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Washington state celebrates as new marijuana law hits the books

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Derek Franklin, head of a group of substance-abuse treatment providers, said his group would fight “to keep marijuana from going the way of cigarettes in the 1950s and becoming a normal part of daily life in Washington.”

The owners of several medical-marijuana dispensaries, which are unaffected by the new law, reported off-the-street customers demanding to buy from them, though they lacked medical authorizations.

If they hit the black market instead, they are likely to find it awash in supply. One experienced local grower, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said a bumper crop of Northern California-grown marijuana has flooded the market.

“There’s a massive amount of cannabis available, compared to what it was three months ago,” the grower said.

“I’m not breaking any laws!” yelled John Sanders, holding a zip-lock bag of marijuana over his head at the Seattle Center celebration.

Sanders, chairman of the Edmonds Community College music department, brought his 11- and 9-year-old daughters to show them “democracy in action.” He said he wasn’t going to smoke marijuana there because public consumption remains illegal, but brought the baggie to exercise his new rights.

“I feel way more comfortable telling people now that I’m a marijuana user,” he said, smiling nervously. “I don’t have any inhibitions at all.”

The idea of “coming out of the marijuana closet” was repeated at the celebration. Vivian McPeak, co-founder of Seattle’s Hempfest, the largest marijuana-focused festival in the U.S., took the long view.

“We’ve lived our entire lives under prohibition, and never known anything else,” McPeak said. “It’s a huge quantum shift in thinking. I think what everybody sees is, if two states go this easily, the entire wall can come down faster than we thought possible.”

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THE NEW LAW

Possession: State criminal penalties for possession of 1 ounce of marijuana (or 1 pound in cannabis-infused food, or 72 ounces of cannabis-infused drink) are eliminated. Public consumption of marijuana, like alcohol, can mean a $50 fine.

Employment: The new law does not change the right of employers to drug-test employees.

DUI: A level of 5 nanograms of THC, marijuana’s active ingredient, in a driver’s blood becomes equivalent to a 0.08 percent blood-alcohol level for driving under the influence.

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