Legislature(2015 - 2016)ANCH LIO AUDITORIUM

09/14/2016 01:00 PM House JUDICIARY

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01:03:33 PM Start
01:05:34 PM Implementation and Regulation Status of Alaska Marijuana Legalization, Ballot Measure 2, and Commercial Marijuana Industry.
05:08:28 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
Joint with Senate Judiciary
+ Implementation and Regulation Status of Alaska TELECONFERENCED
Marijuana Legalization, Ballot Measure 2 and
Commercial Marijuana Industry
-- Public & Invited Testimony --
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
                         JOINT MEETING                                                                                        
              SENATE JUDICIARY STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
               HOUSE JUDICIARY STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                    Anchorage LIO Auditorium                                                                                    
                       September 14, 2016                                                                                       
                           1:03 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATE JUDICIARY                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Lesil McGuire, Chair                                                                                                   
 Senator John Coghill, Vice Chair                                                                                               
 Senator Mia Costello                                                                                                           
 Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                         
 Senator Bill Wielechowski                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE JUDICIARY                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Gabrielle LeDoux, Chair                                                                                         
 Representative Bob Lynn                                                                                                        
 Representative Charisse Millett                                                                                                
 Representative Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATE JUDICIARY                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 All members present.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE JUDICIARY                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Wes Keller, Vice Chair                                                                                          
 Representative Neal Foster                                                                                                     
 Representative Matt Claman                                                                                                     
 Representative Kurt Olson                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
OTHER LEGISLATORS PRESENT                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative Dan Saddler                                                                                                      
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
IMPLEMENTATION AND REGULATION STATUS OF ALASKA MARIJUANA                                                                        
LEGALIZATION, BALLOT MEASURE 2, AND COMMERCIAL MARIJUANA                                                                        
INDUSTRY                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
        - HEARD                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CYNTHIA FRANKLIN, Director                                                                                                      
Alcoholic Beverage Control Board and Marijuana Control Board                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided an update on the implementation of                                                               
the marijuana legalization initiative.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
PETER MLYNARIK, Chair                                                                                                           
Marijuana Control Board                                                                                                         
Soldotna, Alaska                                                                                                                
POSITION STATEMENT: Testified on the Marijuana Control Board.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
KEN ALPER, Director                                                                                                             
Tax Division                                                                                                                    
Department of Revenue                                                                                                           
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Explained tax collection on marijuana sales.                                                              
                                                                                                                                
BRANDON SPANOS, Deputy Director                                                                                                 
Tax Division                                                                                                                    
Department of Revenue                                                                                                           
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Described Alaska's marijuana sales tax.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
PATRICE WALSH, Chief of Examinations                                                                                            
Division of Banking and Securities                                                                                              
Department of Commerce, Community and Economic Development                                                                      
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Answered questions regarding banking and the                                                              
marijuana industry.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
JAHNA LINDEMUTH, Attorney General (AG)                                                                                          
Department of Law (DOL)                                                                                                         
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Described how Alaska law does not allow for                                                               
marijuana social clubs.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
JANA WELTZIN, Owner/Operator                                                                                                    
JDW, LLC                                                                                                                        
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT: Described  legal  issues  encountered by  the                                                            
marijuana industry.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
BRUCE SCHULTE, Former Chair                                                                                                     
Marijuana Control Board                                                                                                         
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Provided  updates and  suggestions  for  the                                                            
marijuana regulatory process.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
RHONDA MARCY                                                                                                                    
Wasilla, Alaska                                                                                                                 
POSITION STATEMENT:  Commented on the limits imposed  by marijuana                                                            
regulations and provided suggestions.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SAMANTHA LAUDERT-RODGERS                                                                                                        
Chugiak, Alaska                                                                                                                 
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Testified   that  the  marijuana  regulatory                                                            
process is taking too long.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MARTIN CHRISTENSEN                                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in favor of marijuana clubs.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MARGE STONEKING, Executive Director                                                                                             
American Lung Association                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT: Explained  the  health  risks of  second-hand                                                            
marijuana smoke and vapor.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
EUGENE CARL HABERMAN                                                                                                            
Matanuska-Susitna Valley, Alaska                                                                                                
POSITION STATEMENT:  Criticized time  limits for public  testimony                                                            
and the absence of many committee members.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
JOSHUA TOBIN                                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Expressed  frustration  with  the  marijuana                                                            
regulatory process.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MAGGIE MULDONADO (Last name was unclear)                                                                                        
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Testified  in  support of  Pot  Luck  Events                                                            
marijuana club.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DON HART                                                                                                                        
Wasilla, Alaska                                                                                                                 
POSITION STATEMENT:  Testified on the constitutionality  of zoning                                                            
by initiative with regard to marijuana laws.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TIMOTHY HALE                                                                                                                    
Butte, Alaska                                                                                                                   
POSITION  STATEMENT:   Encouraged   the  legislature   to  address                                                            
marijuana clubs and spoke of testing drivers for marijuana.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
JOHN RANDALL                                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in support of marijuana clubs.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
HEATHER THOMAS                                                                                                                  
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Expressed support  for  clubs  that are  not                                                            
alcohol-centered.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER (Name given but indecipherable)                                                                            
Chugiak, Alaska                                                                                                                 
POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in support of medical marijuana.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
PETER (Indecipherable last name)                                                                                                
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Testified in support of marijuana clubs.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
LEE HAYWOOD, Owner                                                                                                              
Pot Luck Events                                                                                                                 
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Described Pot Luck Events marijuana club.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:03:33 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GABRIELLE LEDOUX  called the joint meeting of  the House and                                                            
Senate  Judiciary  Standing  Committees  to  order  at  1:03  p.m.                                                              
Present  at the  call to  order  were Senator  Costello and  Chair                                                              
McGuire  and  Representatives  Lynn, Millett,  and  Chair  LeDoux.                                                              
Online were  Senator Micciche  and Representatives  Kreiss-Tomkins                                                              
and Drummond.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
^Implementation   and  Regulation   Status  of  Alaska   Marijuana                                                              
Legalization,   Ballot  Measure   2,   and  Commercial   Marijuana                                                              
Industry.                                                                                                                       
    Implementation and Regulation Status of Alaska Marijuana                                                                
    Legalization, Ballot Measure 2, and Commercial Marijuana                                                                
                            Industry                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  announced that the  only order of business  would be                                                              
an update  on the status  of the  implementation of  the marijuana                                                              
ballot initiative. She announced the first two witnesses.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:05:34 PM                                                                                                                    
CYNTHIA  FRANKLIN,  Director,  Alcoholic  Beverage  Control  Board                                                              
(ABC) and  Marijuana Control Board  (MCB), Anchorage,  Alaska, was                                                              
asked  by Chair  LeDoux for  an  update of  the Marijuana  Control                                                              
Board.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN  said she  will begin  with regulation projects  from                                                              
2015. The  Marijuana Control Board  had its first meeting  on July                                                              
2, 2015, and  it met a total of  17 times before the  end of 2015.                                                              
On  November 20,  the board  adopted nine  articles of  regulation                                                              
that  matched  those   anticipated  by  the  ballot   measure.  On                                                              
February 24, 2016,  the newly-named Alcohol and  Marijuana Control                                                              
Office  (AMCO) began  accepting  electronic  applications for  all                                                              
marijuana license  types. At its February 2016  board meeting, the                                                              
marijuana control  board approved a  roll out that called  for the                                                              
AMCO  staff to  process cultivation  and  testing licenses  first.                                                              
The  board decided  to look  at product  manufacturing and  retail                                                              
store applications  beginning at  its September meeting.  This was                                                              
to  give  licensed  cultivation  facilities  the  chance  to  grow                                                              
legal,  tested, and  tracked marijuana  before  stores or  product                                                              
manufacturing facilities  were licensed. It is a  requirement that                                                              
all  marijuana  in  those  facilities come  out  of  the  tracking                                                              
system from  licensed facilities,  she explained. The  board began                                                              
approving  cultivation and  testing facility  applications at  its                                                              
June 9-10 meeting.  It approved 28 licenses and met  again July 7-                                                              
8 and looked  at 30 more applications.  Most were approved  and "a                                                              
couple" were tabled.  The board met September 7-8  and approved 16                                                              
more cultivation  licenses, four manufacturing  facility licenses,                                                              
and 12  retail store licenses, but  members will meet  this Monday                                                              
to look at four  more applications that were on  their agenda. She                                                              
said the  board has approved  two testing facility  licenses, many                                                              
cultivation  licenses, four  product  manufacturing licenses,  and                                                              
12 retail  stores-with four more  expected on Monday, for  a total                                                              
of 81 licenses  approved by the  board, so far. She noted  that no                                                              
applications have  been denied, but the board  tabled applications                                                              
from Kodiak  and the Mat-Su  Borough when those  local governments                                                              
opted out or imposed a moratorium.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:08:41 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FRANKLIN added  that  those  applications were  tabled  until                                                              
after  votes  in those  jurisdictions.  She  referred  to a  chart                                                              
provided to  the committee, and  said the numbers change  daily in                                                              
the electronic database,  but there are 42 new  applications where                                                              
people  have  just   started  filling  out  forms   but  have  not                                                              
submitted  them.  There  are  203  applications  that  are  in  an                                                              
initiated  status, which  represent applicants  who have  not paid                                                              
to  have  their  paperwork  reviewed, but  who  might  already  be                                                              
advertising  and providing  local  governments with  notification.                                                              
There  are 18  applications under  review, which  means that  AMCO                                                              
has accepted  payment and is making  sure that the  application is                                                              
in order.  There are 11  that are incomplete,  where the  team has                                                              
requested  corrections by  the applicant.  There are  41 that  are                                                              
deemed complete,  which will be on  the agenda for the  meeting on                                                              
October 27-28.  There are  18 applications  that are delegated  by                                                              
the board,  which means the board  has voted to approve  them, but                                                              
they  are waiting  other  approvals  from local  governments,  the                                                              
Department of  Environment Conservation  (DEC), or the  state fire                                                              
marshal.  Two  applications  were  tabled.  There  are  25  active                                                              
applications,  whereby they  are  approved and  AMCO has  received                                                              
all of the final  approvals. They are now allowed  to get into the                                                              
tracking system  and get ready  for their preliminary  inspection.                                                              
She said she  checked with the enforcement team,  and she believes                                                              
that  14 have  been inspected  and  are operating.  There were  63                                                              
voided   applications,  nine   rescinded,  and   none  that   were                                                              
transferred,  denied,  or  expired.  There  are  a  total  of  432                                                              
applications  in  the  system. The  board  has  approved  multiple                                                              
marijuana handler  permit education  courses, and the  enforcement                                                              
staff  has issued  271 handler  permits.  The board  will meet  in                                                              
October  to approve  more licenses,  and  "we already  have 41  in                                                              
that  bin for  them." The  board will  also meet  in December  and                                                              
next  February.  She  said  she  is trying  to  get  the  schedule                                                              
similar  to the  Alcohol Beverage  Control  Board schedule,  which                                                              
meets five times a year.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:11:48 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FRANKLIN said  there  will be  a testing  facility  operating                                                              
three  to six  weeks from  now. The  board hired  a contractor  to                                                              
look at  the scientific part  of the facility,  because no  one at                                                              
AMCO  is  qualified  to  assess  the  testing  process.  It  is  a                                                              
scientific accrediting  facility called  A2LA. She explained  that                                                              
someone from  A2LA was flown in  and will come back in  October to                                                              
assess  other  approved  labs.  The  biggest  challenge  has  been                                                              
inadequate  staff.  The shortage  is  most apparent  in  answering                                                              
questions from  the public, applicants,  and local  governments. A                                                              
series  of email  boxes have  been created  to make  it easier  to                                                              
manage the questions, but it is still a challenge.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX  asked  if the  staff  are  the  same as  the  staff                                                              
working on alcohol.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:13:24 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN  said staff are  the same, and  they are the  same as                                                              
prior  to the  ballot measure,  but two  licensing examiners  have                                                              
been  added.  She  said  AMCO  attempted  to  have  all  examiners                                                              
working on both  substances so that there would not  be a big line                                                              
for marijuana and  a short line for alcohol. It  hasn't turned out                                                              
that  way, she  said, because  there are  many alcohol  inquiries.                                                              
The  10-day statutory  deadline  for  processing  alcohol is  very                                                              
strict, and alcohol permits seem to have gone up exponentially.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  said one of her  concerns is the letters  written to                                                              
prospective licensees.  She read the  letter that goes  to alcohol                                                              
inquiries, and noted  that it said, "Our staff is  eager to assist                                                              
you"  and  "feel  free  to  call  our  office  with  questions  or                                                              
concerns,"  and  "we are  here  to  assist  you in  your  business                                                              
venture."  The letter  sounds really  user friendly,  but the  new                                                              
letter for  the marijuana  applicants sounds  like you  don't want                                                              
them dropping in.  It says if a person has multiple  questions, he                                                              
or she will be  required to schedule an appointment.  "It's a real                                                              
different  tone"  for  the  marijuana   applicants.  "Is  there  a                                                              
reason-a rationale-for that different tone?"                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:16:38 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN  said the  alcohol instructions  were written  before                                                              
the marijuana  initiative passed.  She was  aware that  AMCO would                                                              
get  a  lot of  questions,  so  she  looked  to other  states  for                                                              
guidance  on how  to  deal with  an  avalanche  of inquiries.  The                                                              
marijuana  instructions  were written  after  the ballot  measure,                                                              
and the alcohol  instructions represents "the way  the office used                                                              
to be-before  we got  both substances."  She  said the office  has                                                              
not had  a chance to  update the  alcohol instructions,  but those                                                              
applicants  have told  her that  the office has  become much  more                                                              
stressed  and a  lot  less  friendly. It  is  simply  a matter  of                                                              
[inadequate staffing].  Her predecessor estimated that  the office                                                              
would  need twice  the staff  if  the ballot  measure passed,  and                                                              
that was not  done, so there are  a limited number of  people. She                                                              
noted that  liquor license  applicants have  to make  appointments                                                              
now. Not  all appointment slots are  full, so AMCO is  not turning                                                              
people away  for appointments. When  marijuana applicants  come in                                                              
for  appointments, they  have generally  expressed  that they  are                                                              
pleasantly surprised  that "we're pretty nice," but  the job can't                                                              
get done  with the current number  of staff. She said  she brought                                                              
a chart showing  the increase in  staff in other states,  but AMCO                                                              
did  not get  anywhere near  as many.  Basically, Alaska  is in  a                                                              
fiscal crisis,  and she recognizes  that AMCO needs  the licensing                                                              
receipts  to  fund new  staff.  "That  was  the approach  that  we                                                              
agreed to  take. What Alaska is  feeling now is  the ramifications                                                              
of  that  approach,"  she  explained.  The  enforcement  team  has                                                              
enough people  to inspect  but not  to do much  else, so  AMCO has                                                              
been  unable  to  run any  proactive  enforcement  programs,  like                                                              
underage buying,  because of  the loss of  the grant to  fund that                                                              
effort and because  the staff is very busy checking  in on all the                                                              
licensees-which is  a good thing, but other states  are doing more                                                              
enforcement for both alcohol and marijuana.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:19:25 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FRANKLIN said  she was  asked if  criminal background  checks                                                              
are  required,  and they  are  for  both applications  except  for                                                              
handler  permits, special  event  permits, or  other permits  that                                                              
non-licensees  apply for  on the  alcohol side.  The ABC board  is                                                              
required   by  statute  to   review  applicants   with  a   felony                                                              
conviction within the  past 10 years, but there  is no prohibition                                                              
on issuing  a license. Those applicants  are evaluated on  a case-                                                              
by-case  basis in  executive session.  Complications of  marijuana                                                              
applications  and enforcing  the rules  like residency,  operating                                                              
plans, and metric,  require a different process.  Alcohol is still                                                              
a paper-based  application process,  and the marijuana  process is                                                              
all  electronic,  which  demonstrates  that  applicants  have  the                                                              
means to enter the metric tracking system.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN  said  the board began  issuing  licenses based  on a                                                              
certification  filed by  each  applicant stating  that  he or  she                                                              
