’ from CUD. That fact alone will significantly motivate further medical marijuana related research because now we can move away from the ‘burnout’ dogma and focus on the actual health benefits of cannabis. We always believed that you shouldn’t became a slave to the plant, but consume it moderately in order to reap the rewards it can provide and utilize its maximum potential.
Supporting Studies
To support this research, we found a study that was published in the American Journal of Epidemiology in August, 2011. The study revealed that middle-aged men could benefit from the use of marijuana as well. Apparently, cannabis can significantly improve their mental stamina. They are able to think more clearly, a benefit that was practically never associated with the use of marijuana. The study was conducted on 8,992 male drug users. The first phase of research was conducted when they were 42, and the second when they turned 50. Basically, much was gained in terms of mental clarity, yet nothing was actually lost for good.
Conclusion
According to these two studies, it is safe to conclude that the use of medical marijuana is actually beneficial to both patients who suffer from bipolar disorder and middle-aged men. In addition, there seem to be no permanent psychological consequences of frequent marijuana use (at least in the time span of 10 years) with middle-aged men. This actually makes sense because recent research actually proves that the brain is not fully developed until you reach your late 30?s or early 40?s even. So, even you don’t toke in the first 20 years, don’t worry – there’ll be plenty of time to enjoy it afterwards.
Some people who have Biploar feel that marijuana works in terms of dealing with their bipolar. Most feel sativa strains are more helpful for treating Bipolar. However it can depend on which mood you are feeling so at certain times an indica strain may be beneficial.
Regulating cannabis access would provide patients with an effective treatment for chronic pain and likely reduce morbidity associated with the use of prescription opiates and other pharmaceuticals, according to a review published in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs.
A researcher with the Centre for Addictions Research of British Columbia reports that cannabis may be useful in the treatment of chronic pain as well as certain substance abuse disorders, and that it poses fewer risks to health than many conventional alternatives.
He writes: “When used in conjunction with opiates, cannabinoids lead to a greater cumulative relief of pain, resulting in a reduction in the use of opiates (and associated side-effects) by patients in a clinical setting. Additionally, cannabinoids can prevent the development of tolerance to and withdrawal from opiates, and can even rekindle opiate analgesia after a prior dosage has become ineffective. Novel research suggests that cannabis may be useful in the treatment of problematic substance use. These findings suggest that increasing safe access to medical cannabis may reduce the personal and social harms associated with addiction, particularly in relation to the growing problematic use of pharmaceutical opiates.”
The author continues: “Since both the potential harms of pharmaceutical opiates and the relative safety of cannabis are well established, research on substitution effect suggests that cannabis may be effective in reducing the use and dependence of other substances of abuse
such as illicit opiates, stimulants and alcohol. As such, there is reason to believe that a strategy aiming to maximize the therapeutic potential benefits of both cannabis and pharmaceutical cannabinoids by expanding their availability and use could potentially lead to a reduction in the prescription use of opiates, as well as other potentially dangerous pharmaceutical analgesics, licit and illicit substances, and thus a reduction in associated harms.”
The author concludes, “Despite a lack of regulatory oversight by federal governments in North America, community-based medical cannabis dispensaries have proven successful at supplying patients with a safe source of cannabis within an environment conducive to healing, and may be reducing the problematic use of pharmaceutical opiates and other potentially harmful substances in their communities.”
Between the years 1999 and 2007, over 65,000 people died from unintentional opioid analgesic overdose.
A previous review, appearing in the Harm Reduction Journal in January, similarly argued, “Prescribing cannabis in place of opioids for neuropathic pain may reduce the morbidity and mortality rates associated with prescription pain medications and may be an effective harm reduction strategy.”
In November, clinical investigators at the University of California, San Francisco reported that vaporized cannabis augments the analgesic effects of opiates in subjects prescribed morphine or oxycodone. Authors of the study surmised that cannabis-specific interventions “may allow for opioid treatment at lower doses with fewer [patient] side effects.”For more information, please contact Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director, at: [email protected]. Full text of the study, “Cannabis as an Adjunct to or Substitute for Opiates in the Treatment of Chronic Pain,” appears in The Journal of Psychoactive Drugs.
MMeeddiiccaall NNeewwssPage 18 Cannabis Connection
Can Medical Marijuana Be Used To Treat Bipolar Disorder? From Medical Marijuana Blog
is a bi-monthly publication for the medical cannabis community in Oregon.
Published by K2 Publishing Co. in Medford, Oregon, we strive to inform
the public on the value of medical marijuana, as well as provide news, information,
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All information in our publication is intended for legal use by adults only.
Our publication is advertiser supported and over 28,000 copies are
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Picaso's Woman With A Yellow Hat
Access Medical Cannabis Likely To Reduce Use Of Opiates And Other Addictive Drugs
By Paul ArmentanoDeputy Director of NORML
Ingredients:
4 cups half-and-half
2 tablespoons Simple Cannabutter
(recipe in June 2012 issue of OCC)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
extract
1 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
Optional add-ins:
1/4 cup chocolate
chips
1/4 cup chopped pecans
1/4 cup crumbled cookies or candy bar
pieces
Directions: Pour half-and-half into a
large pot over high heat. Scald until
bubbles form at edges. Remove from
heat. Melt the cannabutter into the hot
half-and-half. Add vanilla, sugar,and
salt. Cover and refrigerate for 30
minutes. Freeze according to the
directions for your ice-cream maker,
adding in chocolate chips, pecans,
cookies, or candy bar pieces, as
manufacturer suggests.
