US Atty Concerned: Oregon weed industry has an overproduction problem

greg nr

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/2018/02/oregon-weed-industry-overproduction-problem/

And what, preytell, will be the solution?

Oregon's marijuana industry has a "massive" overproduction problem, according to U.S. Attorney Billy Williams.

Williams told a summit of law enforcement and cannabis industry representatives on Friday that he wants to do something about the amount of Oregon marijuana that has ended up on the black market. The state is producing producing about three times more pot than can legally be consumed, former Oregon State University Professor Seth Crawford told the Associated Press.

The Oregonian last month, Williams said that 16 states had reported marijuana seizures from Oregon and that Oregon postal agents had recovered 2,644 pounds of marijuana in outbound parcels during 2017.

"This lucrative supply attracts cartels and other criminal networks into Oregon and in turn brings money laundering, violence, and environmental degradation," Williams wrote.

After Sessions announced that he would roll back the Obama-era policy, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum called the move an "overreach" by the Trump administration in a tweet, adding that Oregon collected $60 million in state taxes from the marijuana industry last year. Governor Kate Brown wrote in a statement that the cannabis industry had created 19,000 jobs for the state.

The 2013 Cole Memo, named for then-Deputy Attorney General James Cole, redirected the focus for U.S. attorneys towards prosecuting cases that involved organized crime or sales to minors rather than businesses and sales in stated where pot was legalized. In the January 2018 turnaround, Sessions called the rescission of the Obama-era guidances a " return to the rule of law" since marijuana is still illegal under federal law.

"Today's memo on federal marijuana enforcement simply directs all U.S. Attorneys to use previously established prosecutorial principles that provide them all the necessary tools to disrupt criminal organizations, tackle the growing drug crisis, and thwart violent crime across our country," Sessions said in a statement on January 4.​
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/2018/02/oregon-weed-industry-overproduction-problem/

And what, preytell, will be the solution?

Oregon's marijuana industry has a "massive" overproduction problem, according to U.S. Attorney Billy Williams.

Williams told a summit of law enforcement and cannabis industry representatives on Friday that he wants to do something about the amount of Oregon marijuana that has ended up on the black market. The state is producing producing about three times more pot than can legally be consumed, former Oregon State University Professor Seth Crawford told the Associated Press.

The Oregonian last month, Williams said that 16 states had reported marijuana seizures from Oregon and that Oregon postal agents had recovered 2,644 pounds of marijuana in outbound parcels during 2017.

"This lucrative supply attracts cartels and other criminal networks into Oregon and in turn brings money laundering, violence, and environmental degradation," Williams wrote.

After Sessions announced that he would roll back the Obama-era policy, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum called the move an "overreach" by the Trump administration in a tweet, adding that Oregon collected $60 million in state taxes from the marijuana industry last year. Governor Kate Brown wrote in a statement that the cannabis industry had created 19,000 jobs for the state.

The 2013 Cole Memo, named for then-Deputy Attorney General James Cole, redirected the focus for U.S. attorneys towards prosecuting cases that involved organized crime or sales to minors rather than businesses and sales in stated where pot was legalized. In the January 2018 turnaround, Sessions called the rescission of the Obama-era guidances a " return to the rule of law" since marijuana is still illegal under federal law.

"Today's memo on federal marijuana enforcement simply directs all U.S. Attorneys to use previously established prosecutorial principles that provide them all the necessary tools to disrupt criminal organizations, tackle the growing drug crisis, and thwart violent crime across our country," Sessions said in a statement on January 4.​
Sounds like the State's bordering need to legalize too.
 

jonsnow399

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/2018/02/oregon-weed-industry-overproduction-problem/

And what, preytell, will be the solution?

Oregon's marijuana industry has a "massive" overproduction problem, according to U.S. Attorney Billy Williams.

Williams told a summit of law enforcement and cannabis industry representatives on Friday that he wants to do something about the amount of Oregon marijuana that has ended up on the black market. The state is producing producing about three times more pot than can legally be consumed, former Oregon State University Professor Seth Crawford told the Associated Press.

The Oregonian last month, Williams said that 16 states had reported marijuana seizures from Oregon and that Oregon postal agents had recovered 2,644 pounds of marijuana in outbound parcels during 2017.

"This lucrative supply attracts cartels and other criminal networks into Oregon and in turn brings money laundering, violence, and environmental degradation," Williams wrote.

After Sessions announced that he would roll back the Obama-era policy, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum called the move an "overreach" by the Trump administration in a tweet, adding that Oregon collected $60 million in state taxes from the marijuana industry last year. Governor Kate Brown wrote in a statement that the cannabis industry had created 19,000 jobs for the state.

The 2013 Cole Memo, named for then-Deputy Attorney General James Cole, redirected the focus for U.S. attorneys towards prosecuting cases that involved organized crime or sales to minors rather than businesses and sales in stated where pot was legalized. In the January 2018 turnaround, Sessions called the rescission of the Obama-era guidances a " return to the rule of law" since marijuana is still illegal under federal law.