does  not  have  a  disqualifying  criminal  history.  Fingerprint                                                              
cards and  fees are  being collected  and will be  sent to  DPS on                                                              
the day that SB  165 becomes effective, which is  October 4, 2016.                                                              
She said  she has been ordered  by the board to  summarily suspend                                                              
any  license  in which  the  owner  has a  disqualifying  criminal                                                              
history, even though  the owner certified that he or  she did not.                                                              
She expects  there will be between  200 and 250  fingerprint cards                                                              
to  submit to  DPS. Many  of the  licenses are  owned by  entities                                                              
with multiple individuals,  and the legislature voted  that anyone                                                              
with a disqualifying  criminal history, no matter  their ownership                                                              
stake,  would be  disqualified.  She said  AMCO  has been  working                                                              
with DPS, which  forwarded SB 165 to the FBI, and  it was approved                                                              
this week.  So there  will be no  delay on the  back end  once the                                                              
act becomes  effective; DPS will  immediately begin  accepting the                                                              
fingerprint  cards  and running  them  through the  same  criminal                                                              
background check that is used for liquor license applicants.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:22:45 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  LEDOUX noted  that  Senator  Wielechowski  has been  online                                                              
since the  beginning of  the meeting,  and Representative  Saddler                                                              
is in  the audience.  She then asked  if there  was much  delay in                                                              
licensing because of the background check legislation.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:23:21 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FRANKLIN said  the  board  did not  delay  in  taking up  the                                                              
issue.  The  applications  began  being  filed  in  the  initiated                                                              
status  on  February   24,  2016,  which  requires   a  three-week                                                              
advertising   period  before   coming  forward   with  the   other                                                              
documentation. In  terms of getting  the applications  ready, AMCO                                                              
set  aside  the background  check  issue  and powered  on  through                                                              
getting   those  applications   ready  for   the  board,   and  30                                                              
applications  were brought  to  the board  for  its June  meeting.                                                              
There  was  no  May  meeting,  and  she  believes  there  was  one                                                              
applicant  for the April  meeting. The  delay was  not due  to the                                                              
background checks  but was due to  the desire to get the  board as                                                              
many applications  as possible  in its  first meeting  and getting                                                              
the handler  course programs up  and running so that  everyone who                                                              
was at that stage of approval could take handler courses.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:24:45 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX asked  if the board is where it is  supposed to be in                                                              
issuing licenses.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FRANKLIN said,  yes,  and added  that  anytime an  electronic                                                              
system  starts   up,  there   will  be  glitches.   Administrative                                                              
services  and  the   IT  team  in  the  Department   of  Commerce,                                                              
Community,  and  Economic  Development  (DCCED)  have  prioritized                                                              
AMCO's  needs   over  other  divisions'   needs  because   of  the                                                              
deadlines  in  the  ballot  measure.   The  IT  team  has  done  a                                                              
fantastic job  providing an electronic  system, but as  AMCO staff                                                              
worked  with it,  they "identified  these statuses,  so that  long                                                              
list of statuses  that you have  are places where we  identified a                                                              
place  where  an application  might  rest.  We  wanted to  have  a                                                              
status,  because  we  have  attempted  to  have  as  completely  a                                                              
transparent  process  as we  can."  She said  there  is  a lot  of                                                              
transparency, including  a spreadsheet on the website  showing the                                                              
change in  application status, which  is updated weekly.  There is                                                              
another  spreadsheet  on  the  website   keeping  track  of  local                                                              
governments that  have opted out  or passed marijuana  ordinances.                                                              
There  is  a   licensing  mailbox  for  anyone   involved  in  the                                                              
application process,  and there is a mailbox  for general comments                                                              
and questions.  She noted that the  board is continuing  to refine                                                              
the regulations.  There are  also six  regulation projects  on the                                                              
ABC  side, "so  we've  been busy."  She  expressed  her belief  in                                                              
keeping   everything   transparent    and   noted   an   extensive                                                              
frequently-asked-questions  database on  AMCO's website,  which is                                                              
updated  every month  to  six weeks.  The  website is  continually                                                              
refined to  keep current and to  get all of the board  agendas and                                                              
packets  online. All  the documents  that the  board has  reviewed                                                              
are  on  the  website,  and  the  goal  is  to  keep  the  process                                                              
transparent  and understandable.  The regulations  went out  twice                                                              
for  public comment  before they  were finalized,  and there  were                                                              
two  full  days  of  public  hearings   in  October  2015.  "We're                                                              
committed to hearing what people have to say."                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:28:04 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX asked Mr. Mlynarik if he had anything to add.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
PETER MLYNARIK,  Chair, Marijuana  Control Board (MCB),  Soldotna,                                                              
Alaska, reiterated  that the staff  has been busy. The  board gets                                                              
the application  packets in one  lump, usually three to  four days                                                              
before  a meeting.  Each  license  application can  be  50 to  100                                                              
pages, so  the board would  like to get  them sooner to  have more                                                              
time to  go through  them all. But  the staff  has been  busy, and                                                              
most  of  the applications  received  by  the  board do  not  have                                                              
errors, so the staff  is doing a good job. The  regulation project                                                              
was  time   consuming-making  regulations  from   scratch-although                                                              
there are  templates from other states,  but the board  had to fit                                                              
them  to Alaska.  Considering  [the  shortage  of] staff  and  the                                                              
newness  of the regulations,  the  process, as  a whole, has  gone                                                              
fairly  smoothly.  The only  denials  were for  marijuana  handler                                                              
permit courses,  and those were  because of a lack  of substantial                                                              
information.  Those are  important  as they  teach  people how  to                                                              
handle  marijuana,  but  there  have  been  quite  a  few  handler                                                              
permits provided, he said.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX asked about the course.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MLYNARIK  said that  the courses  can be  online or  taught in                                                              
classes.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:30:49 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN  said regulations  specify what  must be taught  in a                                                              
marijuana  handler  permit  course,  including  information  about                                                              
marijuana,  how  to deal  with  persons  impaired, and  the  rules                                                              
about  restricted access.  Anyone  can  go in  a  liquor store  in                                                              
Alaska, but  the sales can only  occur for customers 21  and over.                                                              
For marijuana,  children cannot  enter the  store. Also,  unlike a                                                              
liquor store  where someone might be  able to slip a  bottle under                                                              
their sleeve and  walk out with it, marijuana  customers will have                                                              
to fill  an order  and purchase  the product  before handling  the                                                              
marijuana.  The  controls are  to  assure the  federal  government                                                              
that Alaska has met the stipulations in the Cole memo.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:32:24 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MICCICHE  said AMCO  is  underfunded and  overworked.  He                                                              
congratulated  Mr.  Mlynarik  and  the  board,  saying  they  have                                                              
processed an  incredible workload in  a relatively short  time. He                                                              
said he  supports having this status  meeting today, "but  we knew                                                              
this was not  going to happen overnight,"  and he hoped  to take a                                                              
moment to appreciate the hard work of the board.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  agreed and noted  that Representative  Guttenberg is                                                              
now online.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:34:05 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  agreed  and  complimented  the  director  and  the                                                              
board,  noting that  they  had fewer  resources  than the  alcohol                                                              
program  has had  and  perhaps  with more  complexities.  "Imagine                                                              
coming in  after prohibition  and being the  first people  on line                                                              
to  begin that  process of  legally  regulating alcohol  again-how                                                              
overwhelming  that would  be." She  asked if  AMCO has created  an                                                              
overall  implementation  plan  for  where  things  should  be,  so                                                              
everyone can  understand where things  are now and where  the gaps                                                              
are, particularly  regarding the roles of the  legislature, board,                                                              
and DCCED.  It will help guide all  the parties to know  "where we                                                              
need  law  clarifications,  where  we  need  process  improvement,                                                              
where  we need  staff improvement-just  an overall  implementation                                                              
plan."  She  expressed  her concern  of  patch-working,  like  the                                                              
issue of the social  clubs, which is a radical  departure from how                                                              
Alaska  treats  alcohol. The  goal  was  to treat  marijuana  like                                                              
alcohol,  but is  seems like  the state  will end  up with  retail                                                              
establishments  setting aside a  social lounge,  and that  is very                                                              
different. She  expressed that in each  case AMCO is forced  to be                                                              
reactionary   and  needing   to  interpret   the  Cole  memo   and                                                              
legislative   intent,  so  it   might  be   helpful  to   have  an                                                              
implementation plan everybody can look at.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:36:47 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN said  there is an implementation plan,  but it is not                                                              
called that  on the website, "so  that is a great idea."  The plan                                                              
is guided  by the ballot  measure as  amended by legislation.  But                                                              
the idea behind  the timing of the  ballot measure and  all of the                                                              
deadlines  it contains  was to  get  a marijuana  industry up  and                                                              
operating  within two  years.  At  this time,  AMCO  has all  four                                                              
types of  licenses approved  by the board.  She expects  the first                                                              
testing facility  to begin  operations in a  matter of  weeks, and                                                              
there will  be a very  rapid roll out  of the other  license types                                                              
once the testing  facilities are operating. By  February 2017, she                                                              
believes there will  be stores operating and  manufacturers making                                                              
products,  which have  been individually  approved  by the  board,                                                              
which is  a tremendous amount of  work, and there will  be testing                                                              
facilities and  a lot of cultivation  facilities growing a  lot of                                                              
legal marijuana  in Alaska.  In terms of  the social clubs,  it is                                                              
something that came  up from other states and  was not unexpected.                                                              
She said other  states also had issues with  unregulated marijuana                                                              
businesses, such  as delivery companies and retail  stores that do                                                              
not have licenses.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN said  that it is difficult for the public  to tell if                                                              
an establishment  is licensed and  regulated. Many of  the illegal                                                              
establishments are  posing as legal. The ballot  measure passed in                                                              
November 2014,  so people  feel that there  should be  stores open                                                              
by  now.  She said  her  staff  is  responding  to the  public  by                                                              
stating  that  "we're  very  close;  we're  getting  there;  we're                                                              
marching  along toward  that." The  most helpful  statute that  is                                                              
missing would address  selling marijuana without a  license. In SB
30, regarding  misconduct involving  marijuana, "we have  our team                                                              
working on a place  in Anchorage right now that  is selling liquor                                                              
without  a license,  and that's  a very specific  offense  that we                                                              
feel is much  more likely to be  taken seriously when  it comes to                                                              
the   prosecution  decisions   than  simply   defaulting  to   the                                                              
Controlled  Substances  Act  on  relying  on  whatever  amount  of                                                              
marijuana is  found in such  a place." She  said it makes  it very                                                              
difficult   for  the   enforcement   team   to  address   illegal,                                                              
unregulated  establishments,  but   this  is  something  that  has                                                              
happened  in Colorado  and Washington.  Washington outlawed  clubs                                                              
and Colorado  has not,  so there are  models for both  strategies.                                                              
Colorado struggles  with a lot of gray-area businesses,  and a lot                                                              
of it has to  do with the overlay of its medical  marijuana market                                                              
on the recreational market.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:40:19 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN  said she feels lucky  that there is just  one set of                                                              
rules, and  she believes  this industry will  stand up  and demand                                                              
that unlicensed, unregulated competitors be shut down.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MLYNARIK  added that the  goal of the  board is that  if there                                                              
is marijuana, it  will be legal and will not come  from people who                                                              
do not  have a  license. "I  think we're  running into,  possibly,                                                              
the  risk of  unlicensed  people  selling marijuana."  People  are                                                              
emboldened  in  some  fashion,  and that  needs  to  be  addressed                                                              
through enforcement  and prosecution. Although it is  legal, it is                                                              
not  legal  to sell  without  a  license.  "I  think that  we  are                                                              
starting to  see some of that stuff  pop up even with  people with                                                              
signs that aren't  licensed." It will need to be  addressed if the                                                              
commercial marijuana industry is to be successful, he said.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:41:58 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT  asked about  social  clubs in  Washington                                                              
and Colorado  and the pros  and cons of  each strategy.  She noted                                                              
the  attorney general  opinion (2016  Op. Alaska  Att'y Gen.  Aug.                                                              
31) stating that social clubs are not legal.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN  said the pros of  marijuana social clubs  are common                                                              
sense. If marijuana  is legal, it is an issue if  there is nowhere                                                              
to consume  it. She  said that  was identified  early on,  and the                                                              
board  is  attempting to  address  it  by  creating some  form  of                                                              
consumption area  in a licensed, regulated establishment.  "In the                                                              
meantime, life  goes on, and  so the social  clubs open,  and they                                                              
claim that they're  exempt from the prohibition  on consumption in                                                              
public,  because they're  not a  public place."  She said  that is                                                              
what  the AG  opinion touches  on, and  she will  let her  address                                                              
that.  From  a licensing  and  regulatory  perspective,  marijuana                                                              
social  clubs  provide   a  continued  market  for   black  market                                                              
dealers. "If  you go to any  of the social club  websites, they're                                                              
not  only  inviting  people  to  bring  their  own  marijuana  in,                                                              
they're promising  to provide it  if you pay  the fee to  become a                                                              
member." She  noted they have "strains  of the week,"  products to                                                              
try, and none  are produced by licensed, regulated  cultivators or                                                              
manufacturers.  If a person  was a  grower and  had a nice  little                                                              
cabal of customers,  and those customers decided to  buy legal and                                                              
tested marijuana  from a store, that  person could go into  one of                                                              
the  social clubs  and find  more  customers. That  is why  bottle                                                              
clubs  are prohibited  on  the alcohol  side,  she explained.  The                                                              
alcohol  industry  recognizes  the  competition  from  unlicensed,                                                              
unregulated places that invite people in to drink.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT  noted  that Alaska  allows  for  personal                                                              
use, which  is not  regulated or  licensed, "so  when you  balance                                                              
the  fact that  folks can  grow their  own marijuana  at home  and                                                              
consume  it, that's  an opportunity  for social  activity, and  we                                                              
haven't outlawed  homegrown  beer, and those  things are  consumed                                                              
and  done."  She wants  to  find  a balance,  because  people  are                                                              
allowed  to grow  their  own marijuana  or  make  alcohol, so  the                                                              
social club aspect,  for her, doesn't mean that  the marijuana has                                                              
to  be regulated,  "I mean  you could  bring your  home strain  or                                                              
whatever  and then  share it  there.  So your  thought process  is                                                              
just  that  it's   untested,  it's  not  licensed,   and  it's  an                                                              
opportunity to undercut a licensed facility?"                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN  said home growers  can have their  marijuana tested.                                                              
The testing  regulations were written  in a way to permit  that in                                                              
recognition that  there are  some people in  Alaska that  are very                                                              
talented at a small  home grow and might be interested  in the THC                                                              
content  and terpene  profiles. In  terms of  getting together  in                                                              
public  to  share that,  there  really  is  no equivalent  on  the                                                              
alcohol side.  People are not  permitted to bring  homebrew-Alaska                                                              
has  introduction   and  removal   rules  that  came   about  when                                                              
prohibition  ended  with  the  idea   that  if  there  will  be  a                                                              
controlled   alcohol  industry,   all  public   outlets  must   be                                                              
controlled.  That is where  the idea  comes from, and  introducing                                                              
one's own  strain to a  public area where  people can pay  to come                                                              
and consume it is not a regulatory model that has been adopted.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:47:09 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT  surmised  that  a social  club  would  be                                                              
considered  a public  place,  and that  is  the basis  for the  AG                                                              
opinion.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX noted  that restaurants  can allow  people to  bring                                                              
alcohol.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FRANKLIN answered  that only  wine  is allowed,  which is  an                                                              
exception  to  the  introduction  statutes.  There are  a  lot  of                                                              
places in Title  IV where pressure over the years  has loosened it                                                              
up,  and it  now allows  bringing one's  own bottle  of wine.  She                                                              
takes guidance  from AS  04.16.090, the  bottle club  prohibition,                                                              
which refers  to the  exact business  model that  she has  seen in                                                              
the social  clubs: charging  memberships to  come in and  consume.                                                              
The legislature  has the ability  to allow bottle clubs  or social                                                              
clubs. This is  a fledgling industry, and there  should be maximum                                                              
protections to  ensure its success;  otherwise, the  black markets                                                              
will flourish  and people  who have  made significant  investments                                                              
might flounder.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:49:08 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX  asked if that  is coming  from Ms. Franklin  or from                                                              
the industry.  She said she assumes  that one reason there  are no                                                              
bottle  clubs  is  that CHARR  [Cabaret,  Hotel,  Restaurant,  and                                                              
Retailers   Association],    bar   owners,   and    other   retail                                                              
establishments  do not want  them. "It  wasn't because  government                                                              
said, at the  beginning, there is something inherently  wrong with                                                              
it." She  asked if  the push to  not have  social clubs  is coming                                                              
from the  marijuana industry  or if Ms.  Franklin or  Mr. Mlynarik                                                              
just decided on their own.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FRANKLIN  said the  industry  does  not  yet speak  with  one                                                              
voice. The  marijuana industry  would be licensed  establishments,                                                              
and the  board has  only looked at  81 of those  so far.  "I don't                                                              
presume to  speak on  behalf of the  marijuana industry,"  but she                                                              
has  had  multiple  applicants  express  displeasure  with  social                                                              
clubs  and others  support  them,  because marijuana  is  becoming                                                              
more accepted,  which is a desire  for almost everyone  in the new                                                              
industry that  we be able to talk  about marijuana and  work on it                                                              
as a legal and regulated substance. "I think its evolving."                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:51:18 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  LEDOUX  said she  was  concerned  about the  definition  of                                                              