Find our review of The
High Times
Cannabis
Cookbook© in the
June issue
Find it online at
www.hightimes.com or
at Amazon.com
RecipesCannabis Connection Page 19
BBQ Ribs With Marijuana Sauce
Cheech and Chong“Nice Dream” Ice Cream
Medical cannabis consumption can be unpredictable, always start with a quarter serving and give it time. Effects can take
up to an hour and sometimes longer. If you have doubts, you should contact a cannabis
clinician about dosage.Ingredients for Canna Bar-B-Q Sauce:
1 1/2 cups ketchup1 cup cider vinegar1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce1/4 cup soy sauce1 cup packed light brown sugar2 tablespoons dry mustard1/4 cup chili powder1 teaspoon ground ginger2 garlic cloves, minced2 tablespoons vegetable oil3 lemon slices1/2 cup melted Canna Butter
Directions: Combine all ingredients in a medium sauce pan and bring to a simmer over medium heat, stirring often, for 5 minutes. Remove the lemon slices. The sauce will keep covered and refrigerated for up to two weeks
Now you are ready to make the ribs.
Ingredients:Four pounds of country-style ribs1 1/2 cups Canna Bar-B-Q Sauce1 cup orange juice
Directions: Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Arrange the ribs in a large baking dish. Whisk together the Canna Bar-B-Q Sauce and orange juice. Pour sauce over the ribs and make sure each one is evenly coated. Cover with aluminum foil and bake for three hours. Uncover, increase the oven temperature to 350 degrees and bake the ribs for one more hour, turning them once after 30 minutes. Remove ribs to a platter and let stand for 15 minutes. Spoon off fat from the sauce and serve the ribs with the sauce.
By By Elise McDonough from The Official High Times Cannabis Cookbook©
From Culture Magazine
New Recipes In Every Issue!
& A Special Thanks To Our Contributors!
3601 NE MLK Blvd, Portland(503) 933-7662 - Dine In/Take Out
Bacon CaramelsBy Kristi AndersonOregon Cannabis Connection
Nutty Avocado Salad (non-medicated recipe)
By Todd DalottoThe Hemp Cookbook: From Seed To Shining Seed ©
Ingredients:
1/2 lb. of canna butter
1 cup of rendered bacon fat
4 cups of sugar
2 cups heavy cream
3/4 cup of water
1 cup of light corn syrup
3 cups chopped cooked bacon
Directions:
Combine the
canna butter,
cream, and
bacon fat,
warm until
blended. In a
separate pan,
warm the water, corn syrup, and
sugar to 320 degrees (using a candy
thermometer). Add the dairy to the
sugar slowly, stirring the whole time
to avoid bubbling over. Continue
stirring and heat mixture until it
reaches 244 degrees. Line a baking
pan with 2 cups chopped bacon. Pour
cooked caramel mixture over bacon.
Spread remaining chopped bacon on
top of caramels. Let cool, then cut to
appropriate size.
Makes approximately 100.
Ingredients:
2 medium
avocados,
diced or
mashed,
depending on
ripeness
Juice of 1 lemon
1/2 teaspoon dried dillweed
1 tablespoon chives (fresh if possible)
1/2 teaspoon sage (fresh if possible)
1 pinch cayenne powder
3 medium celery stalks, chopped
1 medium carrot, grated
1/2 cup chopped cabbage
1/4 cup diced onion
1 cup cashews, ground
1/4 cup hempseed oil
6 cups sprouts or other greens
Directions: Prepare and mix all
ingredients (except the sprouts or
greens) in a large bowl. Stir it up and
serve on a bed of sprouts or greens.
Serves 4.
Todd Dalotto is the
Chair, Oregon Health
Authority's Advisory
Committee on Medical
Marijuana (ACMM) &
the Chair, ACMM's
Horticulture, Research
& Safety Committee.
Find The Hemp Cookbook: From Seed
To Shining Seed online at Amazon.com
The preamble (the “whereas” section) of Measure 80/ OCTA 2012 contains an excellent summary of cannabis facts which should be widely circulated. Measure 80 also includes these provisions:
474.005 (5) Seeds and starts of all varieties of cannabis shall be considered hemp.
474.035 (1) The commission’s jurisdiction shall extend to any person licensed under this chapter to cultivate or process cannabis, but shall not extend to any person who manufactures products from hemp. Hemp production for fiber, protein and oil shall be allowed without regulation, license nor fee. No federal license shall be required to cultivate hemp in Oregon.
474.065 (3) The cultivation and possession of cannabis for personal, noncommercial use by an adult shall not require a license nor registration.
These provisions persuaded us to support this measure, despite other possibly problematic sections, which we look forward to helping improve once the measure is actually being implemented.
All varieties may be grown as hemp, including local high-strength cultivars. This allows us to avoid the extreme limitations imposed by the very low-THC strains permitted as “industrial hemp” in recent times. We can finally re-establish the balance existing before prohibition, when the most vigorous hemp provided medicine as well as food, fuel, fiber and building materials, with several times the yield obtained from modern “dwarf” hemp.
The Canadian hemp farmers have done their best to create a profitable hemp industry using only their permitted low-
THC varieties. However, their yields are far lower than hemp traditionally provided. Pre-prohibition films and photos show hemp growing up to 20 feet tall. Modern “industrial” strains reach less than half that height. Hempseed oil yields were once 300 gallons per acre, sometimes far more; modern strains produce 100 gallons per acre, or less. Compare the size and quality of local medicinal cannabis seeds with the seeds imported from Canada. Seeds from the high-THC varieties are twice as big and much tastier. And while pre-prohibition hemp was famously resistant to pests and diseases, the Canadian strains are not nearly as tough.
Oregon’s cannabis farmers have instinctively resisted proposals to plant “industrial” hemp anywhere near their grow sites. This wariness is justified if “industrial” refers only to the low-THC strains, a modern misconception heavily promoted by the prohibitionists. But cross-pollination among high-THC varieties will reinvigorate the species, not weaken it, and the occasional seeds in outdoor medical grows will be recognized as blessings
instead of commercial inconveniences. Medicinal and industrial hemp coexisted harmoniously for thousands of years before prohibition.
