Politics
New marijuana growing rules taking hold in Colorado by start of next year: what you need to know
DENVER – Colorado law enforcement and marijuana growers will have to make some adjustments regarding marijuana growing in the state over the next six months, as two new laws aimed at reducing illegal marijuana cultivation and dealing will take effect.
Gov. John Hickenlooper signed two bills last week aimed directly at cutting down on high plant limits and reducing the flow of Colorado pot to other states—something law enforcement agencies say has become an increasing problem in recent years.
House Bill 1220 will cap the number of plants allowed for recreational users to only 12 per house or “residential property,” and will cap the number of plants for medical marijuana growers and caregivers at 24.
The law will allow local jurisdictions and municipalities to enact rules to allow growers to raise more plants than the statewide limit, however.
Denver, Colorado Springs, Douglas County, Carbondale and Lafayette were among the jurisdictions that had already capped the number of marijuana plants allowed to be grown on residential property at 12.
Colorado had been the only of dozens of states that have medical marijuana programs to allow patients or caregivers to grow more than 16 plants. The state allowed them to grow up to 99 based off a doctor’s recommendation.
House Bill 1220, which takes effect Jan. 1, 2018, will also allow district attorneys to charge people who break the new plant limit law.
A first offense involving more than 12 plants will be considered a level 1 drug petty offense punishable by a fine of up to $1,000.
A second or subsequent offense involving between 12 and 24 plants will carry a level 1 drug misdemeanor charge, and a second or subsequent offense involving more than 24 plants will be considered a level 3 drug felony.
The bill’s sponsors, Rep. Cole Wist, R-Centennial and Rep. KC Becker, D-Boulder, said the bill will establish much-needed safeguards against illegal growing, which leads to a larger black market for Colorado pot.
And starting on July 1, state and local officials will start cracking down on illegal marijuana growers and distributors as a result of House Bill 1221, which Hickenlooper also signed last week.
The bill creates an enforcement grant program that will allow local jurisdictions to apply for grant money to fight illegal grows and distribution networks, with priority added to rural municipalities and counties with small budgets to do such work.
The bill defines “rural areas” as counties with fewer than 200,000 people and towns or cities with less than 30,000 people that is at least 10 miles away from a town or city with more than 50,000 people.
The grants will help small district attorney’s offices and agencies to cover the costs incurred by identifying and busting unlicensed grows.
The money for the grants would come from either the Marijuana Tax Cash Fund or the Proposition AA refund account. Under the bill, any money not dispersed through grants that is appropriated can be spent the next year without being re-appropriated.
The bill also mandates that beginning Nov. 1, 2019, the Division of Local Government would have to update to Senate and House committees on the program’s effectiveness. Subsequent updates would be required on or before Nov. 1 of each following year.
Around $5.94 million has already been appropriated to the Department of Local Affairs to enact the program starting July 1. Nearly all of the money will be used for the grant program, though $21,000 will cover the purchase of new IT services and around $4,700 will cover legal services.
The bill also allows the prosecution of anyone not in compliance with state caregiver guidelines to begin under the new law starting July 1.
Colorado’s Republican House Minority Leader seemingly uses congressman’s shooting to raise money
DENVER – Colorado’s Republican House Minority Leader is under fire for what some are saying was a thinly-veiled attempt to raise money for a conservative political action committee off of Wednesday’s shooting of a U.S. congressmen, several aides and police officers.
Denver Daily Beast contributor Dave Maney first raised the issue, tweeting out an email from Colorado Liberty PAC signed by House Minority Leader Patrick Neville, R-Castle Rock, in which Neville says that the Virginia shooting was an “attack tantamount to political terrorism aimed at shutting up Conservatives, Republicans, and Americans like you.” Continue reading
Race already heating up for Polis’ congressional seat after he announces governorship candidacy
DENVER – The race to replace Jared Polis as Colorado’s 2nd Congressional District representative is already heating up just days after the congressman announced he was running for governor in 2018.
Joe Neguse, an attorney and former CU regent who is the son of Eritrean immigrants, announced his candidacy for the seat—which covers either most of or all of Boulder, Broomfield, Clear Creek, Eagle, Gilpin, Gran, Jefferson, Larimer, Park and Summit counties—on Monday.
Neguse narrowly lost to Wayne Williams in the 2014 secretary of state race after winning the Democratic nomination.
“My family’s story embodies the American Dream, but today under President Trump that dream is turning into a nightmare for far too many, and it’s up to us to fight back,” Neguse said.
Gov. John Hickenlooper also announced Tuesday that Neguse would resign from his current position as executive director of the state’s Department of Regulatory Agencies effective June 26 after serving two years in Hickenlooper’s cabinet. He was among the youngest cabinet members in Colorado history.
“He has been an invaluable asset to DORA as he consistently worked to cut red tape all the while championing consumer protection,” Hickenlooper said of Neguse. “We will miss his leadership, but wish him much success.”
He co-founded New Era Colorado in the mid-2000s, which became the largest youth voter registration nonprofit in the state, and also worked to fight climate change.
His parents immigrated to the U.S. as refugees, and many of his policies surround equal opportunities for refugees, immigrants and minorities.
Neguse has already received endorsements from dozens of former and current state and local officials.
Though he is the only person so far to announce his intent to run for the seat, which has been held by Democrats since Tim Wirth won the seat in the 1974 election, there are more likely to follow, as Mark Udall’s 1998 win over Bob Greenlee was the only time since 1990 that Republicans have come within 10 percentage points of the Democratic candidate.
Among those whose names have been floated for the seat are Shannon Watts and Ken Toltz—both of whom who are also liberal Democrats.
