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Rocky Mountain high

Pot a $200 million industry in Colorado

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“This is not your father’s marijuana,” he said.

Colorado’s one-of-a-kind system arose through necessity.

In 2000, it joined Washington in allowing medical marijuana, but it wasn’t until 2009 that Denver, like Seattle, began seeing wildcat marijuana dispensaries popping up across the city.

Then-state Sen. Chris Romer, son of a former governor, in 2010 pushed through medical marijuana regulations envisioned to be “as strict, if not twice as strict, as alcohol.”

Five-figure licensing and application fees — plus security and requirements that dispensaries grow most of their own product — added up to $500,000 or more. That was intentional, Romer said.

“If you raise the bar high enough, they won’t risk their $500,000 or million-dollar investment to sell to youngsters,” Romer said.

With a new law in place, a retired liquor regulator and onetime drug cop, Matt Cook, was brought in to broker a five-month negotiation that “had drug dealers on one side, law enforcement on the other, and my staff in the middle,” he said.

Cook had one primary goal: no “diversion” of marijuana spilling from regulated grows onto street corners.

The result was a blizzard of rules: 24-7 video surveillance in grow farms and dispensaries accessible to enforcement officers via the Internet; bar codes on each plant; criminal background checks; and hard-copy manifests faxed to Cook’s staff each time a pound of pot was moved.

“The process works,” said Cook, who retired and is now a consultant to the medical marijuana industry. “It sort of set the example for the rest of the nation. This commodity won’t go away. And it can be regulated.”

Washington lawmakers tried to replicate the system in 2011, but Gov. Chris Gregoire vetoed the bill, citing the remote risk that state employees could be charged with violating federal law.

Colorado skipped right over that.

Colorado’s 2.9 percent state sales tax last year generated $5.3 million from medical marijuana sales. Cities, which can impose huge licensing fees and extra sales taxes, have reaped far more. Dispensary owners say they pay federal income tax, often at high rates because their businesses do not qualify for many deductions.

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