Restoring the freedom to plant high-grade hemp without restrictions can reverse the current economic crunch, mostly induced by the long-term artificial scarcity imposed by hemp prohibition in the first place. Hemp seed is a complete food that anyone can grow easily, so overall food costs come down. Between hempseed biodiesel and ethanol from crop waste (up to 1200 gallons per acre), locally produced fuel
lowers the cost of energy.
Hemp has the longest, strongest natural fiber, and the yield is at least three times that from cotton, and it doesn’t need chemicals. The leftover stalk fragments can yield four or five times as much paper per acre per year as trees, with no toxic waste, and the paper lasts centuries. Or they can be mixed with cement to form hempcrete, much lighter and stronger than concrete. Or
the stalks can be heat-pressed into boards, beams and panels that are twice as strong and light and fireproof as those made from trees. This can end any remaining economic incentive for clear-cutting what remains of our forests.
Sixteen-foot hemp forests growing in four months can provide huge areas of cooling shade for people or tree seedlings, suppressing weeds without any herbicides, replenishing soil, preventing erosion, absorbing megatons of CO2 and restoring oxygen lost through deforestation, so public health improves and health care costs come down.
Thousands of small family farms went under because of chemical debts and an economy skewed by the ban on hemp. Legal hemp makes small-scale farming much more viable. Since hemp can be used to make non-toxic equivalents of any product made from oil, the opportunities for establishing local manufacturing facilities and job creation are limited only by our imagination. If we use hemp to the full extent Nature intended, localizing production of our basic necessities will decentralize power, which is why the powers-that-were outlawed it in the first place. Abundance is the best antidote for crime, including the massive high-level crime entrenched in the social order.
Thousands of cannabis users now have an opportunity to show that their analytical abilities are unimpaired, that they can see through the prohibitionists’ disinformation and recognize what is in their long-term best interests.
Waves Forest is a DJ for Takilma FM at www.takilmafm.com. For more info at FreeTheEarthlings.com and RexResearch.com
Hemp is one of the most useful plants on Earth.
For thousands of years, humans have used parts of the hemp plant for food, textiles, paper, fabric, and fuel oil. Today, modern processing technologies have made it possible to create alternatives to gasoline, plastic, and other petroleum products that can help the human race lessen its reliance on polluting and expensive fossil fuels.
The hemp plant is a renewable resource that can be produced domestically. It grows quickly, naturally resists plant diseases, requires little weeding, thrives in most climates, and enriches the soil it grows in.
Here are some of its most important applications:
Food & Nutrition
Body Care
Paper
Fabric & Textiles
Rope
Fuels
Plastic Fibers
Building Materials
Lubrication
Livestock Feed & Bedding
& Many More Uses...
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Many Uses Of HempFrom Information Distillery
Hemp And Economic Recovery
By Waves Forest
A Block of Hempcrete, which uses hemp fibers for strength
Ancient cave drawing depicting hemp
More Questions answered by our resident growing experts at Paradise Supply in Grants Pass. To submit your question, email [email protected]
Question: My friend uses two amendments in his garden I am curious about, bokashi and micorrhizae. How do they work and are they organic?
Answer: Bokashi introduces fundamental microorganisms which increases the nutrient availability to the plant. Bokashi is comprised of lactobacillus and other strains of bacteria that help to compost organic materials. The bacteria is inoculated onto rice hulls or some other substrate so when you put it in your soil the bacteria colonizes there. The microorganisms in the bokashi will work with the mycorrhizea in a symbiotic fashion. Mycorrhizea is a beneficial fungi that works with the plant’s root system to help obtain nutrients from the soil. While these products are natural the substrates they are introduced with may not be. Check each manufactures package for an organic certification.
Question: What is "Ph" and why does it matter what "Ph" number my soil is?
Answer: PH is a measurement of acidity
or alkalinity. Which is to say, this is the relationship between hydronium ions and hydroxide ions (got that?). ph is important for the proper uptake of nutrients that a plant needs at any given time. PH will dictate what nutrients are readily available. Too low of a ph will “burn” your roots and not allow uptake of nutrient. Too high of a ph will lock nutrient out of the plant as well. It is best to swing your ph slightly in soil between 5.8 to 6.8, and in hydro 5.5. to 6.3.
Question: I have heard a lot about LED lighting for indoor gardens. How do they compare to typical HID lights such as High Pressure Sodium and Metal Halide, do they save energy and still produce the same?
Answer: LED manufacturers have made many claims concerning “equivalencies” to HID or HPS lighting. If you are growing
lettuce or micro-greens indoors, LEDs will do well.
Otherwise, you will be better served to use a
multi bulb T-5 fluorescent fixture for small starts and vegetative growth, then transferring to a fixed HID/HPS lighting system for flowering.
As far as light output, lumen for lumen, they don’t compare. Canopy penetration and spectrum are also issues. Stick with tried and true technology, until the new tech catches up.
Would you rather end up with a pound of mids, or a half pound of the chronic?
I grew up raising cattle with my grandpa the old fashioned way. No antibiotics, no cruelty, no force-feeding, and chasing the cows could earn you a boot to the ass. Fast forward to our present day treatment of livestock, and the horrors are endless. The consequences are an unhealthy populace, environmental destruction, and animal cruelty. The same is true of your plants.
If you are just starting out with your first crop you are probably dreaming of massive buds towering overhead. The kind of yields grow room legends are made of. But consider this: the reason we treated those cows gently was not just to keep them fat, but to keep stress, and the negative energy it creates out of the meat. Sure, you can pump a cow up to massive proportions, just like you can bend, break, prune, and manipulate your plants in many different ways to get a bigger yield, but is it worth it if the bud you produce carries that negative energy forward? I even heard that plants scream when you cut them, we just can’t hear it because of the low frequency.