“A Congressional seat opening up where I live…Hmmmm,” Watts tweeted after Polis announced his governorship candidacy.
A Congressional seat opening up where I live… Hmmmm. https://t.co/8FWk31p8uU
— Shannon Watts (@shannonrwatts) June 11, 2017
She is a former executive who founded Moms Demand Action following the Sandy Hook massacre, a group aimed at bringing “common-sense” solutions to U.S. gun control who moved to Colorado in recent years.
She also was the impetus for a story that made national news after two girls were kicked off a United Airlines flight for wearing leggings in violation of the company’s travel orders for standby tickets.
Toltz has been fighting gun violence since before 2000, when he ran against Tom Tancredo, and eventually created Safe Campus Colorado to lobby against firearms usage and concealed carrying on state campuses.
Polis has held the seat since he was elected in 2008 and sworn in in early 2009. He defeated Republican challenger Nicholas Morse by nearly 20 percentage points in 2016.
Polis joins a crowded field for the governorship that already includes fellow Rep. Ed Perlmutter on the Democratic side, among many others.
ICE will continue immigration roundups at courthouses despite pleas from Denver officials
DENVER – A U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement official respectfully declined to order a stop to his agents’ ongoing presence at Denver courthouses—something Denver’s officials called for in a letter to the agency in early April.
Matthew T. Albence, the Executive Associate Director at ICE, replied to the April 6 letter from Denver Mayor Michael Hancock and other city officials on May 25. The mayor’s office received the reply Monday. Continue reading
LIVE BLOG: Fired FBI director James Comey testifies on Trump-Russia in front of Senate intel committee
Replay former FBI director James Comey’s testimony in an open hearing of the Senate intelligence committee regarding the Russia probe and his firing. Click here for the full wrap-up. Continue reading
Longmont police say ‘misinformation’ from housing authority led to apartment search presence
LONGMONT, Colo. – The Longmont Police Department on Wednesday laid the blame for its officers and K-9 units being involved in apartment inspections on a letter the Longmont Housing Authority sent to residents, and said officers were only present at the housing authority’s request.
“It was incorrectly reported that the police were conducting illegal searches,” a statement from the police department Wednesday said. “The source of this misinformation can be traced back to a letter that the Longmont Housing Authority sent to residents stating, ‘Please note that we will occasionally have K-9 units with LPD accompany us for purposes of training and compliance.’” Continue reading
Colorado Supreme Court Justice Allison Eid nominated to fill Gorsuch seat on 10th Circuit
DENVER – President Donald Trump has nominated Colorado Supreme Court Justice Allison H. Eid to fill the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals seat vacated when Neil Gorsuch was confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The Washington Times first reported Eid’s nomination, saying the judge was also on the president’s list of potential Supreme Court nominees. The Denver Post was able to confirm that was the case shortly afterward, citing two congressional sources. Continue reading
Feeling disillusioned with Republicans and Democrats? There’s officially a new party in Colorado
DENVER – If you’re a Coloradan feeling disillusioned by the Republican and Democratic parties but want a party affiliation, there’s a new official minor party you can sign up for: The Unity Party.
The party, which has had a presence in Colorado since 2005, on Monday reached the 1,000-voter mark necessary to give it minor party status on state election ballots in both 2018 and 2020.
The Unity Party joins the American Constitution, Green, and Libertarian parties as the fourth minor party in Colorado. Aside from the Republican and Democratic parties, more than one-third of the state’s registered voters aren’t affiliated with any party.
Before reaching the 1,000-voter threshold, the Unity Party was a qualified political organization, which meant that any prospective candidates had to petition to get on a ballot.
The party will now have to assemble at least 73 days before the 2018 primaries to nominate a candidate or organize a primary for the party’s choice.
The only candidate currently registered with the party is Bill Hammons, who has run for various seats in Congress in every congressional election since 2010.
Hammons is running for the governorship of Colorado in 2018.
He lost to Jared Polis in both 2010 and 2012 when he ran for Colorado’s 2nd Congressional District seat.
In 2014, he received 6,427 votes in a bid for the U.S. Senate seat won by Cory Gardner, and in 2016, he received 9,336 votes in the election for Colorado’s other U.S. Senate seat, which Michael Bennet won.
Hammons outperformed two independent candidates in that election.
He is also both the state and national chairman of the Unity Party, whose slogan is: “Not right, not left, but forward.”
Hammons called the news of his party’s certification “pretty exciting” and that it “was a long time coming.”
He told Denver7 Wednesday the party would likely get together in the next couple of months to readopt their bylaws, and would likely schedule the nomination convention for some time next March.
He said he remains committed to his governorship run despite also running the state and national chapters for the Unity Party.
“I welcome challenges in the party,” Hammons said, “but I’d be the best Unity Party candidate for the job.”
“This latest development reflects that as Coloradans we treasure our ability to make our own decisions,” Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams said about the addition of a new minor party.
Colorado authorities say election system wasn’t breached after report leaks NSA intel
DENVER – Colorado authorities haven’t received any notice from federal agencies that state voter systems were compromised during last year’s election, they said Tuesday.
On Monday, The Intercept published a leaked National Security Agency classified intelligence document showing that Russian hackers were able to phish their way into some U.S. elections systems, specifically through a company called VR Systems. Continue reading
Day after report, Longmont officers and K-9s stop tagging along during apartment inspections
LONGMONT, Colo. – A day after Denver7 reported that police officers and their K-9 partners were tagging along during apartment inspections, the police department said it was discontinuing the practice.
A Longmont Police Department spokesperson called Tuesday to say the department’s officers didn’t participate in any inspections Tuesday and that they wouldn’t be involved in the future. Continue reading