- Colorado's first marijuana club opened on New Year's Eve in Denver
- Club 64 is open only to members, and does not sell pot
- Some marijuana advocates say the club violates the intent of Amendment 64
- That amendment legalized recreational marijuana use in Colorado
The members-only Club 64
is the first of its kind to open in Colorado since November when voters
approved Amendment 64, which legalized possession of small amounts of
marijuana for recreational use.
The club opened on New Year's Eve at 4:20 p.m. -- another significant number among pro-pot advocates
-- to a small, but enthusiastic crowd of about a dozen people, all over
the age of 21. Each member paid a $29 fee, allowing them to bring their
own weed and smoke anywhere on the premises.
Not all of Colorado's marijuana advocates are celebrating.
"Much of our success with
Amendment 64 was making the soccer moms comfortable," said one advocate
who campaigned to pass the amendment and declined to be named for fear
of creating a rift within the marijuana advocacy community.
"This is not the fight we want to have right now."
Even though the club
doesn't sell marijuana, the advocate said it "thwart(s) the intent of
Amendment 64," which requires a year-long waiting period before stores
are allowed to open and sell marijuana. That provision is designed to
allow state and local governments enough time to regulate the industry
and, proponents hope, to help ease fears in the community.
Despite new laws in Colorado and Washington state,
federal law still prohibits recreational marijuana use. It's unclear if
the federal government will step in and try to stop either state's laws
from being enacted.
The advocate expressed
concern that unregulated marijuana clubs in Colorado could create a bad
impression on voters who supported the measure.
"We have not only an opportunity but a responsibility to demonstrate to America this can work."
In a carefully worded
statement, the advocacy director of Yes on Amendment 64 said that while
Club 64 poses no risk to the community, it does put at risk the advances
their cause has made.
"We can best demonstrate
that regulation is a much safer approach to marijuana policy than
prohibition through the careful and swift creation of regulated
businesses," Betty Aldworth said.
Those who showed up at
Club 64 Tuesday weren't interested in making sure "soccer moms" would
approve of their behavior. They just wanted to celebrate their recent
victory at the ballot box by ringing in the new year with their now
legal drug of choice.
"The voters of Colorado
have said we want cannabis to be legalized and we want a bunch of
like-minded adults to be able to get together and exercise their
constitutional rights together and that's what Club 64 embodies," said
club owner Rob Corry.
Gabriel Kinderay, clad
in an orange Denver Broncos cap, wasted no time filling a small glass
pipe with marijuana he says he grew himself and lighting up.
"It seems like up until
today we were the kind of people that had to be secretive about who we
were and how we lived our lives," he said. "Over the last couple of
years we've been able to start really talking more openly about what we
do and people have accepted it and that's great. I'm glad to see that."
Club 64 doesn't have a
permanent location and the address for the New Year's Eve celebration
was distributed only to paying members. Corry hopes to make the club a
monthly event, moving from location to location.
Long-time Denver marijuana activist Miguel Lopez hopes Amendment 64 and Club 64 will serve as a model for other communities.
"It's a pathway to
further freedom," said Lopez. "Are we truly free if all human beings
cannot possess marijuana? Not just in Colorado but as a human rights
campaign globally. Let Denver be a beacon of hope for freedom, for true
freedom."
Lopez then fired up a joint, held in the smoke and exhaled with a series of coughs.
"You can't get off if you don't cough," he said with a grin.
The new year could bring
a deeper divide among Colorado's pro-marijuana advocates, as the state
tries to figure out how to reconcile its new law with the federal
government and the stigma surrounding the drug that advocates insist is
no worse than alcohol.
Corry, an attorney and a
longtime marijuana advocate who is known for ruffling feathers,
rejected the notion that his club is hampering efforts to make marijuana
more socially and legally acceptable.
"This is much larger
than just marijuana, this is a civil rights struggle to end prohibition
and civil rights struggles and overcoming oppression (do) not happen
easily," Corry said. "It has to happen by people taking chances and
sometimes yes, pushing the envelope ...
"And that is how change
happens in this country and that's what got us to this point -- people
taking chances and pushing the envelope."
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