If you aren’t moved to try a low-stress natural approach to growing by the spirtual perspective, consider the realist perspective–you aren’t going to be a natural Cervantes right out of the chute. (If you haven’t heard of Cervantes, and you plan to grow bud stop what you’re doing. Even Cervantes wasn’t a natural Cervantes, he had to work for it. There are no shortcuts to growing great buds consistently. Diseases can wipe out your grow faster than a swat team, and every time you bend, break, cut, or stress a plant you create an opportunity for a disease to develop. If you are a master grower with an impeccably clean grow, and you are basically hanging from the ceiling over your plants like a ninja waiting to spring into
Superior Cannabis gardens are what gardeners want for their efforts, and planting by the phases of the Moon makes this possible. Seeds germinate faster. Plants are hardier and more disease-resistant. They blossom sooner and bear more fruit. Just as importantly, they better resist the stress of harsh weather, drought and insect infestation. Naturally, good gardening techniques must still be adhered to. Gardens need be watered, pruned, mulched, hoed, weeded and fertilized. If you have an outside or in side cannabis garden, paying attention to the Moon phases may be the easiest part of your cannabis gardening experience but the one with the biggest rewards for growing marijuana.
Phases of the moon for growing cannabis.Gardening by the moon phases is all a matter of timing. Since we are able to anticipate the phases, we can plan ahead and maximize the connection between the solar system and biological cycles to gain optimum results in the cannabis garden.
The Moon symbolizes emotions, instincts, habits and routine. It describes the ways in which we feel most nurtured and secure. The Moon also reflects the public mood as it changes signs every two to two and half days.
The Moon travels monthly through each of the 12 signs of the Zodiac, staying approximately 2 and a half
CCuullttiivvaattiioonnCCaannnnaabbiiss CCoonnnneeccttiioonn PPaaggee 2211
Low Stress Is The Secret To High Quality Yields
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The Phases of the Moon for Growing Marijuana
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action at the sign of trouble, then stress techniques could enhance your yield.
On the other hand, if you are a new grower, or a grower who tries all the latest huge-yield tricks, but your bud is mediocre, consider going au natural for a round. Those cows always looked happy, and the meat was superb. If you ever hear a grower say it’s easy, or they’ve never had a problem, scream “Cops!” and run the hell out of there. Growing decent bud is more than most people can handle. I say that not to discourage you from trying, but to remind you that a great grower is an artisan, and that you will never become great with shortcuts.
By all means keep growing, just consider that the size of the yield is only one factor in your pursuit. After all, a pound of mids is good, but a half pound of the chronic is better.
days in each sign. As it does so it forms an angular relationship with the Sun that we call a Phase of the Moon. Phase actually means the angle between Moon, Earth and Sun. Moon orbits the Earth and the Earth orbits the Sun. It is the Earth's orbit that defines the ecliptic which is divided symbolically into the Zodiac.
First of all, phases occur in two stages - Waxing and Waning.
The Moon is Waxing - growing - during these phases:New Moon | Crescent Moon | First quarter Moon | Gibbous Moon
It is Waning - shrinking - during these phases: Full Moon | Disseminating | Second Quarter | Balsamic
As a general rule of thumb when the Moon is waxing, plants develop leaves and above ground systems, when it is waning plants develop their root systems. Planting leafy crops such as cannabis that grow above ground are best sown at waxing moon and those that will require strong root systems or grow below ground should be sown after full moon, in the waning phase.
We can now divide these phases into four quarters.
New Moon to First quarter
First quarter to Full Moon
Waxing Full Moon to Second quarter
Second quarter to New Moon again. - Waning
These 4 phases can be useful to apply the rule of thumb Plant | Feed Harvest|Destroy If you get these 4 main quarters fixed, you will go a long way to understanding cycles.The 4 intermediate phases also form a quaternary of activity.
Crescent, Gibbous, Disseminating, Balsamic
Crescent moon phase is when the best germination occurs and is a good time for thinning out seedlings to give room for the rapid growth that occurs at the next phase.
Gibbous moon phase is when there is a greater uptake of nutrients from the soil, and swelling of fruits. Disseminating moon is an excellent time for seed setting and ripening. Balsamic phase is the best time for destroying weeds, pruning trees, and all preparation for the next cycle.
It is important to note that you should not do any gardening task at the exact time of a phase. Wait a few hours. Each of the exact phase positions marks a critical time as the moon makes a shift from one phase to the next.
Because the Sun stays in a sign for a full month there are some months that are better for certain gardening tasks than others. Interfacing the Sun cycle and the Moon's cycle takes a little skill but is not 1 difficult once you apply the logic.
If the Sun is in a 'fertile' sign for a month, then you should take advantage of that month to do some gardening - naturally the best results occur when the Moon is also is a fertile sign and the correct phase with the Sun. The best days for doing specific tasks will depend on the Moon's sign. To synthesize the phase with the sign is important in planting. There is no point in planting at the correct phase, if the Moon is in an incompatible sign - one which might damage or inhibit growth.
Remember the Sun stays in a sign for approximately a month, the Moon passes through all 12 signs in a month, so stays in a sign for approximately 2 and a half days. A new moon always occurs when the Sun and Moon are in the same sign. A full moon occurs when the Moon is in the opposite sign to the Sun.
The crowd was responsive, and were hopefully motivated to take action.
Bands from across the region played, and some from outside the area, too. The line up included Unified Culture, Vinny Rip, Frankie Hernandez and more. Henry Turner returned again, from New Orleans, to play his great Blues!
We are looking forward to another great Emerald Empire Hemp Fest next year. Great job Dank and your army of volunteers!