"public location" because  a social club would be  a crime. Should                                                              
the definition  of public  be defined  by a  regulation or  by the                                                              
legislature?  "It  seemed  as  if   everything  was  because  it's                                                              
illegal  and thus a  crime because  it's in  the regulations,  but                                                              
normally crimes  are determined  by the  legislative body,  not by                                                              
the regulators."  She noted that Senator Coghill  arrived about 45                                                              
minutes ago.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT  asked if Ms.  Franklin tried to  work with                                                              
the social  clubs to put regulations  in place so that  they could                                                              
operate.  "Have you  been willing  to work with  the social  clubs                                                              
and have dialogue  with them … so  that there could be  maybe some                                                              
regulations  that  would allow  operations  of those,  absent  the                                                              
attorney general's opinion, obviously?"                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN  said that in June  of 2015, she sent letters  to six                                                              
establishments  that appeared  to have gotten  started early,  and                                                              
that is all. She  has not taken any enforcement  action. The board                                                              
did  not  create  any  crimes  through   regulations-that  is  the                                                              
legislature's  role. It  is the  ballot measure  itself that  made                                                              
public consumption illegal,  and it is only a $100  fine. In part,                                                              
social clubs have  thrived because there are no  crimes that would                                                              
shut them down.  It would be a matter of writing  tickets to their                                                              
customers,   which   is   an  uncomfortable   position   for   law                                                              
enforcement officers,  or it would  be trying to charge  the owner                                                              
of  the  establishment  with  possession  of  whatever  amount  of                                                              
marijuana  was there  when  law  enforcement goes  in.  If it  was                                                              
legalized,  there would  be language,  but there  is a gap.  Other                                                              
than  the definition  of "public"  that came  from an  established                                                              
statute,  there is  really nothing  in the ballot  measure  or the                                                              
legislation  that speaks  to  the legality  of  these places.  The                                                              
owner of  one social club  has come to  all of the  meetings, "and                                                              
we're  cordial,  but  as  an  attorney,   looking  at  the  ballot                                                              
measure, I  can't see how  the people voted  for those, and  so it                                                              
really  is  a dead  spot."  She  surmised  that  that is  why  the                                                              
commissioner asked the attorney general for an opinion.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:55:24 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX handed the gavel to Chair McGuire.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE announced  the upcoming  witnesses.  She noted  the                                                              
last discussion points  to the complexity of the  issue. There are                                                              
philosophical  values bumping  against  each  other. Alaskans  are                                                              
somewhat  libertarian, and,  since  the Ravin  decision [Ravin  v.                                                              
State,  537 P.2d  494 (Alaska  1975)], the  state has  a right  of                                                              
privacy  that allows  individuals to  grow and  consume their  own                                                              
marijuana.  The initiative  provides  liberty through  regulation.                                                              
With  the legalization,  you will  not  have "to  skulk around  in                                                              
dark allies  and have  to buy a  substance to consume  illegally."                                                              
She  said  some  consumers  have   multiple  sclerosis  and  other                                                              
things, but at  what point does the regulation  quash the liberty?                                                              
She said  she understands that there  should be penalties  for the                                                              
black market,  but there  is the irony  of creating  more criminal                                                              
penalties  to haunt  individual Alaskans.  It comes  to that  core                                                              
level  of our  philosophical values  bumping  against each  other.                                                              
She appreciated  that Ms.  Franklin said  perhaps Alaska  will get                                                              
to the  place where  we resolve  this and  we have  a nice  set of                                                              
rules  ahead  of us  in  this  industry.  Regarding Title  IV  and                                                              
alcohol, she was  involved in the brew issue, "and  I can tell you                                                              
it was  a war  like I've never  seen." The  idea that  everyone in                                                              
this  industry  will  ever  come   together  is  hopeful  but  not                                                              
realistic. There will  be work year after year,  because there are                                                              
always  winners and  losers. She  noted that  the homebrew  people                                                              
wanted  to  sell  growlers  and increase  their  limits,  and  the                                                              
established dealers did not want the competition.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:59:36 PM                                                                                                                    
KEN ALPER,  Director, Tax Division,  Department of  Revenue (DOR),                                                              
Juneau,  Alaska, initially  discussed  taxation  on marijuana.  He                                                              
said there  are completed  regulations that  establish a  two-tier                                                              
system. The initiative  referenced [a tax of] $50  per ounce, with                                                              
some  flexibility  for  the  different  parts of  the  plant.  The                                                              
division created  the second  tier of $15  per ounce for  the non-                                                              
flowering part  of the plant, which  has a lower  concentration of                                                              
the  active  ingredients  and  warrants  a  lower  tax  rate.  His                                                              
expectation   is  that   those  parts   would  be   used  by   the                                                              
concentrates industry  to make liquids.  The division is  aware of                                                              
the banking  issues, and he said,  "We can't fix it for  them, but                                                              
we  could do  our best  to enable  them  to pay  their taxes."  He                                                              
stated that the  state is building a facility by  a parking garage                                                              
[in  Anchorage]  where  all  taxpayers,  not  just  the  marijuana                                                              
industry,  can make  cash  deposits. Individuals  who  are not  in                                                              
Anchorage will  be able to  mail their taxes  in cash to  a secure                                                              
post office box at the Anchorage airport.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:02:26 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX  asked if there is  much interest in paying  taxes in                                                              
cash other than from the marijuana industry.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  ALPER said  it  is  expected to  be  used for  the  marijuana                                                              
industry,  but  "we're  taking  pains  to  ensure  that  it's  not                                                              
exclusively  for that  purpose,"  so a  bank  will see  it as  tax                                                              
money and not marijuana money.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  asked about  problems with  other states  depositing                                                              
tax  money from  the  marijuana industry.  "If  I were  a bank,  I                                                              
would be afraid to take it," she said.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. ALPER said  it is awkward. He  does not want to  say the state                                                              
is laundering  marijuana  money, but  once the  state takes  it to                                                              
the bank, it is just tax money.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
BRANDON  SPANOS,  Deputy  Director, Tax  Division,  Department  of                                                              
Revenue, Juneau, Alaska,  added that other states have  not had an                                                              
issue  with banks  taking the  money.  Banks in  Alaska have  said                                                              
they  are  willing  to  take  the  money  once  it  is  "revenue";                                                              
however,  there is  some concern  if it is  viewed as  exclusively                                                              
marijuana  tax. Oregon  will no  longer take  credit cards  on its                                                              
website,  and Oregon's  tax  revenue was  closed  down for  credit                                                              
card processing,  because the website  specifically said  a credit                                                              
card  could be  used  to  pay marijuana  taxes.  There  is also  a                                                              
transportation  carrier who  wanted  no part  of transporting  the                                                              
cash, he  explained. The banks  have not  said they will  not take                                                              
revenue, but "to  ensure that we're on the up-and-up,  we're going                                                              
to take cash  from all tax types."  It is seldom, but  some of the                                                              
alcohol and  tobacco taxpayers  have paid  small amounts  in cash,                                                              
he said.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:06:25 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  summarized that  there  will  be a  mechanism  for                                                              
accepting cash,  and local  banks will take  it because it  is not                                                              
specific revenue from the marijuana industry.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL asked  if the tax division will do  spot checks or                                                              
annual  true-ups  for  accountability.   There  is  an  electronic                                                              
reporting mechanism  on the marijuana sold or  transferred through                                                              
a marijuana  retail outfit,  so does the  reporting come  from the                                                              
retail outlet?                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:08:09 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  SPANOS  said  the  reporting   is  through  the  tax  revenue                                                              
management  system. Revenue  Online is  an outward-facing  website                                                              
that  taxpayers   can  log  into   and  report  taxes.   Marijuana                                                              
taxpayers  are the  cultivators, so  when they  make a  sale to  a                                                              
processor  or  retailer, they  must  report  the total  ounces  of                                                              
flowers and  other parts of the  plant sold. It is a  simple form,                                                              
and  the total  tax  due  is calculated.  For  spot-checking,  the                                                              
division  will do  the same  thing  it does  for other  taxpayers,                                                              
which is  examine and  audit those  returns. The examination  will                                                              
rely on  that seed-to-sale software  that AMCO will be  using. All                                                              
of the sales  are tracked in the  software, and both AMCO  and the                                                              
tax  division will  have investigators  to verify  the plants  and                                                              
the shipments.  An investigator can  show up, look at  a shipment,                                                              
weigh it, and verify it, he explained.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL said  if it is going from a non-legal  industry to                                                              
a legal  industry, there will  be a temptation  to not  pay taxes,                                                              
so  it is  important to  make sure  that  those who  are doing  it                                                              
right  are  not troubled  any  more  than  need  be, so  they  are                                                              
rewarded for doing  things correctly. He suggested  protection for                                                              
the sellers  and accountability.  "I don't  know that  I'm totally                                                              
satisfied with the answer yet, but I'll listen along the way."                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:10:22 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  ALPER referenced  the division's  support  for squeezing  out                                                              
the illegal  industry  and its goal  of doing  everything  to make                                                              
sure the  Alaska marijuana  industry is focused  on the  legal and                                                              
licensed taxpayer.  A bill last session, HB 337,  would have given                                                              
DOR  the power  to  have tax  penalties  in addition  to  criminal                                                              
penalties  for retailers  that did  not have  a legal grow,  which                                                              
could  be an extra  deterrent. It  will be  a continuing  problem,                                                              
and one that should be fixed as quickly as possible.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:12:00 PM                                                                                                                    
PATRICE  WALSH, Chief  of Examinations,  Division  of Banking  and                                                              
Securities,  Department   of  Commerce,  Community   and  Economic                                                              
Development  (DCCED),  Anchorage,  Alaska,  said the  director  is                                                              
traveling  and  could not  call  in.  She explained  that  banking                                                              
institutions  are  regulated  by   federal  and  state  laws,  and                                                              
marijuana  is still illegal  under federal  law; therefore,  banks                                                              
that deal  with the  marijuana industry  violate federal  law. The                                                              
U.S.  Department  of Justice  gave  guidance  in August  2013  for                                                              
marijuana  enforcement,  and  it  issued the  Cole  memorandum  in                                                              
February  2014,   which  states  that  it  will   enforce  federal                                                              
marijuana  laws regardless  of state laws.  Federal regulators  of                                                              
banks  include  the Office  of  the  Comptroller of  the  Currency                                                              
(OCC) and  the Federal Deposit  Insurance Corporation  (FDIC). The                                                              
FDIC had  a meeting  in April  2014, and  stated it would  support                                                              
banks  that   elected  to  offer  services   to  marijuana-related                                                              
businesses.  The transactions  would  involve  funds derived  from                                                              
activity that  violates federal  law. Therefore,  a bank  would be                                                              
required  to file  a  suspicious activity  report  (SAR) with  the                                                              
Financial  Crimes  Enforcement  Network  (FinCEN).  FinCEN  issued                                                              
guidance  in  2014  describing  three  levels  of  SARs  that  are                                                              
related to the marijuana industry.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS.  WALSH  said  she  was  asked  about  challenges  that  Alaska                                                              
banking institutions  encounter regarding marijuana.  The Division                                                              
of  Banking and  Securities is  not aware  of any  bank or  credit                                                              
union in  Alaska that is willing  to bank marijuana  businesses at                                                              
this time,  as it  can put the  financial institutions,  including                                                              
staff and  directors, at  risk of  federal prosecution.  Banks and                                                              
credit unions  are comprised  of boards  that instruct  management                                                              
on who  to do business  with, and they get  to choose who  they do                                                              
business  with,   so  the  threat  of  action   against  them  has                                                              
dissuaded  them  from  providing   services  to  marijuana-related                                                              
businesses in  Alaska. Credit unions  have the same  challenges as                                                              
banks, and  their federal regulator  is the National  Credit Union                                                              
Association. She said  she was asked what steps are  needed to set                                                              
up a community bank  for the marijuana industry similar  to one in                                                              
Washington.  All banks are  subject to  federal law, whether  they                                                              
are national  or state-chartered.  Additionally, all  are required                                                              
to get federal  insurance, and that requires adherence  to federal                                                              
law. If  the State of  Alaska were to open  a bank, it  would have                                                              
to apply for a  charter through a federal regulator,  and she said                                                              
she imagines that  it would require legislation  and funding-there                                                              
has  to be  different  amounts  of capital  to  open  a bank.  The                                                              
division  is not familiar  with  the banks in  Washington  and how                                                              
they offer services to marijuana-based businesses.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:17:56 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WALSH  said it is each  board's choice to provide  services to                                                              
marijuana businesses,  and there  would be "very  huge" additional                                                              
costs. It  is expensive  to handle  cash, she  said, and  it would                                                              
require the additional  SARs reporting. She said  the division has                                                              
reached out  to some  banks and  credit unions  to try  and bridge                                                              
this gap.  In November  2015, the division  hosted a  webinar with                                                              
FinCEN, and  it included a lot  of financial officers  from Alaska                                                              
trying to  understand the risks.  The division also had  a seminar                                                              
with Director Franklin's  group for financial officers  to explain                                                              
the  state's  due  diligence in  issuing  licenses  to  marijuana-                                                              
related businesses  and the  enforcement  and regulations  for the                                                              
industry.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:19:57 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  asked what  role  the  division should  have.  She                                                              
noted the  Cole memo,  the follow-up memo  from the  Department of                                                              
Treasury, and  the FDIC board hearing  on April 9, and  said there                                                              
is  no  outright prohibition  for  a  bank  to lend  to  marijuana                                                              
businesses  that have  been legally  licensed. The  Cole memo  and                                                              
others are  attempting to  get down  to the  nuances of  finding a                                                              
way for banks to  become more comfortable about this.  She said it                                                              
seems that  the issues for  banks are uncertainty,  administrative                                                              
burdens, and  collateral issues with  lending where there  is real                                                              
property-or  even chattel that  could be  subject to seizure.  But                                                              
it all hinges  on the idea that  was in the Cole memo  saying that                                                              
states that  have legalized  marijuana have  an obligation  to set                                                              
up regulations  to provide security,  authority, and a  clear path                                                              
for banks  and lending  institutions to  secure legal  lending. It                                                              
is interesting, she  stated, that that is the  missing element. If                                                              
Alaska under  the leadership  of Ms. Walsh  and the  director were                                                              
to propose regulations  that would comport with the  Cole memo and                                                              
were approved  by the DOJ at  the federal level, banks  could then                                                              
rely  on that  and enter  into these  transactions.  She said  her                                                              
point  is  if  the  idea is  to  eliminate  the  black  market-the                                                              
illegal  weapons  trade,  the  cash,  the  human  trafficking,  et                                                              
cetera-then legalizing  it is  exactly the right  way to  do that.                                                              
If it  is legal, why  would the state  want people  running around                                                              
paying their  taxes with cash  in paper  bags or from  bags hiding                                                              
under their mattresses?  It seems to be a contradiction.  It seems                                                              
that the answer is regulations from Ms. Walsh's office.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:23:42 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WALSH  said she  has not been  speaking her opinion;  Congress                                                              
has  not changed  the  law. There  is  guidance,  but guidance  is                                                              
guidance. There  is still a federal  law with violations,  so that                                                              
is where  the issue is. Banks  have been given this  guidance, but                                                              
when it  comes down  to being prosecuted,  there is  no protection                                                              
from the  guidance, so the  banks make  decisions to be  sound for                                                              
all of  their accountholders. Institutions  are not willing  to do                                                              
something that could  throw a prosecution at them  with huge fines                                                              
that  could undermine  them.  The work  needs  to be  done at  the                                                              
congressional level,  since there are so many  states passing laws                                                              
[to legalize marijuana]. "I think that's the next step."                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  said  an  analogy   is  waiting  for  the  federal                                                              
government to  build an  icebreaker, and Alaska  can only  wait so                                                              
long. "I  am asking  a very different  direct question,  which is:                                                              
Do you believe  that your department in banking  and securities in                                                              
the State of  Alaska has a role,  never mind the opinion  that has                                                              
been  expressed by  some  banks  that they  would  prefer to  have                                                              
federal clarity-I  think  everyone would  prefer that-but  we also                                                              
know that  getting federal clarity  and action is  very difficult,                                                              
so we  understand that, but  my question  is: Do you  believe that                                                              
if you  were to  promulgate regulations  comporting with  the Cole                                                              
memo-and  the Cole  memo  cries out  for it-that  would  set up  a                                                              
regulated,  legalized   pathway  for  banks  to   allow  marijuana                                                              
customers  to come  into  their  system, do  you  think that  they                                                              
would be more likely to lend?"                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:27:03 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WALSH  said, "It  could offer  an assurance  to the  financial                                                              
institutions; however,  we're not the only regulator.  They have a                                                              
federal  regulator,  and unless  they  have  a state  charter,  we                                                              
don't have  any jurisdiction over  them." She added that  there is                                                              
one credit union  in Alaska that is a state charter,  and it would                                                              
not apply to the  rest of the credit unions. There  are four state                                                              
banks that  are chartered,  and the others  are not and  would not                                                              
be affected.  It might help, but  there is still the  component of                                                              
the federal regulator,  and if they could get  assurance from that                                                              
piece of it, they might be able to feel more comfortable.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said, "Godspeed  in your work.  I encourage  you to                                                              
keep being proactive  on it." She added that there  is room in the                                                              
Cole memo to think  about the state "as we have  in the initiative                                                              
and  in implementation  of the  licensing itself."  Ten years  ago                                                              
someone could  have said that the  initiative could not  have been                                                              
written and  the legislature could  not have acted.  "Someone said                                                              
that, I  know, but  here we are."  She said  it is an  opportunity                                                              