"Today's memo on federal marijuana enforcement simply directs all U.S. Attorneys to use previously established prosecutorial principles that provide them all the necessary tools to disrupt criminal organizations, tackle the growing drug crisis, and thwart violent crime across our country," Sessions said in a statement on January 4.​
Tell him he can send the surplus to me and I will burn it, slowly.:fire:
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/2018/02/oregon-weed-industry-overproduction-problem/

And what, preytell, will be the solution?

Oregon's marijuana industry has a "massive" overproduction problem, according to U.S. Attorney Billy Williams.

Williams told a summit of law enforcement and cannabis industry representatives on Friday that he wants to do something about the amount of Oregon marijuana that has ended up on the black market. The state is producing producing about three times more pot than can legally be consumed, former Oregon State University Professor Seth Crawford told the Associated Press.

The Oregonian last month, Williams said that 16 states had reported marijuana seizures from Oregon and that Oregon postal agents had recovered 2,644 pounds of marijuana in outbound parcels during 2017.

"This lucrative supply attracts cartels and other criminal networks into Oregon and in turn brings money laundering, violence, and environmental degradation," Williams wrote.

After Sessions announced that he would roll back the Obama-era policy, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum called the move an "overreach" by the Trump administration in a tweet, adding that Oregon collected $60 million in state taxes from the marijuana industry last year. Governor Kate Brown wrote in a statement that the cannabis industry had created 19,000 jobs for the state.

The 2013 Cole Memo, named for then-Deputy Attorney General James Cole, redirected the focus for U.S. attorneys towards prosecuting cases that involved organized crime or sales to minors rather than businesses and sales in stated where pot was legalized. In the January 2018 turnaround, Sessions called the rescission of the Obama-era guidances a " return to the rule of law" since marijuana is still illegal under federal law.

"Today's memo on federal marijuana enforcement simply directs all U.S. Attorneys to use previously established prosecutorial principles that provide them all the necessary tools to disrupt criminal organizations, tackle the growing drug crisis, and thwart violent crime across our country," Sessions said in a statement on January 4.​
Sessions and his department are sharpening their knives. I don't doubt that Oregon is growing more than the Oregon rec and med dispensary market can absorb.

My legal four produced seven pounds. I slimmed my inventory down to the legal eight ounces plus one pound of cannabutter as soon as I could -- for me an ounce of flower lasts about a year so this is not a hardship.. I can't keep my entire harvest but I can gift people, and yes, @jonsnow399 , I've given pounds away. Which puts even more pressure on the legal growers to find buyers. Totally agree with ninja that not just border states should legalize. Pot is easy to grow. People are going to find a way to move to places where people are willing to pay good money for it. I'm doing my best to flood Oregon with free pot. I have my legal four and I've given my neighbors free seed. They are growing too. They are gave away more than they kept last year too.
 

Warpedpassage

Well-Known Member
Sessions and his department are sharpening their knives. I don't doubt that Oregon is growing more than the Oregon rec and med dispensary market can absorb.

My legal four produced seven pounds. I slimmed my inventory down to the legal eight ounces plus one pound of cannabutter as soon as I could -- for me an ounce of flower lasts about a year so this is not a hardship.. I can't keep my entire harvest but I can gift people, and yes, @jonsnow399 , I've given pounds away. Which puts even more pressure on the legal growers to find buyers. Totally agree with ninja that not just border states should legalize. Pot is easy to grow. People are going to find a way to move to places where people are willing to pay good money for it. I'm doing my best to flood Oregon with free pot. I have my legal four and I've given my neighbors free seed. They are growing too. They are gave away more than they kept last year too.
Well sir, you are a modern day hero. Bravo!!!
 

greg nr

Well-Known Member
My legal four produced seven pounds. I slimmed my inventory down to the legal eight ounces plus one pound of cannabutter as soon as I could -- for me an ounce of flower lasts about a year so this is not a hardship.. I can't keep my entire harvest but I can gift people, and yes, @jonsnow399 , I've given pounds away. Which puts even more pressure on the legal growers to find buyers. Totally agree with ninja that not just border states should legalize. Pot is easy to grow. People are going to find a way to move to places where people are willing to pay good money for it. I'm doing my best to flood Oregon with free pot. I have my legal four and I've given my neighbors free seed. They are growing too. They are gave away more than they kept last year too.
Pretty much the same story here. While I have a 12 plant limit, I only grow 4 or 5 at a time. That's pretty much all a 3x3 will hold without wasting stalks. I give 95% away, an ounce at a time.

I like the extra plant count though. It lets me grow from reg seeds without going over. If I had to stick to 4, I'd have to run 3 in the tent and one mother, or grow fem seeds, limiting my choice for what to run or reducing the runs per year...

But yeah, I'm sure the collective is having an impact on bm sales; we don't have retail sales approved yet, even though rec and growing are.
 
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