Problems Inc. v. Commissioner. If a dispensary sells marijuana andalso engages in the separate business of care-giving, the caregiving expenses are deductible. If only 10% of the premises is used to dispense marijuana, most of the rent is deductible. Still, good record-keeping is essential. See Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Persist Despite Tax Obstacles.”
Almost every ganja-preneur that I know is trying to open a collective/dispensary/club. I wonder how many of them changed their mind when they saw this decision get handed down. I wonder how many of them have no idea what 280e reform is? The scariest part about this case to me, is that they had a forensic accountant go so far back in time (8 years) to find their evidence. How many other dispensaries will experience the same fate? How many ongoing legal battles will be affected by this decision? One thing is for sure, there will no doubt be more battles ahead, and we need to push Congress for 280e reform, NOW!
10th Annual EEHFCont. from Pg. 9
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Bend Brew FestAugust 16 - 18, 2012Bend, OR 97702
Back by popular demand, the 9th Annual Bend Brewfest quenches Bend’s thirst for fine craft brews. The 2012 festival will be held at the Les Schwab Amphitheater . This years event will feature a great selection of food, family friendly booths (till 7pm!) and a fantastic selection of beer from over 45 brewers. For more info, call (541) 312-8510 or go to www.bendbrewfest.com.
BBQ & BluegrassAugust 17, 2012205 Doris St.Springfield, OR 97477
Bluegrass music and a barbecue in the perfect setting. Relax to the music of the Alder Street All-stars and the Cascadia Folk Quartet. Food and beer garden by the Pump Cafe. For more info, go to www.willamalane.org.
Seattle HempfestAugust 17 - 19, 20123130 Alaskan Way W.Seattle, WA
Seattle Hempfest is founded in the belief that the public is better served when citizens and public officials work cooperatively in order to successfully accomplish common goals. Seattle Hempfest's objective and purpose is to educate the public on the myriad of potential benefits offered by the Cannabis plant, including the medicinal, industrial, agricultural, economic, environmental, and other benefits and applications. In particular, Seattle Hempfest seeks to advance the cause of Cannabis policy reform through education, while advancing the public image of the Cannabis advocate or enthusiast through example. For more info, go to www.hempfest.org.
Port of Toledo Wooden Boat ShowAugust 18 - 19, 2012Toledo, OR 97391
The Annual Port of Toledo Wooden Boat Show is an old-fashioned, down-home waterfront festival where everything is fun and nothing much is fancy. Launched in 2005, the first Wooden Boat Show kicked off to coincide with the City of Toledo’s Centennial Celebration. Held in August when the weather is fantastic, the Wooden Boat Show showcases vintage and new wooden boats at Port Dock One! The finest boat builders in the Pacific Northwest come to display their work and demonstrate their craft. Live music, food from various vendors and events for the whole family make this a festival not to be missed. Local artisans line the walk to display and sell their work. For more info, go to www.portoftoledo.org.
Jefferson State Hemp Expo 2012August 24 - 25, 20123833 Holland Loop Rd.Cave Junction, OR 97523
Three day music festival and educational hemp exposition featuring speakers and hemp industry advocates, 30+ regional and national music acts on two stages. Jefferson State Hemp Expo is founded on the belief that through awareness, education, and the cooperation and coordination of citizens and public officials, many complex social issues can be solved. The objective and purpose is to host a world class music event that provides outlets for cannabis advocates to educate the public on the many potential benefits and uses of the cannabis plant. For more info, go to www.jeffersonstatehempexpo.com.
World of Wine FestivalAugust 25, 2012Jacksonville, OR 97530
The World of Wine (WOW) Festival, the Rogue Valleys premier wine showcase. Some 40 wineries will participate. More than 750 people will attend the grand public tasting, which accompanies a professionally judged wine competition. This festival features the very best of southern Oregon wines. Come for the wine, but stay to enjoy the food, live music and silent auction. New venue this year in Jacksonville, OR. For more info, go to www.worlofwinefestival.com.
Selma Community Center Reggae FestivalAugust 31, 201218255 Redwood Hwy.Selma, OR 97538
Overground and One Drop Records presents: Selma Community Center Reggae Festival featuring Lutan Fyah, Messenjah Selah, Blaak Lung, Sista Molly Rose, Zebulan Fyah, Arkaingelle & Only Natural. Italian dinner & door opens at 6pm, show starts at 7. $20 at the door, $18 in advance. Tickets on sale at Good Earth, Havoc Clothing & Wheels Are Turning Garden Supply, or call (707) 362-0728.
The Willamette Valley RumblequeAugust 25, 2012 4740 Main StreetSpringfield, OR 97478
Local vendors and backyard chefs will compete for bragging rights to the area’s best barbecue! Area celebrity judges and food lovers will decide on the best chicken, tri-tip and pork ribs. Come join the fun and enjoy a true sampling of the best local barbeque delights! Barbeque - Beer Garden - Live Music - Food Booths - Various Vendors - Friendly Competition with $1500 in cash and prizes and More! Free Admission. For more info, go to www.komosunlimited.com.
Ashland Gathering of the Peacemakers &August 31 - September 2, 2012 Labor Day Weekend One Love FestivalSeptember 3, 2012Jackson Wellsprings2253 Hwy 99 NAshland, OR 97520
3-day Gathering of the Peacemakerson on Labor Day Weekend Aug 31-Sept 3 in Ashland, OR. Nightly performances by Indubious, Alcyon Massive, Cornflower, Rocker Tee, Synrgy, David Kai, Beloved, Sequoyah Oregon, and Har-I. The pace of our 3-day Gatherings is enlivening yet relaxed. Our gatherings are small, affordable and family-friendly and include people from all ages, lifestyles and spiritual paths. Many come with friends or family and many come alone. Everyone leaves recharged and inspired and ready to play their part in the global transformation to love. For more info, go to www.onelovepress.com.