for Alaska  to be at the forefront  of the conversation  to see if                                                              
it  could  get some  agreement,  even  if  it  is just  through  a                                                              
memoranda of understanding.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:28:45 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  LEDOUX said  she does  not want  to throw  cold water  over                                                              
some forward  thinking, but if she  were a bank or a  credit union                                                              
she would not touch  this with a ten-foot pole.  The penalties for                                                              
being wrong  are onerous, and she  did not realize, at  first, the                                                              
requirements  that  banks have.  A  grocer  who knows  that  every                                                              
dollar  coming  into   the  store  is  from  drug   money  has  no                                                              
obligation to report  it to the federal government,  but a bank is                                                              
not just  set up  to protect  people's  money, its  role is  as an                                                              
unpaid  helper  for  law  enforcement.  "I  don't  know  how  that                                                              
happened,  but it  did,  and so  we're stuck  with  it." She  said                                                              
Washington found  a way around that,  so, somehow, the  benefit of                                                              
being the  banker for  the marijuana  industry has outweighed  the                                                              
risk. She  asked Ms.  Walsh to find  out what  they did  so Alaska                                                              
does not  need to reinvent  the wheel.  Senator McGuire  is right.                                                              
This law  tries to  legalize things-to  bring  things in from  the                                                              
shadow-and then  there is a  federal rule requiring  everything to                                                              
be in cash, so  the state will probably not get  all of its taxes,                                                              
because  that's the  way it  works in  cash economies.  California                                                              
must have  something for  its active  medical marijuana  industry,                                                              
she  surmised.  The  problem  applies  to  the  medical  marijuana                                                              
industry  as well, so  there has  got to  be some way.  California                                                              
has been doing  it for 10 years,  so someone must have  figured it                                                              
out. She asked Ms. Walsh to look into it.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. WALSH agreed to look into it and report back.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:32:53 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE asked if there were more questions.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO  spoke of  a bill she  introduced and  was signed                                                              
into  law that  dealt with  equity  crowd investing.  She said  if                                                              
there  would be  problems  associated  with that  legislation.  It                                                              
allows businesses  to raise  $1,000,000 with  contributions  of up                                                              
to  $10,000  from  Alaskans,  and  the  division  is  promulgating                                                              
regulations right now.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:34:17 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WALSH  said the division  does not  see problems at  this time                                                              
with that  "and these other issues,"  but she will contact  her if                                                              
problems come up.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COSTELLO said  she appreciates  the  opportunity to  plug                                                              
equity crowd  investing. No  one in the  media has picked  this up                                                              
so  she is  writing  an op-ed.  "This  is a  way  for Alaskans  to                                                              
invest  in  Alaska  businesses,  and  I'm  sitting  here  thinking                                                              
that's why  we created  the law."  She expressed appreciation  for                                                              
the  division for  promulgating  the regulations,  and  it is  her                                                              
understanding  that the  division  will help  businesses create  a                                                              
business  plan to  access equity  crowd investing,  which is  like                                                              
crowd funding with equity in the company.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:35:19 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COGHILL  asked about barriers  for capital  improvement of                                                              
a building  or buying a  building. "Do  we look at  Alaska Housing                                                              
and Finance; do we look at Fannie Mae?"                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. WALSH  said, "At this point,  we're hoping that it  doesn't go                                                              
that far  down, but it's  up to each  bank or credit  union." They                                                              
are starting  to  look at where  the cutoff  should  be as far  as                                                              
third-party associations.  Those are things that  banks are trying                                                              
to decide  with their boards. All  institutions are taking  a very                                                              
close look at this.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL  said where there is  a will, there is  a way, and                                                              
there  will be  people who  will be  putting their  thumbs on  the                                                              
scales, "and  you're going  to have to  deal with that."  It could                                                              
be  through  relationships that  are  at  arm's reach,  but  still                                                              
entangled, he  stated. Any  way the legislature  can look  at ways                                                              
to supply a  different avenue is something to  consider. Borrowing                                                              
for a  business plan  is one  thing, borrowing  for a  building is                                                              
another,  and cash  flow  is another  issue.  "It  sounds like  we                                                              
don't have a good answer."                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:37:46 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WALSH  said each  institution  makes its  own policy,  and she                                                              
knows they  are addressing  it. As a  regulator, the  division has                                                              
supported  the  industry  and  changes with  state  law,  but  the                                                              
institutions  look at their  federal regulator.  "And we've  had a                                                              
lot of  contact with  the federal  regulator,"  which is FDIC  for                                                              
banks  that the  state regulates.  The division  has had  numerous                                                              
conversations  with  the FDIC,  and  if  a  bank chooses  to  have                                                              
accounts that  are marijuana-related,  the division  supports that                                                              
and is working  with the federal  regulator to try to  let that be                                                              
okay, "but it's  not our decision." The division's  job is to make                                                              
sure  the  institution  is  making  sound  business  decisions  to                                                              
protect the accountholders but not who to bank with.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:39:24 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  said  it  is  like   liberty  through  regulation.                                                              
Landlord/tenant  laws  had  a  hands-off   approach  until  people                                                              
decided to  address discrimination.  "To a degree  we say  that we                                                              
let  these businesses  operate  the  way they  do,  but there  are                                                              
points in  time in history  where we take  a step back and  try to                                                              
identify whether there  are gaps; people who aren't  being lent to                                                              
for reasons  that we  would like  to prevent."  It's incumbent  on                                                              
the government  to continue to be  proactive and visioning  on how                                                              
funding  is  accessed,  like  startups  and  new  innovations  and                                                              
ideas. Oregon's  governor, Kate  Brown, initiated a  movement that                                                              
led to  institutions there  that are  equity driven-board  driven,                                                              
and  the board  mandatorily  includes  women  and men,  people  of                                                              
color,  people of  different  sexual  orientations,  and they  are                                                              
motivated  by philosophy  that  they'll adopt.  There  is room  to                                                              
consider that there might be gaps.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:41:12 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  LEDOUX  said  she  understands  where  Senator  McGuire  is                                                              
coming  from, but  she would  not want  to require  banks to  deal                                                              
with these  businesses. She  said she  really wants the  marijuana                                                              
industry  to succeed,  but she  does not  want to  tell a  private                                                              
business that  it has to  take money from  someone that  might put                                                              
them in  violation of  federal law  and cause  them to  lose their                                                              
charter. That is a dangerous road to go down.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:42:20 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said she is not  saying that, but there  are always                                                              
those  intersections in  history  between what  is  legal now  and                                                              
what is  legal in the  future. There was  a time when  alcohol was                                                              
legal and  then it wasn't, but  she was not suggesting  that banks                                                              
be forced  to take  [marijuana] money, but  there could  be better                                                              
communications with  the federal government. She  said there could                                                              
also be outside-the-box thinking so lending can occur.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL  said  banks end  up  at  the  end of  the  line.                                                              
Racketeering laws were  based on drug money and  laundering, so it                                                              
ends  up at  the bank's  door. They  had to  look one  transaction                                                              
beyond and  be able  to report it.  That is  one of the  problems.                                                              
"How  do we,  as  a  state, short  circuit  that,  so  it's not  a                                                              
racketeering   problem   anymore,  but   it's   actually  a   cash                                                              
transaction that's  accountable?" It needs to be  addressed at the                                                              
federal  level, but  at the  state level,  the problem  is how  to                                                              
keep a less-legitimate business from laundering cash.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:44:20 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE  welcomed Jahna  Lindemuth and  asked if she  is the                                                              
first female  attorney general  in Alaska.  (She replied  that she                                                              
is the second.)                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
JAHNA  LINDEMUTH,  Attorney  General,  Department  of  Law  (DOL),                                                              
Juneau, Alaska,  said she  was asked to  address how  the attorney                                                              
general opinion (2016  Op. Alaska Att'y Gen. Aug.  31) came about.                                                              
She noted that  she has been on  the job for only four  weeks, but                                                              
she will provide  her understanding of the opinion.  The Marijuana                                                              
Control  Board identified  some  confusion  in the  law  regarding                                                              
marijuana social  clubs, which is not  a defined term in  the law,                                                              
but it is a  business that offers marijuana for a  fee, whether it                                                              
is a membership fee or otherwise.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX asked  if a club is a business that  offers marijuana                                                              
for a fee or one that offers a place to consume it for a fee.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. LINDEMUTH said  it could be either, but there  is remuneration                                                              
for consuming marijuana  in the location. There  are many entities                                                              
operating differently,  so the term captures a  bunch of different                                                              
possible operations.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:47:05 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  LEDOUX said  if they  were  providing marijuana  for a  fee                                                              
without being  licensed, that is  illegal and is a  big difference                                                              
between that  and the gray  area of providing  a venue  to consume                                                              
the marijuana.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. LINDEMUTH said  there is a distinction, and  that is addressed                                                              
in the opinion,  but if a business is advertising  that there will                                                              
be marijuana samples,  and it is charging a fee,  that can be seen                                                              
as distributing marijuana.  There would be a  financial benefit to                                                              
the  owner  of the  building  who  is advertising  that  marijuana                                                              
samples would be  provided. The MCB was not confused,  because the                                                              
statutes  and  regulations  are  very  clear,  but  educating  the                                                              
public  could help  with enforcement.  Education  comes first  and                                                              
then there is enforcement if folks do not get the message.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:48:49 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX  noted that  Ms. Lindemuth said  the statute  is very                                                              
clear. The  statute is the  initiative, and  she does not  find it                                                              
to be very clear.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  LINDEMUTH  said  it  is  clear  that  public  consumption  is                                                              
banned.  The initiative  legalized consumption  and allowed  every                                                              
person to  have one ounce or  six plants, which was  later changed                                                              
to twelve plants.  It also says that marijuana  will be regulated.                                                              
Then  it allows  four different  types  of entities  to have  more                                                              
than an  ounce: retail marijuana  stores, cultivation  facilities,                                                              
product manufacturing  facilities,  and testing facilities.  Other                                                              
entities cannot have more than one ounce or 12 plants.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:50:59 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  LEDOUX  asked  about  clubs  that  are  not  offering  free                                                              
samples. For  example, tourists  from cruise  ships have  no place                                                              
to go, because [marijuana]  is not allowed on the  ship and cannot                                                              
be  consumed on  the street.  The tourist  would want  a place  to                                                              
consume what has  been legally purchased and pay a  fee to go into                                                              
a club.  She asked  if the  opinion applies  to a  club that  only                                                              
offers a place where someone can consume it.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:52:29 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH said  such a place would be a public  place, but the                                                              
legislature could  change that.  As written,  the club would  be a                                                              
public place, and "I don't think we can get around that."                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LEDOUX  said she is  trying to figure out  the idea                                                              
of a public place.  If a club is an athletic club,  or a petroleum                                                              
club, or  any club, and  the fees are  pretty expensive,  then not                                                              
everybody  could go  in. If  those places  had a  room to  consume                                                              
pot, would they be public?                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:53:51 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH said  the opinion describes three ways  that a place                                                              
is public,  and "I think  it would fall  under any of  those three                                                              
situations."  A business  is a public  place,  and that gets  into                                                              
whether there is  a financial benefit to the  club owner-and there                                                              
is. Places  of amusement  are public. The  third way  addressed in                                                              
the opinion are  places where a substantial number  of people have                                                              
access.  It would  not be a  house where  people  only come  in if                                                              
they are known and invited, she explained.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  LEDOUX   asked  if  those  definitions   are  from                                                              
regulations and  not legislative definitions. There  are different                                                              
definitions  for different  purposes. She  said she believes  that                                                              
when most  people voted  on the  initiative,  they figured  that a                                                              
public place  just meant  that a  person could  not smoke  a joint                                                              
walking  down the  street. Public  has  different definitions  for                                                              
other laws, such  as anti-discrimination, disability,  and others,                                                              
but  then there  is "just  that  old definition"  of public  being                                                              
what most  people think of, "and  that is, you're  outside, you're                                                              
someplace that  everybody can  be, that you  can just  walk around                                                              
in," and  she does  not think  marijuana clubs  meet that  kind of                                                              
public  definition, other  than  through the  regulations. She  is                                                              
troubled that the  regulations are making the law  rather than the                                                              
legislature. Maybe the courts need to decide, she stated.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:56:39 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH agreed  that the definition of public  is broad, but                                                              
she  believes that  it is  consistent  with the  statute and  with                                                              
common law.  Even if  the regulation did  not exist,  she believes                                                              
it  would end  up in  the same  place.  The statute  has the  four                                                              
buckets, and unless  an entity is one of those buckets,  it is not                                                              
part of the regulated industry.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  LEDOUX   said  there  is  a  law   that  prohibits                                                              
urinating  in  public  but  does   not  prohibit  using  a  public                                                              
restroom.  There are  really huge  differences in  the meaning  of                                                              
public depending upon the context.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. LINDEMUTH  said it is  hard to imagine  that someone  would be                                                              
in  violation  of  the  law  if they  went  into  a  restroom  and                                                              
consumed an edible.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  LEDOUX said her  point is  that the definition  of                                                              
public does not prohibit urinating in a public restroom.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:58:03 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH  said, "Right,  but what we  are starting  from here                                                              
is what you are  deeming a club where people can  come and be with                                                              
other  people  that  they  don't  know and  that  there  would  be                                                              
marijuana consumed."  Just because there  is a membership  fee, it                                                              
does  not  change it  from  a  public  to a  private  event.  Like                                                              
Costco,  which requires  a membership,  is still  a public  place.                                                              
The  board  room  at  Alaska Airlines  is  public  even  though  a                                                              
private membership  is required,  and they  serve alcohol  and are                                                              
regulated by the Alcohol Control Board.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:58:50 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  spoke of  SB  30 that  meant  to clarify  this  by                                                              
defining  "public" as  Chair  LeDoux does.  It  made people  think                                                              
about it in several  ways: "We thought about in  terms of alcohol,                                                              
we thought  about it  in terms  of smoking,  and we thought  about                                                              
this practical point  of what reasonable people  think." Also, the                                                              
Alaska Constitution's  rights of  privacy have provided  the right                                                              
to  consume marijuana.  There are  uncovered issues,  like a  weed                                                              
fairy  that  comes in  and  provides  the  weed for  most  people.                                                              
"We've just  sort of  ignored it,  but the  reality is  that there                                                              
are many  Alaskans that have  consumed marijuana for  medicinal or                                                              
recreational  purposes under  the assumption  of the  Noy [Noy  v.                                                              
State,  83 P.3d  538, 544-45  (Alaska  Ct. App.  2003)] and  Ravin                                                              
decisions. This area  needs to be clarified in  statute, and there                                                              
needs to be  a robust record of  it. We want to  welcome tourists,                                                              
she said, and  we want them to  be safe, and then we  say they can                                                              
buy  marijuana and  then  we say:  "I have  no  idea where  you're                                                              
going  to consume  it." Alaskans  with  children may  not want  to                                                              
consume marijuana  at home. She  said she knows many  families who                                                              
choose to  consume alcohol  only away, so  a group of  parents may                                                              
want to  consume marijuana  legally in a  social situation  not in                                                              
the presence  of their  children. "Gosh,  now we're saying  you're                                                              
subject  to, perhaps,  criminal  penalties."  She  does not  think                                                              
that was the goal  of the initiative, but the legislature  has not                                                              
given Ms.  Lindemuth much latitude.  The regulations are  based on                                                              
unclear parts of the initiative.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:01:36 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH said  the legislature is welcome to  address this by                                                              
adding a fifth element,  which would be like a  bar for marijuana,                                                              
but  the regulations  have tried  to  address this  by allowing  a                                                              
place for  consumption at  a retail  store. By regulation,  stores                                                              
can allow public consumption.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT asked for a definition of a private club.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. LINDEMUTH  said  that is outside  the scope,  because  that is                                                              
not how  the statute and regulation  is written. There  is private                                                              
consumption that  allows the possession of one  ounce of marijuana                                                              
and 12 plants at  home. The legislature could add  that concept to                                                              
the statute.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT  said, "So let's just talk  about a private                                                              
club  that's not  marijuana-based."  If someone  wanted a  private                                                              
club in a commercial  building where people were  charged to enter                                                              
in order  to basket-weave,  how would he  or she make  it private?                                                              
"So for you, there's no private club definition in statute?"                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:03:46 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  LINDEMUTH said  the  concept of  charging  a fee  makes it  a                                                              
business  and  brings  it  into  the  public  realm.  If  you  are                                                              
charging  a fee,  you  are  acting as  a  business,  and for  this                                                              
discussion, it would be a public place.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  LEDOUX asked about  the Moose  or Elks  who charge                                                              
dues, and they are  private, but they are still  subject to public                                                              
accommodation laws  when it comes to discrimination,  and yet they                                                              
certainly  are private  clubs. If  the Elks  decided to  set up  a                                                              
room in  its private club to  allow the consumption  of marijuana,                                                              
could you bust them?                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:05:22 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH  said that if the  Elks want to serve  alcohol, they                                                              
have to  be licensed.  It is  the same  concept. There  is nothing                                                              
