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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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News >  Marijuana

WSU study finds that THC lingers in breastmilk

When breastfeeding moms used cannabis, low amounts of the psychoactive component THC showed up in the milk they produced, a new study showed. The Washington State University-led research in testing breastmilk found no consistent time when THC peaked and then declined. Next,  a follow-up is examining potential effects, if any, on infants.
News >  Marijuana

Study: More older adults are using cannabis post-pandemic

A new study, published in the Cannabis and Cannabinoids Research journal, found more older Americans are using cannabis today than before the pandemic. According to researchers with the University of Michigan’s Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, roughly 1 in 8 Americans over 50 currently use the substance. “As the stress of the pandemic and the increased legalization of cannabis ...
News >  Marijuana

Spokane City Council proposal would dedicate some marijuana tax revenue for drug treatment

The city has been designating a half million dollars of its payments from the state's dedicated cannabis account for use by the Spokane Police Department. The measure from Spokane City Council members Karen Stratton and Betsy Wilkerson, who are sponsoring the law, would retain that $500,000 for police in future budgets, but additional money would be funneled into its own separate account for education and treatment programs.
News >  Marijuana

Can you bring legal weed back to Idaho from a neighboring state? Here’s what the law says

While neighboring states allow recreational and medical marijuana use, Idaho remains strictly bud-free. In total, 21 states across the U.S. have legalized recreational marijuana, and 37 states have allowed medical use. Idaho is one of just four states yet to even decriminalize marijuana, along with Wyoming, Kansas and South Carolina. But with several weed-friendly states only a few hours’ ...
News >  Crime/Public Safety

Co-owner of Spokane’s marijuana producer Grow Op Farms among 9 indicted in Utah fraud scheme tied to supplements

The Washington Liquor and Cannabis Board confirmed Thursday that Robert McKinley, 45, co-owner of Grow Op Farms and Phat and Sticky, was named in a December indictment alleging he and eight other residents of Utah had devised a scheme to bilk customers of "nutraceutical, CBD, and dietary supplement products" out of millions of dollars by setting up phony companies and websites and making untrue claims about the products' health benefits. McKinley's attorney said the allegations are not related to his state-licensed businesses in Washington. 
News >  WA Government

Spin Control: Legislative bills show the mainstreaming of marijuana

When Washington voters legalized recreational marijuana a little more than 10 years ago, persons of a certain age wondered about the switch from the realm of “Dazed and Confused” to the brave new world of state-sponsored pot.Probably no one could have imagined how far government intervention might come as we start our second decade.
News >  Business

WA pot sales decline for first time in the decade since legalization

Dec. 19—This December marks a decade since Washington state became one of the first two states in the U.S. to legalize marijuana. A look back at the cannabis industry's growth in the Evergreen State shows the fledgling market has yet to mature, with sales declining after surging during the pandemic and the initial years of legalization. After voters in Colorado and Washington approved ballot ...