Sky Candy - Annual Yachats Kite FestivalSeptember 1, 2012Adobe Resort LawnYachats, OR 97498
This fun historic festival (reintroduced in 2011) will take place on the expansive lawn of the Adobe Resort. Bring the entire family for kite demonstrations, kite-making classes, contests, public kite flying….and more. Brought to you by Yachats Mercantile and the Adobe Resort. For more info, call (541) 547-3060 or go to www.yachats.org.
Taste of Harry & DavidSeptember 1 - 2, 20121314 Center DriveMedford, OR 97501
Southern Oregon’s premier food and wine event. Sample a delicious array of extravagant food and wine from over 50 fine sampling stations. Enjoy live music while taking advantage of special sales and more! For more info, call (541) 864-2278 or go to www.harryanddavid.com.
Lincoln City's 5th Annual Pride FestivalSeptember 6 - 9, 2012801 SW Hwy 101, 4th FloorLincoln City, OR 97367
Formerly the Iris Pride Festival! Join in on this fabulous Pride weekend. Included in this year’s event will be amazingly fun entertainment, music, dancing, food, wine and beer garden, Flamingo Bingo, drag shows, camel rides on the beach, vendors and kids activities. Come celebrate diversity in Lincoln City! For more info, call (800) 452-2151 or (541) 996-1274 or go to www.oregoncoast.org.
Musicfest NWSeptember 6 - 12, 20122220 NW QuimbyPortland, OR 97210
Portland’s largest and most successfulmusic festival is going to be bigger than ever! Produced by Willamette Week, MFNW teams up with music professionals from the local, regional, and national music scene to curate this multi-venue festival featuring bands from indie, hip hop, punk and more musical backgrounds. Twelve years ago, Portland, Oregon was a sleepy burg, and MusicfestNW was little more than a hope and a prayer—a hope of putting on a music festival that matched the outsized ambitions of the alt-weekly that founded it and a prayer that the wheels wouldn’t fall off. Today, Portland is one of the most exciting cities on the globe. And MusicfestNW has become the third largest indoor music festival in the United States, one that a couple of years ago, Time magazine called one of 50 Authentic American Experiences. For more info, go to www.musicfestnw.com.
*ATTENTION*The wrong date and time were printed in the previous issue of OCC for Hempstalk 2012. The following is the corrected information on this event. Appologies for any inconvenience.
Hempstalk 2012September 8 - 9, 2012Kelly Point ParkN. Marine Dr. & Lombard St.Portland, OR
Portland's annual Hempstalk Festival in Portland, Oregon advocates decriminalization of marijuana for medicinal, industrial, and recreational use. Founded in 2005 by the Hemp and Cannabis Foundation, the festival takes place the weekend after Labor Day in September, and features food vendors, live music, guest speakers and information booths. This public event has always been free to attend. This year's theme, "2012: The End of the Drug War - The Year of Reform." For more info, call (503) 235-4606 or go to www.hempstalk.org.
Pendleton Round-UpSeptember 12 - 15, 20121205 SW Court Ave.Pendleton, OR 97801
One of the largest four-day rodeos in the world. 2012 will mark 102 years of rodeo excellence. Along with the rodeo this authentic Western Town is alive with entertainment of all types including a carnival, night pageant, 2 parades and too much to list! Pendleton, in Oregon’s Rugged Country. For more info, call (541) 276-2553 or go to www.pendletonroundup.com.
Mount Angel OktoberfestSeptember 13 - 16, 2012Mount angel, OR 97362
This small community was settled by German pioneers in the 1800s and readily reminds one of the rich Bavarian countryside. Oregon's oldest and best-loved Oktoberfest began in 1966 as a traditional harvest festival to celebrate the bounty of the earth and the goodness of creation. It is Oregon's largest folk festival. For more info, call toll free at (855) 899-6338 or go to www.oktoberfest.org.
Ride the RogueSeptember 15, 2012Palmerton ParkRogue River, OR
Ride the Rogue begins it’s journey in Rogue River Oregon and offers 3 rides (25, 65, 100 miles). The event offers a historic nature hike for families as well as fun, exercise, a gourmet feast and live music. For more info, call (541) 582-4488 or go to www.ridetherogue.com.
River Fest 2012September 21 - 23, 2012Waterfront ParkPortland, OR
Join in the fun as Portland caps off the summer with the biggest event ever to celebrate the Willamette River. RiverFest offers a family-friendly chance to come down by the riverside, get out on the water, take river tours, enjoy live music, learn first-hand about the river's history and environment, clean-up the riverbank, and view river spectacles. Join us this summer to celebrate the river on the river. For more info, go to www.portlandriverfest.org.
Pacific NW Brew CupSeptember 28 - 30, 20121792 Marine Dr.Astoria, OR 97103
Oktoberfest style Beer Festival-Family friendly with kids activities, food vendors, games and live music. Located east of the Columbia River Maritime Museum, adjacent to the historic train depot. For more info, call (503) 325-7414 or go to www.oldoregon.com.
Events Calendar
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CLINICS, CO-OPS, & ORGS
45TH PARALLEL GROUP
1343 S.W. 30th Street
Ontario, OR 97914
(541) 889-6147
ALTERNATIVE MEDICAL CHOICES
Has Moved!
(971) 270-0262 Fx (888) 846-1172
OR & WA MMJ
www.altmedchoices.com
ALTERNATIVE MEDICAL SPECIALTY
CLINIC, LLC Silverton Clinic Now Open!
Cards - Exams - Home Visits Available -
All Staff Are RN's-Discreet & Professional
Call (503) 307-5840
CANNA MEDICINE
A Grower And Patient Co-op
Serving The Salem/ Corvallis Area
(503) 339-6352
www.cannamedicine.org
CHERRY CITY COMPASSION
Connecting OMMP Patients
2025 25th St. SE
Salem, OR 97302
CherryCityCompassion.org
CHRONIC CARE, INC.