set up  to have  marijuana consumption  outside of the  constructs                                                              
provided.  It is  a regulated  industry, and  the legislature  can                                                              
change it, but that has not been done so far.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LEDOUX  asked about the Elks not  selling marijuana                                                              
but providing  a room where marijuana  can be consumed.  Could you                                                              
bust those people? Arrest them? Cite them?                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:06:38 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH said,  "We were seeing venues that  were advertising                                                              
marijuana  to bring  folks  into  the venue  in  order to  consume                                                              
marijuana." That  was the  primary purpose, so  it may  be outside                                                              
of the [AG] opinion  if there is a group of  people unbeknownst to                                                              
the  Elks that  are  sitting there  enjoying  themselves. That  is                                                              
more  of  a  gray  area.  If  the  legislature  is  interested  in                                                              
allowing  that  kind of  activity,  it  is  best for  everyone  to                                                              
address it by statute so that it is clear.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  said  it  is  interesting.   Some  places  have  a                                                              
cordoned off  area for tobacco.  If a person is  consuming edibles                                                              
in the  public, "where  does that John  Stewart Mill  thing happen                                                              
where your liberty  is bumping up against someone  else's, because                                                              
there isn't  an exchange  of smoke?"  By the  way, she  said, this                                                              
hearing is not  about smoking. Marijuana is also  a substance that                                                              
alters a  person's mind, like alcohol.  Then there is  the privacy                                                              
right, and  it is the only  substance that doesn't come  under the                                                              
Commerce  Clause-it  comes  under  a  compelling  First  Amendment                                                              
right. That  makes it  even odder.  The only  way to move  forward                                                              
with clarity  is for the legislature  to address it. There  are so                                                              
many  mixed messages,  but the  point  of the  hearing brings  out                                                              
that for  liberty, "you regulate  to get  it, but be  careful what                                                              
you  ask for,  because sometimes  you end  up regulating  yourself                                                              
into a  place that  is very  un-Alaskan" and  antithetical  to the                                                              
Alaska  way  of  life.  She  knows  no  one  that  wants  to  bust                                                              
veterans,   for  example,   who  might   be  consuming   marijuana                                                              
peacefully with fellow people who served in the war.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL noted  the conundrum of public  safety and dealing                                                              
with  impairment, and  because of  federal  highway funds,  Alaska                                                              
has  huge regulations  on CDLs  [commercial  driver licenses].  He                                                              
said he  is not sure  that Alaska  has any clue  how to  deal with                                                              
impairment.  He asked  if  the AG's  office  has  looked at  that.                                                              
Transportation is  going to be a  big problem-"put it in  the air,                                                              
it's  a  problem."  Is  it  a  problem   on  state  highways?  The                                                              
legislature  needs  to figure  that  out,  but the  public  safety                                                              
element is impairment, and he asked if that is being looked at.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:11:14 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH said  she has only been in her position  for a month                                                              
and she is  not aware if the  office has been looking  at that. In                                                              
her  private practice  experience  she knows  that  air cargo  and                                                              
transportation companies  have to comply with the  federal law and                                                              
still  have  drug testing.  There  may  be certain  Alaskans  that                                                              
cannot partake in marijuana consumption due to their jobs.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL said  with regard to public consumption,  there is                                                              
a nexus with  public safety that is  "a big deal to  us." The same                                                              
with alcohol,  which can be  tested rapidly and  successfully, but                                                              
he  does not  know about  testing for  other impairments.  No-doze                                                              
and Benadryl can  be tested, but there is no way  of knowing about                                                              
marijuana. Legislators  must start thinking about it,  and it goes                                                              
right to the question of these public consumption clubs.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said the Department of  Law has always been  a very                                                              
useful resource for  complex issues like this.  She suggested that                                                              
the  department  work  more with  the  national  attorney  general                                                              
group, and  she expects that  there is  a coalition among  all the                                                              
states that  are dealing with this.  She said it would  be helpful                                                              
to have Ms. Lindemuth's leadership and advice.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:14:03 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COGHILL  noted the disparity  in one ounce  of concentrate                                                              
and one ounce of  leaves. He said he keeps bringing  this question                                                              
up with regard  to penalties. [The  law] just says "an  ounce." An                                                              
ounce of  hashish or concentrate  is very different from  an ounce                                                              
of  leafy  substances.  He  wants  to have  a  way  to  meter  the                                                              
toxicity.  It is a  huge problem.  There is  the toxicity  and the                                                              
value problem.  "And the  banks are  going to  run into  this, and                                                              
that  is if you  start selling  an ounce  on cash,  and one  ounce                                                              
divided by  a hundred is worth  a thousand dollars, and  one ounce                                                              
divided  by two  is worth  a hundred  dollars, how  do you  figure                                                              
that out?  That is  a key problem  that he  keeps bringing  up, he                                                              
said, and he is bringing it up for Ms. Lindemuth's perusal.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:16:13 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LINDEMUTH  said  there will  be work to  bring consistency  to                                                              
criminal law, and that will probably be a part of that.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT said  this is  a concern  with heroin  and                                                              
fentanyl and other drugs that are hitting the street.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  asked for  questions from  members and  then passed                                                              
the gavel to Chair LeDoux.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:17:43 PM                                                                                                                    
JANA WELTZIN,  Owner/Operator, JDW,  LLC, Anchorage,  Alaska, said                                                              
her law firm represents  a good amount of companies  in Alaska, as                                                              
well as marijuana companies in Arizona, Washington, and Oregon.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX  asked  about  her  experience  in  navigating  this                                                              
process in Alaska-the bad and the good.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  WELTZIN said  there  was a  rocky  start.  Industry has  been                                                              
engaged  in the  rule-making process,  and throughout  it she  has                                                              
often reminded people  that "we really, actually  have some pretty                                                              
good rules in  front of us so  far." There are a couple  of things                                                              
that  did not  make too  much sense,  and more  are still  getting                                                              
fleshed  out,  she  said.  The biggest  issue  is  the  government                                                              
departments  not  talking to  each  other and  giving  conflicting                                                              
advice.  The  delay  is  understandable.  When  people  asked  why                                                              
Oregon  is ready  and not  Alaska, she  tells them  it is  because                                                              
Oregon already  had a medical system,  but it has been  two years,                                                              
and some of  her clients have been  paying rent for a  really long                                                              
time.  For the  application process,  people were  not allowed  to                                                              
use intent  letters  to secure a  premises. They  actually  had to                                                              
have a lease, and  for a landlord to make that  kind of investment                                                              
and agree to  that, a lot of  companies have been paying  rent for                                                              
12  months  or more.  She  said  that the  staff  at AMCO  are  so                                                              
amazing,  and she  would  like more  investment  to relieve  their                                                              
burden. "I don't  want to see where we get in  this industry where                                                              
there's  not  enough  people  there  to  catch  things  that  fall                                                              
through the  cracks, and we  get violations of regulations,  which                                                              
would give people  a little bit of  ammo to kind of  shut down the                                                              
whole   industry."  Consistency   in   treating  applications   is                                                              
important,   and  that  is   hard  to   achieve  when   staff  are                                                              
overworked, she opined.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  asked why a person  needs a lease to get  a license.                                                              
Is that because of a statute, and is it the same for alcohol?                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. WELTZIN  answered that she thinks  it is an  interpretation of                                                              
regulation, which  requires that licenses  be tied to  a premises,                                                              
and a document called POP, or proof of possession, shows that.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:22:35 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WELTZIN  said that Arizona allows  using letters of  intent by                                                              
"engaging  in a  nonbinding document  with the  landowner and  the                                                              
licensee  and   saying,  hey,   if  we   pass  through   all  this                                                              
application  process and  we get  to the point  where we  actually                                                              
are  awarded a  license,  you, landlord,  are  saying to  me as  a                                                              
licensee, I can  use your building." She said that  is what she is                                                              
used to  in Arizona,  but that form  is not  allowed here,  so "we                                                              
had to  use an  actual lease." She  said she  can see  both sides,                                                              
because  a letter  of intent  does  not ensure  that the  property                                                              
will be available,  but that is more of a burden  on the licensee,                                                              
"because  we're  already paying  our  fee regardless."  She  added                                                              
that "we" had to  engage in all these leases, so  there has been a                                                              
lot of  people paying a  lot of money,  but if that  gets changed,                                                              
they will be  asking why they spent  $150,000 for rent  if that is                                                              
no longer required.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  said she understands  those people will be  mad, but                                                              
that  might not  be a  good  reason for  a  change. "Just  because                                                              
we've  done something  in the  past which  might not  have been  a                                                              
great idea,  we should probably  shouldn't be continuing  it." She                                                              
will  ask the  executive  director  to come  back  and comment  on                                                              
that.  She  asked   if  that  is  the  most   significant  problem                                                              
encountered.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:24:35 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WELTZIN  said this  process is  new to  everybody. One  of her                                                              
clients called  yesterday and said  the state fire marshal  has no                                                              
clue what needs  to be done to make a manufacturing  facility fire                                                              
proof.  "They have  no idea what  they're going  to require,"  she                                                              
said,  "and we're  two years  into this."  She said  she does  not                                                              
understand how  that can be. There  are building plans  in and the                                                              
only hold  up is the  fire marshal  not knowing the  requirements.                                                              
It is  a bit  unacceptable. She  expressed appreciation  for Chair                                                              
LeDoux  pushing  the FBI  background  check,  or else  "we  really                                                              
wouldn't have an  industry." She said that was  a big heart-attack                                                              
moment  for everyone.  Another issue  is getting  kicked back  and                                                              
forth  between  DEC and  DHSS  [Department  of Health  and  Social                                                              
Services].  When she  started doing  the  retail application,  DEC                                                              
was  stamping her  food  permit things,  and  all of  a sudden  it                                                              
switched  to DHSS-so  it was  one hand  not talking  to the  other                                                              
hand. She  added that the  interpretation of regulations  leaves a                                                              
little bit  to be desired,  but it will come  in time. A  lot will                                                              
come from  just fleshing this out  and seeing it  actually happen.                                                              
The   biggest  contention   is  onsite   consumption.  The   board                                                              
recognized it,  and there  is no other  industry where  there will                                                              
be a  product sold  to consumers,  yet there will  not be  a legal                                                              
place  to consume it  "except for  the place  where your  children                                                              
are at." That is just bad policy and bad business.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX asked  if part of  the regulations  allow a  license                                                              
for onsite consumption kind of like a bar.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  WELTZIN said  the  last Marijuana  Control  Board meeting  in                                                              
September  was supposed  to  address that  issue  and create  some                                                              
regulations,  but it got  kicked down the  road until  October. It                                                              
is  very  hard  to  plan  for  that  as  there  is  an  incredible                                                              
ventilation system  for allowing smoking. Anchorage  has a smoking                                                              
ban, so for non-private  clubs it is not as much  as an issue, but                                                              
for  everywhere  else, the  ventilation  needs to  be  researched.                                                              
"We've got to  really start researching where and  how these types                                                              
are  going to  be established  and  what the  fire marshal  code's                                                              
going to be." Regulations are not really how-to documents.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX asked  how the  legislature could  make the  process                                                              
easier.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. WELTZIN said,  "We are willing to bend over,  but please don't                                                              
break out backs."  It is incredible how much,  in Anchorage alone,                                                              
that  Title 21  is such  an investment.  Just to  build out  8,000                                                              
square  feet of  cultivation is  about  $250,000 to  get Title  21                                                              
compliant,  not  including  lights.   There  are  warehouses  that                                                              
cannot be used  because of the parking requirements.  She said she                                                              
left Alaska  and came back  and was shocked  at the  building code                                                              
and zoning ordinances.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:29:41 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. WELTZIN  noted that  in November, Denver  will vote  on public                                                              
consumption,  and a yes  vote will  support public consumption  in                                                              
certain clubs,  lounges, and bars.  The definition of  public used                                                              
in the AG opinion  is from the Colorado statute,  "but there is an                                                              
exemption in the  Colorado law, and right now it  says that onsite                                                              
consumption has  to comply  with the indoor  Clean Air  Act, which                                                              
makes it kind of  impossible to comply with." That  is why private                                                              
social  clubs pop up  and require  day memberships.  She said  she                                                              
does  not  think that  is  a  great  model,  and if  Alaska  wants                                                              
something  that  is  unregulated  and  cannot  be  controlled,  it                                                              
should "continue  this path and continue doing  private, because I                                                              
guarantee you  there's ways  to make them,  a club like  Pot Luck,                                                              
private-have   somebody   sponsor   membership-don't   make   your                                                              
Facebook  public." There  are ways  they can  figure that  out, so                                                              
"why don't  we just  create a  license type  that we can  actually                                                              
regulate  and implement  and tax?"  Maybe it  will just be  public                                                              
consumption  venues  with no  marijuana  sales or  free  marijuana                                                              
samples. "Wouldn't  that cure everybody's issues?"  She noted that                                                              
it  is not  the business  model  of Brown  Jug to  consume on  the                                                              
premises.  She  said  she  is  in   favor  of  the  retail  onsite                                                              
consumption idea,  "but if  we don't want  to kick the  door open,                                                              
maybe something  like a  venue consumption-only  place is  an idea                                                              
to consider."  That  might not be  popular for  everybody,  but it                                                              
should be discussed.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT said  the legislature  has addressed  that                                                              
through brew houses  with tastings. A person can go  to the Alaska                                                              
Brewing Company  and try its new  tap and four other  samples. "So                                                              
we  do allow  it  in a  small  regulated way."  When  it comes  to                                                              
having  families  and elderly  people  in  their homes,  "I  don't                                                              
think  most  people  want  to  go home."  She  said  she  has  two                                                              
grandkids and she  sure does not want marijuana in  her house. The                                                              
public wants  this, and she  believes that  was the intent  of the                                                              
voter initiative. "Unless  I go and talk to all  720,000 residents                                                              
of Alaska,  I won't know, but I  think we can go-the  pendulum can                                                              
swing so  far that we  discourage this  new environment or  we can                                                              
go so far  that we don't have  a regulated environment."  She said                                                              
there has  to be  a balance  in the  middle, and  the fear  of the                                                              
people who  voted against the initiative  was that there  would be                                                              
a country  gone wild with pot  smokers on every corner.  That fear                                                              
has diminished  greatly,  and we  are seeing  that the process  is                                                              
very  complicated, but  the more  difficult Alaska  makes it,  the                                                              
more it is set  up for failure. There are brilliant  people in the                                                              
state, and  if they were brought  to the table to talk  about what                                                              
a social club and  its regulations would look like,  there will be                                                              
much  better  legislation.  She  said  she  has  seen  it  in  the                                                              
legislature,  where she is  not an  expert but  she knows  who the                                                              
experts  are  in  the  community,  "and we  could  have  a  really                                                              
balanced  economy   where  it  is  safe  and   people  don't  feel                                                              
threatened that  are non-potsmokers." Everyone just  wants to know                                                              
what the rules are,  "and I think we've been very  vague and maybe                                                              
a little  bit  backwards in  our two  years of  trying to  develop                                                              
these." She said Alaska does not need to reinvent the wheel.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:36:36 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX  said Seattle  or Washington  outlawed social  clubs.                                                              
"Let me tell  you folks, you go  to downtown Seattle and,  I mean,                                                              
that place stinks  right now." People are smoking  on the streets,                                                              
which  is exactly  what the  public does  not want,  and there  is                                                              
only  a  minimal fine  and  no  enforcement.  She said  she  would                                                              
rather have  people in clubs where  the smoke is not  wafting into                                                              
the streets. Smelling the smoke is what is offensive to people.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. WELTZIN agreed,  and asked how to maximize the  ability to cut                                                              
down  on  people  who  drive  when   impaired.  There  are  retail                                                              
establishments-42  in  Anchorage  alone-and  if  they  had  onsite                                                              
consumption,  along with the  bars, it is  a lot for  enforcement.                                                              
"Wouldn't it  be nice if  we just had  three or four  venues where                                                              
people  consume and  then if  the cops  want to  catch people  for                                                              
DUIs they  know where they're at,  instead of having 42,  plus all                                                              
the  bars?"  It's a  lot  for  the enforcement  division  and  the                                                              
police who  are tackling a  lot of issues.  Tourism is  the second                                                              
largest  industry in  Alaska, and  do we really  want to  alienate                                                              
these people  by telling  them to  smoke in  their rental  cars or                                                              
risk hotel violations?                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX said  that a place  like Anchorage,  which is  anti-                                                              
smoking, would likely trump any onsite consumption.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. WELTZIN  said that is true for  a public venue, but  there are                                                              
cigar  clubs in  Anchorage. A  very private  club-a truly  private                                                              
club-that  model has  to be  defined  and narrowed.  She does  not                                                              
want  it to  be  abused, and  there  is the  issue  of a  slippery                                                              
slope.  For a  true private  club there  could be  smoking, but  a                                                              
publicly licensed  venue that  anyone over 21  can come  in, there                                                              
would be no smoking allowed, but people could consume edibles.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:39:39 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  WELTZIN  said  she  sent  contact   information  for  banking                                                              
institutions  in the Lower  48 that  work with cannabis  companies                                                              
to  [the committee  aide]. She  noted  that Ms.  Lindemuth said  a                                                              
person  cannot have  over an  ounce,  but the  statute allows  any                                                              
product grown  on a person's premises  can stay there.  "I want to                                                              
make sure  that we're  not putting  the message  out there  or the                                                              
misunderstanding  that medical-or any  person-that grows  in their                                                              
home cannot  keep that in their  home, whatever they do  grow. You                                                              
can have over an ounce."                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  referred to  the concept of  having an  ounce, which                                                              