570 Lawrence St. Suite 101
Eugene, OR 97401
(541) 344-1688, Fax (541) 344-8110
www.chroniccareinc.com
CLOUD NINE CLUB
651 High St. Suite #8
Salem, OR 97301
(503) 363-4435
COLUMBIA GORGE ALTERNATIVE
MEDICINE
1302 A Street
Hood River, OR 97031
(541) 308-0306
COOS COUNTY CO-OP
3682 Tremont Ave.
North Bend, OR 97459
(541) 751-0005
GROWER PATIENT RESOURCES
3205 SE 13th Ave. #420
Portland, OR
(503) 236-4204
www.luckybud.org
HERBALIST FARMER
45 NE 122nd Ave.
Portland, OR 97220
(503) 252-9088
www.herbalistfarmer.org
HUMAN COLLECTIVE
11509 SW Pacific Hwy.
Tigard, OR 97223
(503) 208-3042
www.humancollective.org
INSTITUTE FOR CANNABIS
THERAPEUTICS
332 W. 6th St. Medford OR 97501
(541) 779-1448 Fax (541) 779-1665
instituteforcannabistherapeutics.com
LINN-BENTON OMMP RESOURCE
CENTER
Uniting Patients, Caregivers and Growers
30942 A Ehlen Dr. Albany, OR 97321
(541) 981-2507
MAMA
MOTHERS AGAINST MISUSE AND ABUSE
www.mamas.org
3 Locations:
PORTLAND OR
5217 SE 28th Ave. (Steele & 28th)
(503) 233-4202 Fax (503) 233-8266
THE DALLES, OR
319 E. 7th. St.
(541) 298-4202 Fax (541) 296-2983
BEND, OR
454 NE Revere St.
(503) 233-4202
MERCY CENTERS
1745 Capital St. NE
Salem, OR 97301
(503) 363-4588
www.mercycenters.org
MT. HOOD WELLNESS CENTER
14325 SE Stark
Portland, OR 97233
(971) 279-4116
www.mthoodwellness.com
NATIONAL GREEN FRIENDS RC
7958 SE Foster
Portland, OR 97206
Mon-Sat 12pm-8pm (503) 777-2355
www.nationalgreenfriends.com
OREGON ALTERNATIVE, LLC.
169 S. Old Pacific Hwy.
Tri-City, OR (Myrtle Creek Area)
(541) 863-4173
OREGON GREEN FREE
OGF OMMP Resource Center
10209 SE Division St. Bldg. B
Portland, OR 97266
(503) 760-2671 fax: (503) 345-1157
www.oregongreenfree.net
OREGON GREEN FREE
Mid-Valley Chapter
(541) 704-7052 message
OGF SOUTH CHAPTER
(541) 210-8790
www.oregongreenfree.net
OREGON MEDICAL CANNABIS
UNIVERSITY
2900 SW Cornelius Pass Rd. Ste. 548
Hillsboro, OR 97123
(503) 649-2999 www.omcu.net
OREGON NORML
PO Box 16057
Portland, OR 97292-0057
(541) 239-6110
www.ornorml.org
PATIENT GROWER NETWORK
PGN Lodge, 2-9 pm Tu - Sa
4090 Cherry Ave. Keizer, OR
Networking, MD Appts
PATIENTS CHOICE CLINIC SERVICE
332 W. 6th St. Medford, OR 97501
Ph (541) 499-5431 Fax (877) 885-9910
732 N. 11th St. Klamath Falls, OR
(541) 205-6968 patientschoiceclinics.com
RIP CITY REMEDIES
3325 SE Division St.
Portland, OR 97202
(503) 235-6000
www.ripcityremidies.com
ROGUE RIVER HERBAL PAIN
MANAGEMENT
106 E. Main St.
Rogue River, OR 97537
(541) 582-9150
www.rrherbalcenter.com
SOUTHERN OREGON ALTERNATIVE
MEDICINE
836 E. Main St. #6, Medford, OR 97504
(541) 779-5235 Fax (541) 779-0479
www.southernoregon
alternativemedicine.com
SOUTHERN OREGON CANNABIS CLUB
1457 NE 6th St. # B
Grants Pass, OR 97526
(541) 660-0209
SOUTHERN OREGON CANNABIS
COMMUNITY CENTER
332 W. 6th St. Medford OR 97501
(541) 779-1448 Fax (541) 779-1665
www.so-norml.org
THE GREENERY
280 E. Hersey St. #20
Ashland, OR 97520
(541) 295-2794
www.ashlandgreenery.org
THE HIGH HOPES FARM
Statewide Services For OMMP Patients,
Growers & Caregivers
(541) 890-9357
www.thehighhopesfarm.com
VOTER POWER OF OREGON
www.voterpower.org
2 Locations:
PORTLAND, OR.
6701 SE Foster
(503) 224-3051
MEDFORD, OR
1708 W Main St
(541) 245-6634
WILLAMETTE VALLEY COMPASSION
COALITION
Tiff's Get Your Hemp On
4192 Liberty Rd. South
Salem, OR 97302
(503) 362- HEMP (4367)
WORLD FAMOUS CANNABIS CAFE
322 SE 82nd Ave.
Portland, OR 97216
www.usacannabiscafe.org
YOUR HEALTHY ALTERNATIVE MEDICAL
CLINIC
3482 Liberty Road S. Salem, OR
Ph. (503) 391-8388 Fax (503) 363-0276
www.yhamd.com
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
GREEN LEAF LAB
The Northwest's Premier
Cannalysis™ Laboratory
(503) 250-2912
www.greenleaflab.org
PAUL LONEY, ATTORNEY
Practicing Medical Marijuana Law
(541) 787-0733
SUNRISE ANALYTICAL LLC
Test For THC
(503) 625-6593
www.sunriseanalytical.com
WOODFIRST - MOBILE SAW MILL
Turn Your Timber To Lumber, And Quality
Slabs, Custom Furniture, Tree Falling,
Trades Considered. Insured
Chris Johnson (541) 892-0323
NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
NORML AND THE NORML FOUNDATION
1600 K Street, NW Suite 501
Washington, DC 20006-2832
(888) 67-NORML (888-676-6765)
(202) 483-5500
www.norml.org
AMERICANS FOR SAFE ACCESS
1322 Webster Street, Suite 402
Oakland, CA 94612
(510) 251-1856
www.americansforsafeaccess.org
YOUCANNECT.COM
(Formerly Budbook.org)
Your Medical Marijuana Online Community
www.youcannect.com
DRUG POLICY ALLIANCE
925 15th Street NW, 2nd Floor
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 216-0035
www.drugpolicy.org
MARIJUANA POLICY PROJECT
P.O. Box 77492 Capitol Hill
Washington, DC 20013
(202) 462-5747
www.mpp.org
STUDENTS FOR SENSIBLE DRUG POLICY
www.schoolsnotprisons.com
U of O chapter contact
TOKE OF THE TOWN
www.tokeofthetown.com
Village Voice Media
JACK HERER WEBSITE
www.jackherer.com
EQUIPMENT/SUPPLIES
ANEVAY ORGANIC SOILS
3650 Alley Ln.
Medford, OR 97501
(541) 601-2136
CANNATEST
Know What's In Your Medicine
Testing for Full Profiles Including:
CBD-CBN-THC-THCV-CBG-CBC
www.canna-test.com
DRAGON HERBARIUM
4638 S.W. Beaverton- Hillsdale Hwy
Portland, OR 97221
(503) 244-7049
www.dragonherbarium.com
DRAGON'S LAIR
210 Northwest 6th Street
Grants Pass, OR 97526
(541) 479-5617
www.dragonslairglass.com
GREEN LIFE GARDENING
Indoor Gardening Supplies
51538 S. Hwy 97, Ste 5 (La Pine Square)
La Pine, OR 97739
(541) 536-1191
MAGIC MUSHROOM / OREGON GIFTS
"Look For The Giant Mushrooms"
Next to I-5, Exit 136
Sutherlin, OR 97479
(541) 459-7481
MARY'S INDOOR GARDEN DESIGN
Will Get You Growing
Anywhere In Oregon!
(503) 820-1617
OGF GRATEFUL GARDEN SUPPLY
(503) 715-0120
www.gratefulgardensupply.com
OPERATION PIPE DREAMS
2021 W. Main St. Medford, OR 97501
(541) 773-3165
www.myspace.com/
operationpipedreams
OREGON ORGANIKS
Your Wholesale Oregon Organic
Garden Supplier
www.oregonorganiks.com
ORGANIC GLASS ART
164 Market Ave.
Coos Bay, OR 97420
(541) 808-0577
PANDORA'S BOX
www.pandoraspipes.com
5 Locations:
UMATILLA, OR
1300 6th St. #E
(541) 922-9237
EUGENE, OR
2001 Franklin Blvd.
(541) 485-7375
ROSEBURG, OR
1425 SE Stephens
(541) 672-7473
KENNEWICK, WA
5300 W. Clearwater
(509) 396-9700
RICHLAND, WA
960 George Washington Way
(509) 943-7473
PARADISE SUPPLY
560 N.E. "F" St.
Grants Pass, OR
(541)955-7224
PUFFIN STUFF – OMMP SERVICES
1040 Crater Lake Ave. Ste A
Medford, OR 97501
(541) 499-0489
SILVER SPOON
8521 S.W. Barbur Blvd.
Portland, OR 97219
(503) 245-0489
www.silverspoonpdx.com
SMOKEY'S NOVELTIES & GIFT SHOP
2080 Lancaster Dr. NE
SALEM, OR 97305
(503) 339-7320
SOUTH CASCADE ORGANICS LLC
100% Organic Earth, Friendly Enzymes
Find Store Near You At
www.socascade.com/SFL-100.html
www.socascade.com
THE PIPELINE
2 locations:
ALBANY, OR 97321
1907 Pacific Blvd SE
(541) 981-2364
LEBANON, OR 97355
732 Park St.
(541) 258-3139
www.myspace.com/albanypipeline
VICTORIA'S STATION
THE STATION , LLC
120 Galice Rd.
Merlin, OR 97532
(541) 471-1396
APPAREL
STONED MADE CLOTHING
Hand Made Oregon Apparel
www.stonedmade.com
LIBATIONS & CUISINE
MACK & DUB'S BREAKFAST CLUB
4200 NE Martin Luther King Blvd.
Portland, OR 97211
(714) 603-5644
MACK & DUB'S EXCELLENT CHICKEN &
WAFFLES
3601 NE Martin Luther King Blvd.
PORTLAND, OR 97211
(503) 933-7662
www.mackanddub.com
THE GYPSY
205 W. 8th St.
Medford, OR 97501
(541) 770-1212
ENTERTAINMENT
KSKQ COMMUNITY RADIO
89.5 FM "Home Grown" Radio
Streaming Live at KSKQ.com
330 East Hersey St, Ste #2
Ashland, OR 97520
(541) 482-3999
STATE OF JEFFESON
Performing At Festivals, Concerts,
Special Events, And More!
Organizers of Jefferson State Hemp Expo
www.stateofjefferson.org
THE HERBAL CREW
Delivering Good Music, Positive Vibes &
An Irie Feeling All Over Oregon!
Check Website For Information
www.theherbalcrew.com
THE ROGUE NEW ROCK 96.9 FM
Southern Oregon's Local Music Show
"Off The Hook" with Wendy King
Sundays at 7pm
www.969therogue.com