was in  the initiative.  She  asked if  it made any  sense that  a                                                              
person can also have all that their 12 plants can grow.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. WELTZIN  said it does. Anything  grown at home can  be kept at                                                              
home,  and she  raised  a question  about  security concerns,  but                                                              
then said  that there is probably  enough weed around  that people                                                              
are  not breaking  down  doors  to steal  it.  But  does a  person                                                              
running around  town really need to  have more than an  ounce? The                                                              
more important  issue the  legislature could  weigh in on  is that                                                              
an  ounce  of  a   flower  is  so  different  from   an  ounce  of                                                              
concentrate.  "If  we're going  to  talk  limits,  we need  to  be                                                              
consistent,  and  that  is  probably   something  that  should  be                                                              
fleshed out."                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX  asked   Cynthia  Franklin  to  discuss   the  lease                                                              
requirements.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:42:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN  said, "When the  regulations were written-these  are                                                              
premises-based  licenses-we have  to know  that the applicant  has                                                              
the right  to possess the premises,  because they are  expected to                                                              
be  in  complete  control  of  everything   that  happens  on  the                                                              
premises of the  marijuana that comes on, the  security measures."                                                              
Both marijuana and  alcohol require leases. Applications  are sent                                                              
to  the  board   within  90  days  of  when   the  application  is                                                              
determined to  be complete. There are  often a lot of  issues with                                                              
the  application, and  her office  tries  very hard  to work  with                                                              
applicants to bring  quality applications to the  board. The board                                                              
is trying to set  up an entire industry in a  very short amount of                                                              
time, and  it could not  get through the  applications in  the two                                                              
days at  the last  meeting. To  give the  board applications  that                                                              
members need  to evaluate, there  has to be application  standards                                                              
or  the   board  would  have   to  wade  through   all  associated                                                              
documents.  There is  not time  with  a volunteer  board; that  is                                                              
what the staff are  paid to do. "So, we're looking  for a lease on                                                              
both sides." It  may be different in Arizona, but  there are a lot                                                              
things  that are  different  in  the other  states.  "This is  our                                                              
book.  It's 127  pages, 9  articles of  regulation." The  Colorado                                                              
regulations are almost 800 pages.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FRANKLIN noted  that they  did their  best to  get a  minimum                                                              
regulatory  scheme in  place,  but there  are  Range 13  employees                                                              
examining these applications,  and they have to  have something to                                                              
look for. If  all applicants have something  different documenting                                                              
that they will  have a place in  the future, then it  is not clear                                                              
what  to  tell  the  board about  the  person's  control  of  that                                                              
property.  "We  are  looking  for  leases,  but,  of  course,  the                                                              
legislature has  the power  to tell us  anything that  we're doing                                                              
wrong  in  the   process."  All  of  the  information   about  the                                                              
application process  went out for public comment  twice, and there                                                              
were  some  concerns  about  the  cost of  having  a  lease,  but,                                                              
frankly, a  lot of this is  just working in a  regulated industry.                                                              
"They  asked  for a  regulated  industry,  and they're  getting  a                                                              
regulated  industry, and  some of  the applicants  aren't used  to                                                              
working  in  a  regulated  industry-they  want  everything  to  be                                                              
private; they  want not to provide  the things that  we're looking                                                              
for to bring  the board a  decent application." She said  they are                                                              
doing their best.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX said  she is not suggested that she  is not doing her                                                              
best. She  mentioned taking an option  where an applicant  who did                                                              
not  get a  license  would  not  have to  pay  for the  lease.  If                                                              
something fell  through, and a license  is contingent on  having a                                                              
particular  place, then  the  license is  not  valid. "What's  the                                                              
purpose of  making them pay rent  for all this time? I  just don't                                                              
understand that."                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:48:17 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN  said, "We  are simply requiring  a lease  before the                                                              
application is  complete. We don't  have any specific  rules about                                                              
how  long  they  have  to  pay  rent  before  the  application  is                                                              
complete."  She  said she  has  seen  some contingent  leases,  so                                                              
people are  dealing with this the  same way they are  dealing with                                                              
other regulated  industries. They  are finding  ways to  work with                                                              
those private  parties and their  landlords. She does  not believe                                                              
that all of the  applicants have the same issues  that Ms. Weltzin                                                              
presented. She  has only heard about  it from a few people.  It is                                                              
a  very broad  brush, and  Ms. Weltzin  has  brought it  up as  an                                                              
issue because it  is different in Arizona, but it  is the way that                                                              
it is  done here. Before the  application is complete,  applicants                                                              
have to  show possession  of the proposed  premises, but  they are                                                              
not required to have a lease for a certain number of months.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX asked how long after the application is complete.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN said, "Until the next board meeting."                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX noted that there are board meetings once a quarter.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN said  there will ultimately be five  meetings a year,                                                              
but this year  there will be seven  to get more licenses  in front                                                              
of the board.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX noted that people can sell their alcohol licenses.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FRANKLIN  said   alcohol  licenses  can  be   transferred  by                                                              
location  or  ownership.  Regarding  marijuana,  licenses  can  be                                                              
transferred  to another  owner but  not to  another location.  For                                                              
alcohol,  licenses  are  population-limited,  and only  a  certain                                                              
number  are  available,  but  an  unlimited  number  of  marijuana                                                              
licenses can  be issued  to anyone who  applies and  qualifies, so                                                              
if marijuana licensees  lose their locations, they  can apply with                                                              
another location.  Alcohol licenses are limited,  and, by statute,                                                              
licensees who lose  their locations have to surrender  the license                                                              
within ten  days unless  they have taken  some other  action. They                                                              
are  both premises-based  licenses that  are very  tied to  place,                                                              
and  losing  a location  means  the  license  would be  lost  with                                                              
either  substance. The  license is  laid on the  location,  not on                                                              
the person,  "so you can't pick  a license up and carry  it around                                                              
town  and   set  it  down   somewhere  else,  because   the  local                                                              
government has  complete control  over the zoning  and controlling                                                              
where these  places go." The state  cannot issue a license  to use                                                              
anywhere. The  local government  has to  know where the  operation                                                              
will be  before the  license is  issued. That  is why  regulations                                                              
require proof of control over the premises, she reiterated.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX said  she cannot see  why an  applicant cannot  just                                                              
show the  lease when the  license is issued  and why  an applicant                                                              
should have to pay for even one month of rent prior to that.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. FRANKLIN  said they are  just looking  for a document  to meet                                                              
the regulations.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:51:20 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT  asked Ms.  Franklin why she  is regulating                                                              
the  municipality's  code  and  not  requiring  the  applicant  to                                                              
determine compliance.  "If you're licensing  as many as  you want,                                                              
I don't understand  why there is even a requirement  to show where                                                              
you  are  going  to  be  at  one   certain  time."  Alcohol  is  a                                                              
population-based  license,  and marijuana  is  unlimited, "so  why                                                              
are you even  requiring to have any documentation  of where you're                                                              
going to  be?" She asked  why AMCO would  even care if they  had a                                                              
lease  or   a  building,   because  that  would   be  up   to  the                                                              
municipality.  From  her  understanding,   the  law  is  based  on                                                              
municipality  structure  not  on something  that  AMCO  regulates,                                                              
monitors, or even enforces.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FRANKLIN  explained  that   the  ballot  measure  says  local                                                              
government has  control over the  time, place, manner,  and number                                                              
of marijuana licenses  issued. The local government  can determine                                                              
that even though  the state would issue unlimited  licenses within                                                              
its city  boundaries. "But  our regulations  require that  we tell                                                              
them  where this  place  is  going to  be  so they  can  determine                                                              
whether it's  in the correct zoning  environment, and they  have a                                                              
right  of protest  to  the issuance  of  the  state license."  The                                                              
local control  is wrapped up in  knowing certain things  about the                                                              
license before  the local  government weighs  in. If the  question                                                              
is why can't the  local government do all of that,  she noted that                                                              
the ballot  measure provided  that if  state regulations  were not                                                              
written  in the  time provided,  the local  government would  have                                                              
the responsibility  to create  all of the  rules around  this. She                                                              
said there  was quite a bit  of resistance from  local governments                                                              
at  the prospect  of  the state  missing  the  deadlines and  then                                                              
being  responsible  for  creating   the  rules.  The  way  alcohol                                                              
regulations and  statutes work is  that it is a  shared regulatory                                                              
burden between  the city and the  state. "When we read  the ballot                                                              
measure we saw something  that looked exactly the same  to us … in                                                              
terms of  local control and  local option,  and we heard  from the                                                              
cities they didn't want to make all the rules."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:54:19 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN  said the  cities wanted  marijuana regulation  to be                                                              
like alcohol,  where the state  would get information,  like where                                                              
it will be, who  is getting it, what the financial  interests are,                                                              
and all of that.  After receiving the information,  the cities can                                                              
make a decision  on whether they  want to protest the  issuance of                                                              
the license. She  said that appears to be what  the ballot measure                                                              
contemplated, and that is what the board wrote.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT  said that she sees a  disparity because of                                                              
the  limited number  of alcohol  licenses.  "It's hard  for me  to                                                              
equate that  the balance is  there." The marijuana  initiative had                                                              
an  unlimited amount  of licenses.  She said  she understands  the                                                              
notification,  but  maybe that  should  be the  responsibility  in                                                              
that once  the license  is issued  is to  note where the  location                                                              
is. "The  ease of that  would be simpler  than to go  through this                                                              
process of  burden. I  mean we're  creating barriers now,  because                                                              
we've required them to lease the space for now up to two years."                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:56:54 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FRANKLIN said  she does not believe that anybody  has leased a                                                              
space for two  years before getting their license.  It hasn't been                                                              
two  years since  the  act became  effective,  and  if anyone  has                                                              
leased  a  place  for  two  years, it  is  their  choice  and  not                                                              
anything  that the  state  made them  do.  It is  a  piece of  the                                                              
application. The limitations  did not come out of  the statute, it                                                              
came from the  regulations, because the only place  in the statute                                                              
that mentions  the  number of licenses  issued  is in the  section                                                              
giving  local government  control  over the  time, place,  manner,                                                              
and  number.   She  added  that  the  population-limited   license                                                              
creates  a   lot  of  issues,  and   when  she  speaks   with  her                                                              
counterparts  in  other states,  they  say  that they  would  have                                                              
preferred  to  let  the  free  market   determine  the  number  of                                                              
licenses. "So we  see it as an improvement, but  not a replacement                                                              
for the  premises-based licensed system."  That is what  the board                                                              
passed, and staff are just trying to make it happen.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT said  she is  just trying  to think  about                                                              
the success of  a new operation, and  we might not like  it but it                                                              
seems just  a little  bit cumbersome  to have that  responsibility                                                              
to lease a place, especially when someone has a warehouse.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  asked if Ms. Franklin  would think of a  way to make                                                              
it less  cumbersome for  people who  are renting,  so they  do not                                                              
need to spend a bunch of money before they get their licenses.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FRANKLIN   turned  to   the  consumption  endorsement.   That                                                              
language was  created and put out  for public comment.  There were                                                              
more  comments opposed  to  the  project than  for  it. The  board                                                              
changed it  and put it  back out between  July and  September, and                                                              
of  the 42  comments  from  the public,  40  were  opposed to  the                                                              
public consumption  endorsement, and there were many  questions of                                                              
why the board  was not responding  to the people who  were opposed                                                              
to  the  project.  At the  September  meeting,  one  board  member                                                              
expressed a desire  to spend more time looking  at the endorsement                                                              
in light  of the AG  opinion, which had  just come out.  The board                                                              
voted to move  it to October. She  said that the project  is still                                                              
alive,  but most of  the commenters  were opposed  to creating  an                                                              
area for public consumption.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX  said  that  is  interesting.  That  multiplies  the                                                              
problem of not having a place to consume.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:59:14 PM                                                                                                                    
BRUCE SCHULTE,  Former Chair, Marijuana Control  Board, Anchorage,                                                              
introduced himself.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX noted  that Mr. Schulte was the chair  of the MCB for                                                              
a year,  and she  asked if he  recommends any  steps the  board or                                                              
the legislature should undertake.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. SCHULTE praised  the AMCO staff, particularly  Sarah Oates and                                                              
her  licensing  team  and  James  Hoelscher  and  his  enforcement                                                              
group.  The  process is  pretty  much  on  schedule, and  the  key                                                              
target dates  of adopting  regulations and accepting  applications                                                              
were on  schedule. A  lot got done  in a short  time, but  a voter                                                              
initiative is an imperfect way of developing law, he said.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:01:26 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SCHULTE  added that  any delays  have been reasonable,  except                                                              
the debacle on FBI  background checks. It was resolved  in SB 165,                                                              
but "had  we waited for that  bill to become effective-to  get FBI                                                              
background checks-nobody  would be  growing anything at  all until                                                              
December or  January." That  would have  been catastrophic,  so it                                                              
is crucial  that the  board intervened  to override the  director,                                                              
and it  got things back  on track. At  that time, some  people had                                                              
been sitting  on real  estate for  many months,  and the  prospect                                                              
that  their application  would  be shelved  for  five more  months                                                              
pending  the  background  check  was  financially  devastating  to                                                              
several  of them.  One  business was  on the  hook  for $22,000  a                                                              
month, so, fortunately, that was a bullet dodged.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX asked if this was in contravention of the director.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. SCHULTE said  the board had not  weighed in on it.  He said he                                                              
and  the public  were informed  from  a radio  interview with  the                                                              
director that  all the  applications were going  to be  held until                                                              
there was an  FBI background check. There was  considerable debate                                                              
about  whether  that  was  required.   "Ultimately,  I  asked  the                                                              
question  at our  board  meeting  in April:  Is  there actually  a                                                              
statutory or  regulatory requirement  for these national  criminal                                                              
background  checks?" The  answer  was no,  so the  board voted  to                                                              
process the  applications. "I don't want  to get too much  down in                                                              
the   weeds,  but   that   was   hugely  important,   because   no                                                              
applications were  to be deemed  complete until that  point." Only                                                              
complete applications  get forwarded to the local  government, and                                                              
until  then, the  60-day  protest  does not  begin,  and then  the                                                              
local  government's process  begins.  He gave  the  example of  an                                                              
Anchorage application  deemed complete on  October 5, it  would go                                                              
the  municipality, which  would  have 60  days to  protest and  go                                                              
through its secondary licensing process.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:04:58 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SCHULTE  said the process  is evolving,  and the folks  in the                                                              
trenches  have  done a  great  job.  Once  the board  approves  an                                                              
application  and  it  goes  to   the  local  government  and  gets                                                              
processed, there  is a  final step before  the license  is issued.                                                              
The AMCO  staff visit the  premises and  say, "Okay, what  you put                                                              
in place is what  you committed to do, here's your  license." That                                                              
should be  the day positive  control of  the property would  be in                                                              
question. "If  you shell up  and they're  not at the  address that                                                              
they had  in their application,  they simply don't get  a license.                                                              
To me  that is  such a  simple way  of handling  it. I don't  even                                                              
know why it's a point of discussion."                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. SCHULTE  said there are five  members on the board  defined by                                                              
the   legislature,  and,   "we   didn't  always   have  the   same                                                              
perspective, in fact,  sometimes we were very much  at odds." Very                                                              
few votes were  five to zero, he  said. That was healthy,  and the                                                              
board makeup  represented how the  public voted on  the initiated.                                                              
It  only  passed by  53  percent,  and  so  where the  public  was                                                              
slightly  in favor  of  it, the  board  members  were slightly  in                                                              
favor  of regulating  marijuana  in  favor  of the  industry.  The                                                              
deliberations  were broad  and  constructive, and  he  said he  is                                                              
pretty happy  with the regulations,  but they can be  made better.                                                              
The board has wrestled with statute, regulations, and policies.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:07:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  SCHULTE  said  much  of today's  discussion  has  been  about                                                              
policies that  are not under the  direct control of the  board. He                                                              
recommended  that those  policies be  codified, and  then let  the                                                              
board  adopt some and  have an  opportunity to  discuss them  with                                                              
public comments.  Some of  these issues  could better  be resolved                                                              
in the open  with public testimony. Regarding marijuana  clubs, he                                                              
said he  is not an advocate  or an opponent.  He said he  called a                                                              
club  that opened  in  Anchorage and  encouraged  them shut  down,                                                              
because  he  did  not  want  to   see  that  distraction,  and  it                                                              
continues  to be so.  At the  board's first  meeting in  July last                                                              
year after the  director wrote cease-and-desist letters,  it voted                                                              
to  make  recommendations  to  the legislature,  and  one  was  to                                                              
clarify  clubs. "Tell  us,  do we  have  authority  over these  or                                                              
not?"  There were  discussions,  and based  on  legal advice,  the                                                              
board  took the  position  that  it did  not  have authority  over                                                              
clubs, either to  regulate or ban them. That was  where the onsite                                                              
consumption  idea  came from.  The  public  was asking  for  that,                                                              
including elected  officials from Juneau and Fairbanks.  They were                                                              
asking to  make provisions  for a place  to consume  marijuana, he                                                              
said.  Legal counsel  told  the  board that  the  definition of  a                                                              
retail store could be expanded to include onsite consumption.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. SCHULTE  said staff proposed  draft regulations in  April, and                                                              
they have been getting  moved down the road over  the last several                                                              
meetings. The committee  was told earlier that  after those cease-                                                              
and-desist  letters  were  issued,  there was  no  further  action                                                              
taken  against these  clubs, but  that  is not  entirely true.  He                                                              
said an alcohol  licensee that is  in the same building  as a club                                                              
in  Anchorage  was told  they  could  not  have an  alcohol  event                                                              
permit  unless  the  club  was  evicted.  That's  significant  and                                                              
concerning.  It appeared  to  be contrary  to  the board's  stated                                                              
position that it  had no authority over clubs. Also,  there was no                                                              
due process-the  club  was not even  consulted  on the matter.  He                                                              
said  that is  not the  way to  regulate, and  a regulatory  board                                                              
should  not  be  in the  business  of  interpreting  or  enforcing                                                              
statute, unless it  is written down. He said he  was concerned and                                                              
asked  for a  meeting with  the director.  "I pointed  out to  her                                                              
that (a) this is  contrary to the board's stated  position, (b) it                                                              
looks  like  coercion."   The  media  was  starting   to  ask  him                                                              
questions,  he  said, and  he  declined  to comment,  because  the                                                              
board chair should  not be getting into that kind  of dispute with                                                              
the executive  director, but  it is  an important discussion.  The                                                              
director told  him he  had no right  to talk to  her about  it and                                                              
stormed out of  the room. Since then, a group  conducting training                                                              
for the  marijuana handler's course  wanted to hold the  course at                                                              
that marijuana  club, and  they were told  the board  might revoke                                                              
their authority to conduct such classes if they held it there.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:12:19 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  SCHULTE said  at least  one other  event was  told that  they                                                              
could not  have a permit  if Pot Luck  Events was associated  with                                                              
it.  Since  the  judiciary  committee was  told  that  no  further                                                              
actions were taken,  "I thought it was incumbent on  me to clarify                                                              
that."  He  noted  that  he  is  not  necessarily  advocating  for                                                              
marijuana  clubs,  but  a  regulatory body  should  not  make  the                                                              
determination.  It   is  the  purview   of  the  courts   and  the                                                              
legislature with  public input,  and one of  his requests  is that                                                              
the legislature  weigh in on it.  "I think the manner  in which it                                                              
was handled was  inappropriate," he said. Senator  McGuire had the                                                              
same  reaction  as   he  did  on  the  balance   between  personal                                                              
liberties  and  government  control.  "I had  that  same  struggle                                                              
myself. It's a  difficult one." One justification  for going after                                                              
these clubs is  because they are nests of illegal  activity. Maybe                                                              
they are.  He said he  has been to them,  and maybe they  are. The                                                              
black  market is  alive and  well whether  or not  it is at  these                                                              
clubs. "I  really can't  say; but,  again, I think  that we  are a                                                              
state  and a  country of  laws, and  the folks  that are  involved                                                              
with this,  they deserve  due process." Prior  to the  AG opinion,                                                              
it was  just an  individual's interpretation  of law.  The opinion                                                              
is helpful, but  as a matter of  public policy, it is  the role of                                                              
the legislature  or the courts  to decide  if clubs are  legal, if                                                              
they  should  be  regulated, and  what  the  operating  parameters                                                              
should be.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:14:57 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SCHULTE  said he  has a "wish  list," and  it begins  with the                                                              
AMCO staff, and  a "later wish" is that the  legislature authorize                                                              
more resources,  because "a  few people probably  want to  stab me                                                              
half way  through this  discussion." He said  it would  be helpful                                                              
if  the  AMCO  office  documented   its  process,  which  is  very                                                              
complicated,  and "none  of us have  ever done  this before."  The                                                              
staff has  been doing  a fantastic  job of  wading through  it and                                                              
creating  something that  did  not exist.  The  process should  be                                                              
documented and  made available for  review. He said he  would like                                                              
AMCO  staff  to  work with  local  governments.  Anchorage  has  a                                                              
complex  licensing process,  so  it would  be great  to develop  a                                                              
supplemental  process. That  way, applicants  could see what  they                                                              
need to  do in parallel-and  what needs  to be done  first. People                                                              
could  look at  the website  and see:  "What am  I getting  myself                                                              
into?" The board,  itself, should move some of  the staff policies                                                              
over to regulations  so they can go through  public deliberations,                                                              
including  things like  the lease  requirement. He  noted that  an                                                              
applicant asked if  a building could have restrooms  down the hall                                                              
shared with another  business. There was a big  question about it,                                                              
because   there  was   discontiguous  space.   Somebody  who   has                                                              
applications for  cultivation, processing, and retail  in the same                                                              
building,  might be  asked to  have different  restrooms for  each                                                              
one,  as  well  as  separate data  rooms  and  offices.  No  other                                                              
business  would  be required  to  have duplicated  resources  like                                                              
that.  He said  he introduced  that  regulations project  "shortly                                                              
before I  was booted  from the board."  He said  he hopes  that it                                                              
will see  the light  of day.  He added  that the regulations  were                                                              
developed quickly,  and he  is pretty happy  where they  ended up,                                                              
given the time frame,  but he would like the board  to refine them                                                              
and remove unnecessary  impediments. It is not a  matter of public                                                              
safety, it  should be in favor  of commerce, because the  board is                                                              
housed under the commerce department.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:18:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  SCHULTE said  he would  like the  legislature to  recalibrate                                                              
the criminal statutes,  which began with the second  version of SB
30.  "It was  awesome;  it was  going in  a  great direction,"  he                                                              
opined.  Existing   criminal  statutes   are  at  odds   with  the                                                              
initiative.  He also  suggested de-scheduling  marijuana. He  does                                                              
not have  a dog in  the fight, but  he would like  the legislature                                                              
to settle the  issue of clubs. At  the last meeting of  the MCB, a                                                              
member said  the board now  had pause over  the whole  question of                                                              
onsite  consumption because  of the  AG opinion.  "So, we're  very                                                              
much  at  an   impasse  here."  There  is  no   place  for  onsite                                                              
consumption,  and the  tourists are  going to  show up  in six  or                                                              
seven months,  and it would be great  to have a solution  by then,                                                              
but that  might be  optimistic. He would  like the legislature  to                                                              
adjust the  law to exclude  certain, licensed businesses  from the                                                              
definition  of public consumption.  "That would  kind of  get this                                                              
out  of  the  ditch  we're  in if  the  law  simply  said:  Unless                                                              
operated under  a state  license, the  following is illegal.  Then                                                              
we make  provisions for  creating a state  license, and  we're all                                                              
off the hook."                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:20:14 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SCHULTE  suggested changing  the tax from  $50 per ounce  to a                                                              
percentage  per   ounce.  The  wholesale  price   of  cannabis  is                                                              
fluctuating  tremendously.  With prices  high,  the  state may  be                                                              
losing out  on revenue at  $50 an ounce,  and later, if  the price                                                              
drops, then  [cultivators] might  be struggling  to compete  or to                                                              
survive  or to  compete with  the black  market, and  the $50  tax                                                              
might be  an unsustainable  portion of  the price.  He said  he is                                                              
not  suggesting  it right  now,  because  "I will  get  publically                                                              
skewered  from  doing  that."  He   said  the  legislature  should                                                              
consider  expanding [AS]  17.38  to allow  the MCB  to create  new                                                              
license types.  There are  only six  licenses available  under the                                                              
four general  categories, and  for alcohol there  are 22  or more,                                                              
including  event  and catering  permits.  He  said Alaska  is  not                                                              
quite ready for  that, but it will be helpful for  the legislature                                                              
to see  how "this  thing" plays  out next  year.  Once there  is a                                                              
comfort level that  the industry can operate responsibly,  it will                                                              
be an  appropriate direction  to go  and would  simplify a  lot of                                                              
these discussions.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:21:36 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  SCHULTE suggested  that the  legislature  authorize funds  to                                                              
AMCO. "They  really are overtaxed.  I get  it." He said  there are                                                              
staff  working   long  hours  and  probably  not   being  properly                                                              
compensated.  He added that  he greatly appreciated  HB 123  as it                                                              
was a fantastic  way to go in the financial context.  "When we can                                                              
demonstrate the  revenue from this  industry, I would like  to see                                                              
a  separate  MCB  created  apart  from  alcohol  with  a  separate                                                              
director  and  a separate  staff."  The  two are  very  different.                                                              
Alcohol  is primarily  people renewing  and moving  licenses-there                                                              
are a  few new ones, but  not as many.  Marijuana is all  new, and                                                              
it is a huge task to balance those two.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:23:00 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT thanked  Mr. Schulte for  his work  on all                                                              
of the  legislation and being  willing to  serve on the  board. He                                                              
did  an  excellent job  and  is  sorely  missed. Mr.  Schulte  has                                                              
shepherded  the  legislature  through a  really  interesting  time                                                              
through the initiative  process and pointing out some  of the road                                                              
blocks. He has been very valuable to the judiciary committee.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:23:43 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  MCGUIRE said,  "Thank you,  Bruce, as  my constituent."  It                                                              
will be  years from  now until  people really  understand  what he                                                              
did to be a voice  of the people of Alaska. It is  a great risk to                                                              
step  out,  particularly considering  his  political  affiliation,                                                              
knowing there  was a  great desire  to smoke,  yet there  were not                                                              
any identifiable  pathways, especially for those  who were already                                                              
using medical marijuana.  She said she will continue  to talk with                                                              
Mr.  Schulte a  lot, and  she thinks  his  suggestions today  were                                                              
fantastic.  The  one  she loves  the  most,  besides  [increasing]                                                              
resources,  is  that  the  board  should  put  its  policies  into                                                              
regulation. It  is important for  all boards to  remember, because                                                              
members could  go into autopilot  looking for expediency  and lose                                                              
sight of the  "line of power that  is supposed to come  down." She                                                              
said the  legislators  sit before  the voters  who can throw  them                                                              
out or reelect  them. The public  has to have some way  to comment                                                              
and understand what is happening at the board level.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:25:35 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX  seconded that.  It is  a great  idea. No  one should                                                              
ever be able  to say, "Well,  that's the policy." It  always needs                                                              
to be a  transparent and vetted  process. Mr. Schulte has  been an                                                              
invaluable resource  over the last  couple of years. If  there has                                                              
ever been  any question  about anything  relating to the  cannabis                                                              
industry, Mr.  Schulte has been  available almost 24/7.  She could                                                              
text  him at midnight  or so,  she stated,  and ask  him what  was                                                              
going on. She expressed regret that he will not be on the board.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  SCHULTE said  he looks  forward to  working with  all of  the                                                              
members in the future, because he is not going anywhere.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:26:48 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  MCGUIRE said  she has  to  leave, but  she reminded  public                                                              
witnesses  to be  respectful  in their  testimony.  She said  that                                                              
stating  an affiliation  is  for  the public  record,  not for  "a                                                              
power control."  The hearing is confined to  marijuana regulations                                                              
and not about Alaska's fiscal crisis or smoking or vaping.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:27:50 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  LEDOUX opened  the hearing  to  public testimony,  limiting                                                              
each to one minute.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:29:00 PM                                                                                                                    
RHONDA MARCY, Wasilla,  said she has an initiated  application and                                                              
has served on  the Mat-Su Marijuana Advisory Committee.  There are                                                              
things  about the  whole process  that she  has not  been able  to                                                              
address.  Her  business  model is  "wellness  from  a  plant-based                                                              
whole health  approach." Under  existing law,  there is no  way to                                                              
juice  or use raw  cannabis.  It has to  be cut,  dried, and  made                                                              
into a  smokable form. She  said she supports  clubs and  having a                                                              
place to  go. She has  been to Pot Luck  and has not  seen illegal                                                              
activity, although  the club  provides the "bud-of-the-week,"  but                                                              
"you  don't buy  it; it's provided  if  you'd like  it as part  of                                                              
being  in the membership."  It is  important  to have places  that                                                              
are safe. She  suggested looking at tradeshows,  because "we don't                                                              
have any  way to  take your  product and  go to cannabis  classics                                                              
that they've  had or  the Hemp and  Cannabis Fair."  She suggested                                                              
rules  so   that  people  can   lawfully  bring  something   to  a                                                              
tradeshow,  like  the  seniors  are having  a  wine  tasting,  and                                                              
"we're shut  down from having that."  At this point, there  is not                                                              
even  social areas  for people  who live  here. She  said she  can                                                              
invite people to  her house, but the problem is  that her wellness                                                              
center is  on her  property, and  she does not  want to  come into                                                              
conflict  with the  state.  She noted  that  she has  not had  the                                                              
opportunity to  address that with  the director. One  little issue                                                              
she  has with  the ballot  measure,  she said,  is zoning  without                                                              
going  through the  zoning  process.  The initiative  process  has                                                              
bypassed  that. There is  action in  the Valley  right now  to try                                                              
and  get the  courts to  address  that "so  that we  can move  our                                                              
Valley  businesses  forward, because  we've  been  shut  out of  a                                                              
process  that's letting  everybody get  ahead of  us while  we sit                                                              
and address  this." She said she  thought Mr. Schulte was  doing a                                                              
great job, and she  is upset that the current chairman  is working                                                              
on an initiative  to stop [marijuana use] on  the Kenai Peninsula.                                                              
"They  claim  that that's  no  conflict  with law  enforcement;  I                                                              
disagree with  that." They  get federal  forfeiture money  if they                                                              
are behind keeping cannabis illegal, she stated.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:32:58 PM                                                                                                                    
SAMANTHA  LAUDERT-RODGERS, Chugiak,  said she  worked hard  on the                                                              
"yes" campaign, and  many did so expecting that  cannabis would be                                                              
available  for  the  medical  marijuana  community.  "Many  of  us                                                              
struggle on a  daily basis with invisible illnesses,  and it's the                                                              
one thing that  actually can help  us and can help so  many people                                                              
in Alaska-and  save lives." She  said things are taking  too long,                                                              
which  is  divisive.  Businesses  that  wanted  to  give  back  to                                                              
Anchorage   or  elsewhere   are  falling   apart.  She  has   seen                                                              
divisiveness,  and  with 81  approved  licenses,  Alaska will  not                                                              
have stores  open within  two years of  the initiative.  She wants                                                              
things to move faster because other issues need focus.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:34:33 PM                                                                                                                    
MARTIN  CHRISTENSEN,  Anchorage,  said  he  has  been  a  business                                                              
person in  Alaska for  the last  14 years and  is an involved  and                                                              
supportive  member of Pot  Luck, but  he is representing  himself.                                                              
People  do not  have a  good history  of  assimilating new  ideas,                                                              
including  the belief that  the world  was flat.  In 1693  we were                                                              
still burning  each other in  the Salem  witch trials. In  1940 it                                                              
was understood  that by traveling  faster than 50 miles  per hour,                                                              
blood would  boil. Less  than 100  years ago  it was assumed  that                                                              
cannabis  would cause "reefer  madness."  Everyone now knows  that                                                              
all  of these  things are  not quite  true. After  the passage  of                                                              
Proposition  2,  his  friend, Theresa  Collins,  opened  Pot  Luck                                                              
Events.  She saw  a  need for  a  place where  like-minded  adults                                                              
could  get together,  and the  idea behind  it was  to just  be an                                                              
event  facility,  like the  Dena'ina  Center.  Since then  it  has                                                              
drastically  changed, and  "we've  become more  of  a place  where                                                              
people can  come who can't smoke  at home and still  socialize. We                                                              
see new friendships  blossom across generations and  culture gaps.                                                              
We've   witnessed   marriage   proposals    and   hosted   wedding                                                              
receptions."  His daughter's  birth  was celebrated  at the  club.                                                              
The club  answers the  need that the  community presented.  He and                                                              
others are  just asking for  the same thing  that is given  to the                                                              
alcohol community.  He said he can  go to the Dena'ina  Center and                                                              
have  a beer and  watch a  show, but  he cannot  do that  anywhere                                                              
else.  The alcohol  community can  throw the  Beer and  Barleywine                                                              
Festival without  cops kicking  in the  door. "That's  really what                                                              
we  want,"  he said.  He  noted  that  he is  a  professional  tax                                                              
person, and from  that standpoint on the federal  level, a private                                                              
club  either  operates  as  a nonprofit  or  it  operates  like  a                                                              
business and  is taxed  like a business.  The phrase,  significant                                                              
public  access,  was  created more  recently  to  protect  private                                                              
clubs  but prohibit  discrimination. That  is where  the law  came                                                              
from, and he  is saddened to see  it used to prohibit  people from                                                              
getting together.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:38:15 PM                                                                                                                    
MARGE STONEKING,  Executive Director,  American Lung  Association,                                                              
Anchorage,  said   there  is  general  consensus   on  having  the                                                              
legislature  decide on  onsite consumption  or  licensure. As  the                                                              
legislature  does  that, she  would  like  to  weigh in  from  the                                                              
health  perspective.  The  American   Lung  Association  takes  no                                                              
position  on  the  legalization  of marijuana,  and  all  comments                                                              
submitted publicly  have been in  regard to second-hand  exposure.                                                              
When  any   plant  product   is  aerosolized   or  combusted   for                                                              
inhalation,  there will be  secondary health  effects. There  will                                                              
be pollution.  When it is indoors,  others are at risk.  There are                                                              
not  nearly as  many studies  on  second-hand marijuana  exposure,                                                              
but the  smoke from it contains  fine particulate matter  that can                                                              
be breathed  deep into  the lungs  and can  cause asthma  attacks,                                                              
increase  respiratory  infections,  and exacerbate  problems  like                                                              
COPD [Chronic Obstructive  Pulmonary Disease] and  bronchitis. She                                                              
wants people to  be aware of the second-hand  smoke effects, which                                                              
cannot be filtrated  or ventilated away. The American  Society for                                                              
Heating,  Refrigeration,   and  Air  Conditioning   Engineers  has                                                              
included  marijuana  smoke  in its  position  on  ventilation-that                                                              
there  is no ventilation  system  that can clean  the air.  Onsite                                                              
consumption poses  a potential risk  to workers in that  venue and                                                              
adjacent  businesses,  and many  Alaska  businesses  are in  strip                                                              
malls.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:42:19 PM                                                                                                                    
EUGENE  CARL HABERMAN,  Matanuska-Susitna  Valley,  noted that  he                                                              
has sat  in on many  meetings. The more  complicated an  issue is,                                                              
the more  notice and opportunities  for public comments  should be                                                              
made available.  He said the one-minute  limit does not  provide a                                                              
reasonable  opportunity  for the  public  to be  heard  and is  in                                                              
violation of  state law. An extensive  amount of time  was allowed                                                              
for invited witnesses,  but when it comes to the  public, they get                                                              
one  minute, and  written comment  is  the only  other option.  He                                                              
asked, "Where  is the quorum?" There  are only two members  of the                                                              
Joint  Judiciary Committee  present,  and everyone  else is  gone.                                                              
There might  be one or  two members online,  but he  cannot verify                                                              
that,  so  this  is  not a  legitimate  meeting,  and  it  is  not                                                              
respectful to  the public.  He has attended  every meeting  of the                                                              
borough  marijuana committee,  and  he has  been  to the  assembly                                                              
marijuana  committee  meetings.  "I  had  substantial  information                                                              
that I would  have like to have  been verbally on the  record, but                                                              
seeing this  tragedy of a meeting,  the way you conducted  it, the                                                              
chair  is now  present,  that has  not allowed  for  me to  really                                                              
focus  on really  what I  want to  say." He  had to  focus on  how                                                              
wrongly the meeting  has been conducted regarding  connecting with                                                              
the people. When  done appropriately, the public may  not be happy                                                              
with the  decision, but people will  be more comfortable  with it,                                                              
and most importantly, they will be more supportive.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:45:11 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR LEDOUX explained  that the quorum requirement  is for taking                                                              
action, and  this meeting is simply  to update the  legislature on                                                              
the marijuana control board.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HABERMAN said  that at  the  beginning of  the meeting  Chair                                                              
LeDoux stated that there was a quorum.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:45:57 PM                                                                                                                    
JOSHUA  TOBIN, Anchorage,  said  he is  also not  that happy  that                                                              
many members  have left. The state  took two years, and  that is a                                                              
long  time.  He  was  told that  people  would  have  licenses  in                                                              
February,  so  he rented  his  building  in December.  "I'll  have                                                              
spent  $50,000 just  for  what reason,  I  don't know."  Regarding                                                              
banking, he said  that everybody in this state has  read that they                                                              
cannot do  business with banks,  and his address is  posted online                                                              
at the  AMCO website as  well as the address  to "my grow.  So now                                                              
they know that  I can't use banks  and they know where  I am. That                                                              
doesn't  help  a whole  lot,"  he  stated.  In Anchorage,  once  a                                                              
person  finishes   the  state's  application  process,   the  same                                                              
process has  to be done again.  "You have a community  meeting for                                                              
the state's process;  you have to have another  one for Anchorage.                                                              
You have  to wait 60 days;  you have to  wait another 60  days for                                                              
Anchorage."  He is  not  sure how  that  helps  anybody. Also,  he                                                              
would bet large amounts  of money that he has not  run into a city                                                              
official who has  read any of the regulations. When  he meets with                                                              
them, they  discuss things in the  first paragraphs. In  a meeting                                                              
last week smell  was discussed. "People were discussing  the smell                                                              
of weed two  years ago-this is  ridiculous." It would be  handy if                                                              
they  could get  up to date.  He stated  that the  AMCO is  really                                                              
understaffed.  "It's  brutal."  He  said  he  heard  that  Cynthia                                                              
Franklin has not  done anything about the people  acting without a                                                              
license, but  she sent APD out  to Wasilla to arrest  Rocky Burns,                                                              
and  he faces  "a  hundred-something years  right  now." "Over  on                                                              
Gambel, right  now, I  saw it this  morning, they're  selling weed                                                              
over there. They  busted them. They're still open."  Regarding pot                                                              
bars,  he personally  laughs about  this.  "You can  go ahead  and                                                              
make  laws   against  it.  That's   fine.  People  are   going  to                                                              
congregate and  do whatever  they want like  they've done  for 100                                                              
years.  You can  either get  on board  and pass  laws making  this                                                              
possible, or  we'll continue to  have this situation  where people                                                              
break the  law." He  said the cannabis  community has  proven that                                                              
they will do that.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:49:23 PM                                                                                                                    
MAGGIE MULDONADO,  Anchorage, said she moved to  Alaska about five                                                              
months ago,  and Pot Luck  has provided her  with a safe  place to                                                              
go and  meet people.  She did  not know  anybody, and  the [people                                                              
at] Pot Luck  have taken care of  her, made her feel  like family,                                                              
and have  been wonderful. "I would  just like to leave  today with                                                              
a more positive note," she said.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:50:15 PM                                                                                                                    
DON  HART,  Wasilla,   said  Proposition  2  created   a  personal                                                              
property right and  was codified in AS 17.38. The  problem with AS                                                              
17.38.210(a)(2),  regarding   local  option,  is  that   when  the                                                              
personal  property  right was  created  in the  constitution,  the                                                              
local  municipalities  stand  in  the shoes  of  the  legislature,                                                              
because  they  authorize  that mandatory  statute,  "so  they,  in                                                              
turn,  are  exercising  government  powers  in  a  takings  action                                                              
through the ordinance  or through initiative process  is a takings                                                              
action  that  violates  these people's  personal  property  rights                                                              
created  by Prop.  2." The  language, "or  through the  initiative                                                              
process," is  unconstitutional, because  the Alaska  Supreme Court                                                              
has decided  in three  cases that  the initiative  cannot  be used                                                              
for  a zoning  process.  It is  illegal  and unconstitutional,  he                                                              
said, and  it violates several  mandatory Alaska  statutes. Alaska                                                              
was divided up into  large zones and large boroughs  to reduce the                                                              
smallest amount  of government  and to  avoid double taxation.  In                                                              
dividing up the  boroughs, six different statutes  were created to                                                              
say exactly  what  had to be  done. The  borough  has to create  a                                                              
planning  and  zoning  commission  to use  an  area-wide  plan  to                                                              
determine how the  land is to be used. Those  statutes mandate the                                                              
borough  to do  all of  the  zoning, and  initiative  does not  do                                                              
that.  It is  not submitted  to  the planning  commission, and  it                                                              
does not  determine the proper  land use.  That is why  the Alaska                                                              
Supreme  Court   has  said  it  is  unconstitutional.   The  Joint                                                              
Judiciary Committee  would probably be interested  in knowing that                                                              
the legislature  itself could  delete "or  through the  initiative                                                              
process", and it  would not affect the rest of AS  17.38. It would                                                              
remove  the  unconstitutional  aspect  of  allowing  and  enticing                                                              
people  to enter the  initiative  process, like  is being  done in                                                              
the Kenai Peninsula Borough.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:54:11 PM                                                                                                                    
TIMOTHY HALE,  Butte, Alaska,  said the  onsite endorsement  is up                                                              
to the legislature  to either make legal or illegal,  which is the                                                              
consensus of people  he has talked to. Intoxicated  driving can be                                                              
an  issue  with  cannabis.  He   said  the  body  metabolizes  the                                                              
cannabinoids  twice. The first  is the  one that is  psychoactive,                                                              
and  the second  is from  what is  stored  in fat  cells and  that                                                              
metabolite  is not psychoactive.  It is  pretty easy to  determine                                                              
the  difference with  a blood  test, and  that needs  to be  taken                                                              
into consideration regarding impaired driving.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:56:15 PM                                                                                                                    
JOHN  RANDALL,  Anchorage,  said   he  is  retired  and  has  been                                                              
regularly going to  the Pot Luck Events Club for  about 18 months.                                                              
There  has never  been  any commerce  there.  It used  to be  that                                                              
folks  that were  growing crops  or promoting  their strain  would                                                              
bring some  to the club  and give it to  people, but it  was never                                                              
in exchange  for money  and never  had anything  to do  with going                                                              
into the club  and paying the cover  charge. It is a  private club                                                              
as far as  he can tell, because  a membership is  required. People                                                              
no  longer bring  samples, because  it  is not  allowed now  under                                                              
their licenses,  "So it's a bring-your-own-bud  kind of a  club. I                                                              
bring  something I  grew  or that  I  have, and  I  share it,  and                                                              
that's  the extent  of  what  goes on  there."  He  never asks  if                                                              
anyone wants  to buy  his marijuana,  and no one  asks him  to buy                                                              
it, it is just a safe place to consume without fear.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:58:21 PM                                                                                                                    
HEATHER THOMAS,  Anchorage, said  she is 22,  and it  is important                                                              
that her  generation has  a safe  place to be  social that  is not                                                              
alcohol-centered.  She does  not like  to drink,  and our  society                                                              
seems focused  on alcohol.  She likes having  Pot Luck  and thinks                                                              
it is a healthy and safe place for people coming into adulthood.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:59:10 PM                                                                                                                    
UNIDENTIFIED  SPEAKER,  Chugiak,  said  he  was  not  planning  on                                                              
testifying but  when he heard the  AG opinion, it occurred  to him                                                              
that if all clubs  are public, then every exotic  club is probably                                                              
violating  public nudity  laws.  (Chair LeDoux  said  that was  an                                                              
interesting point.)  As a long-time  cancer patient  and survivor,                                                              
it  is important  that  we do  try to  add  something for  medical                                                              
needs. He said he  has worked with many medical  people, and being                                                              
left out is a travesty.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
5:00:10 PM                                                                                                                    
PETER BARNES,  Anchorage, said  he has been  a member of  Pot Luck                                                              
since it was open,  and he has never seen one  fight there. "I'm a                                                              
recovering  alcoholic; I  used to  drink  in almost  every bar  in                                                              
this town 20-odd  years ago. I saw a fight in every  one of them."                                                              
He said  he got pulled  over and  went through treatment  numerous                                                              
times,  and  after finding  cannabis,  he  has been  a  successful                                                              
member of  society ever since.  He said he  owns a business  and a                                                              
home and  he is  happily married.  Regarding impaired  driving, he                                                              
said to look  at the numbers of  DUI stops leaving Pot  Luck since                                                              
it opened.  "I don't think  there's any."  He added that,  "We are                                                              
just sharing  our products in  there; nobody's selling  anything."                                                              
The owners  are not selling  anything-they're just not.  "We pride                                                              
ourselves in  following that  rule; we really,  really do,  and we                                                              
condemn those  that try to violate  it." He voted for  cannabis to                                                              
be legal  when he was 19,  and now he is  in his 60s. This  is way                                                              
past  due. He  said  he has  medical  needs that  cannabis  helps,                                                              
including  PTSD. He  is a former  Marine, and  private clubs  like                                                              
Pot Luck need to be allowed, he concluded.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
5:02:27 PM                                                                                                                    
LEE  HAYWOOD,  Owner, Pot  Luck  Events,  Anchorage, said  he  has                                                              
upwards of  6,000 applications and  membership forms,  which shows                                                              
the need for Pot  Luck Events. "We" are fighting  a lot of battles                                                              
in a  lot of different  directions, and  [the owners of]  Pot Luck                                                              
Events just  wanted to  provide a place  where people  could come,                                                              
share their  cannabis, "talk about  what this is,"  start breaking                                                              
down some  of the social  stigmas, educate  people on  the history                                                              
of cannabis, and  introduce people to different  types of strands.                                                              
"We provide  more than  just walking  in off  the street  and come                                                              
smoking with  us." He said that  in over 18 months  of operations,                                                              
there has  not been one  call to "the  muni." There have  not been                                                              
any  disruptions,  and the  club  regulates itself.  "We  regulate                                                              
those  people that  need cannabis  from a  medical standpoint  and                                                              
provide them a place  to be able to link up with  other folks that                                                              
are  willing to  share that  cannabis."  He said  there have  been                                                              
numerous businesses  that have  come into Pot  Luck with  the idea                                                              
of getting into  this industry. He said Pot Luck  tries to provide                                                              
a place  for the  black market  to translate  over into  the green                                                              
market  and give  them  some business  acumen  behind those  ideas                                                              
that they may have.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. HAYWOOD said  Pot Luck provides a place to  be political. Ages                                                              
range  from  21  to  87 for  members,  and  there  is  social  and                                                              
economic diversity. A  person can sit down in any  circle and have                                                              
a conversation. There  is the typical stoner next  to someone with                                                              
an  advanced law  degree,  and they  are  having  a dialogue.  "We                                                              
build  a sense  of community,  and  that's what  we've been  about                                                              
from the beginning."  He said he used  to work for the  state as a                                                              
justice   officer,   and  he   is   retired  military.   "We   are                                                              
professionals  and we're trying  to promulgate this  responsibly."                                                              
He added  that the Pot  Luck wants to  be regulated or  maybe not,                                                              
depending on  what the legislature  decides, but it does  not make                                                              
any money  by selling marijuana. It  does not happen there  and it                                                              
is  frowned upon,  he  explained.  There are  people  who come  in                                                              
looking  to  buy it,  but  that's  not  what  Pot Luck  is  about.                                                              
Regarding comments  about being a public place, he  said there are                                                              
no windows  and everyone has  to sign a  membership form.  He said                                                              
the company is willing  to restructure based on the  AG opinion in                                                              
order  to  stay  legal.  The  founder,  Theresa  Collins,  is  now                                                              
battling  stage  4 cancer.  The  stresses  of this  are  enormous:                                                              
trying  to  build  relationships  and a  sense  of  community  and                                                              
talking to  politicians and  then trying  to conduct your  day-to-                                                              
day life,  like mowing  the lawn, for  example. In this  industry,                                                              
it  has been  said that  one cannabis  year is  worth about  seven                                                              
years  of  anyone else's  life.  The  boxes  he brought  today  of                                                              
membership forms  represent to him  stories of people.  There have                                                              
been many  times he wanted  to throw the  towel in,  thinking that                                                              
the risk is not  worth the reward. He said Pot  Luck owners always                                                              
wanted to serve  as the practicum  for the city and state  on "how                                                              
this  can   be  introduced  socially."   They  have   invited  the                                                              
director,  legislators, mayor,  and assembly  members to  come and                                                              
see what they do.  Some have taken them up and  are members of the                                                              
club. "We  need this in order  to move forward. We've  needed this                                                              
because  we've had  no  infrastructure  prior to  (unclear)."  The                                                              
groups have to come together and talk at the 420 headquarters.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
5:07:15 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT  thanked Mr. Haywood for giving  her a tour                                                              
of Pot  Luck and explaining  what it was  all about. She  said she                                                              
has  encouraged  all other  legislators  to visit  before  passing                                                              
judgement on any  of the social clubs, because  Mr. Haywood really                                                              
opened her  eyes with  the conversations and  the things  that she                                                              
saw. "I  think everybody before  they pass laws or  pass judgement                                                              
on something,  they should go down  and see what it's  all about."                                                              
That  is part  of  the due  diligence  that she  has  as a  policy                                                              
maker, which is  to fully understand what she  is legislating. She                                                              
said she  is not the normal  person, but Mr. Haywood  welcomed her                                                              
with  open arms  and explained  how  things worked.  She said  she                                                              
appreciates his  openness and willingness  to work with  all walks                                                              
of life  and make the  case and  help legislators understand  what                                                              
the concept  is and  what the idea  was. She  said she  really did                                                              
not know what a social club was until talking to Mr. Haywood.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HAYWOOD said  the concept  is to  build a  community and  the                                                              
industry.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
5:08:28 PM                                                                                                                    
There  being no  further business  to come  before the  committee,                                                              
Chair LeDoux  adjourned the Joint  Judiciary Committee  meeting at                                                              
5:08 p.m.                                                                                                                       

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
ABA Marijuana and Banking FAQ Feb2014.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Alcohol Establishment License Application Instructions.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
AG-Opinion Hladick Marijuana Social Clubs.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Ballot Measure 2.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Cole Memorandum.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Department of Treasury Financial Crimes Enforcement Network Memo.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
FDIC Advisory Committee Meeting Minutes 20140409 only MJ pages.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 75.PDF HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 75
HB 123.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
HB 123
Joint-Judiciary Meeting Agenda 9.14.2016.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Legal Memo - Background Checks for Marijuana Licensees.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Marijuana Control Board Approved Regulations.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Marijuana Establishment License Application Instructions.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Marijuana License Flow Chart.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Marijuana Control Board_Licenses by Status 9_14_16.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Marijuana Control Board
Marijuana Control Board_Licenses by Status 9_14_16.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Public Testimony - Dollynda Phelps.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Public Testimony - Heather Thomas.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Public Testimony - Jeremiah Emmerson.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Public Testimony - Hugh Brown.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Public Testimony - Kenneth Jacobus.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Public Testimony - Rebecca Luczycki.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Public Testimony - Samantha Laudert-Rodgers.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM
Schulte Follow up Comments September14,2016.pdf HJUD 9/14/2016 1:00:00 PM