Gov. Gregoire meeting with feds over marijuana law

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) — Washington state Gov. Chris Gregoire will meet with Deputy Attorney General James Cole on Tuesday to discuss the state's recent passage of a measure to legalize and tax the sale of marijuana for recreational use.
Gregoire spokesman Cory Curtis said Monday that the meeting was added to a slate the governor had already scheduled in Washington, D.C., on other state matters. But on the issue of marijuana, Curtis said Gregoire wanted to meet with federal officials because "we want direction from them."
"Our goal is to respect the will of the voters, but give us some clarity," he said.
Initiative 502 passed with 55 percent of the vote last week. The measure decriminalizes the possession of up to an ounce of marijuana beginning Dec. 6, but the state has a year to come up with rules governing the state-licensed growing, processing and labeling of pot before sales to adults over 21 can begin. It also establishes a standard blood test limit for driving under the influence.
Home-growing marijuana for recreational reasons remains barred, as does the public display or use of pot.
Colorado also passed a measure legalizing the drug. Colorado's governor and attorney general spoke by phone Friday with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, with no signal whether the U.S. Justice Department would sue to block the marijuana measure.
If Colorado's marijuana ballot measure is not blocked, it would take effect by Jan. 5, the deadline for the governor to add the amendment to the state constitution. The measure allows adults to possess up to an ounce of marijuana, and six marijuana plants, though public use of the drug and driving while intoxicated are prohibited.
Colorado's measure also directs lawmakers to write regulations on how pot can be sold, with commercial sales possible by 2014.
Gregoire went to D.C. on Monday for a meeting with the Council of Governors and Army Lt. Gen. Frank Grass at the Pentagon to discuss National Guard issues, and for another meeting with Energy Secretary Steven Chu to discuss plans to deal with a leak at a large, double-walled tank of waste at Hanford, the nation's most contaminated nuclear site.
Curtis said that the meeting with Cole was added to her schedule on Monday.
"Our biggest concern is that the state has a fairly big startup cost in creating the whole licensing and regulating scheme around this," he said. "We want some sort of clarity on this before we get a year down the road on the process."
Gregoire will return to Washington state on Tuesday night.
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Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
All said and done, let the stoners get fired from their jobs and contiune getting fired or not hired at all. Wont be much longer and you'll have to pass a drug test for welfare and unemployement, then people who are currently unemployeed and clean can get jobs.
I can see wanting some clarity before WA extends the start up funds. The feds have a reputation for kicking in doors. President Obama, why don't you step up and end the madness? Seriously, why make the states fight for their rights like this. You know the 'war' can't be won. We ALL know that. Let's move on to management.
"Home-growing marijuana for recreational reasons remains barred" Then there is no legalization, just the setting up of a regulated,taxed,corporate monopoly....
She should show up at the meeting stoned. That's how she's acted during her administration.
 @Rob C 503 What makes you think she won't?
"Our goal is to respect the will of the voters, but give us some clarity," he said."
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Clarity, from government? You really need a lesson in reality.
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Why are all these articles wrong? The law does not decriminalize marijuana, it legalizes possession of under an ounce. Decriminalization and legalization are two very different things!
 @poopstainmonkey Under an ounce has been decriminalized for decades.
 @Lips Yes, I know that.
@poopstainmonkey @Lips Yes, I know. I was lending my support to your comment.
Why can't they just move it from a class 1 to a class 2 or 3 drug?That would solve the entire problem.
 @swede760 No, it would not.
 @poopstainmonkey  @swede760Â
Why would moving it on the schedule not allow the federal government to allow states to make laws allowing it legally, or decriminalizing it?
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My understanding (you know, the "wikipedia" understanding) is that the whole purpose of the schedules was to allow the president to use executive privilege to criminalize, or de criminalize any substance without the requirement it got through legislation. And that it superseded any previous legislation.
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Thus my understanding is that Obama could just tell the DEA to move cannabis down from 1 to 3 and states that currently criminalize cannabis would still get federal help in prosecution and states would also be able to craft legislation that would allow it to be legally possessed.
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My (un)reliable source
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled_Substances_Act
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Thank you for making my point, if it is moved by Obama to a schedual 3 then the States can decide which way they want to go and not have this Federal crap to deal with.
Gregoire is a terrible governor. Â Im glad she is leaving.
I think legalizing it would be good, not for the getting high part but for the products one can make from the Hemp plant, like pressed boards that can be used to building houses, and clothing items , some people are or might be allergic to cotton. This would give them an alternative. Also Hemp Fabric is stronger then Cotton.
 @lee986321 and paper. Hemp is a renewable crop, and produces enough fiber in 1 acre to make a higher quality paper than 10 acres of timber.
 @Scruffy Scirocco  @lee986321 Hemp fibers are very long and would take a ton of processing to recreate the properties you get from mixing various species of wood fibers, which measure 0.5-1.5mm long.
That's a lot of false positives as a result of taking some really common over the counter drugs. Your source for this information??
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Sounds like it won't be long and everyone will know if they admit to taking any of these they'll have their case thrown out.
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At present, the current test shows a light grey line indicating some positive response to MJ usage. What follows is a rather dominant LEO or job interviewer takes you aside and tries to get you to admit to MJ usage so that the resulting fines offset their expenses. I'm told the light grey line is normal and doesn't neccessarily indicate MJ usage. That coincides with the false positives you've listed here. However it opens the door for the people on the other end of the exam to try to convince you that you tested positive thereby getting you to admit your usage.
@Hoser Ignatz if you test positive on an industry UA, statistically you're likely to blame it on second hand smoke or a brownie you accidentally ate at a party. Your response isn't ridiculed or rejected and to help you prove your case, a second and more rigorous test--which is more expensive but reveals heavy versus light use--is applied for you to prove yourself. Of course, if you're honest the result shows that you were a very light user. The fact is that if you are, however, it disappears from your system as far as the standard test is concerned after about 3 days.
Won't do any good. In the eyes of the feds, it has been illegal since the mid 1930's, and I doubt they will make any exceptions for it. So, if you got it, toke it. But don't complain when your employer makes you take a p!ss test, you pop positive and get fired for it.Â
Of course you could say that you took one or all of the following, and that is why you popped positive for THC, among other things.
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Advil - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Aleve - false positive for THC, Marijuana Anaprox - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Ansaid - false positive for marijuana Apo-Naproxen - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Atripla - false positive for cannabinoid THC
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B2 vitamin - false positive for THC
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Bayer Select Pain Relief Formula - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Clinoril - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Cramp End Tablets - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Diabetes - false positives for Amphetamines, Cocaine, THC, Ecstasy, Meth and Opiates
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Dolobid - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Dronabinol (Marinol) - false positives for THC
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Edecrin - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Efavirenz - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Feldene - false positives for THC
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Fenoprofin - false positive for Marijuana, Amphetamines, Barbiturates
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Flurbiprofen - false positive for marijuana
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Genpril - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Haltran - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Hempseed Oil - false positive for THC
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Ibuprin - false positive for marijuana
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Ibuprofen - false positive for Marijuana (THC)
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Ifenoprofen - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Indocin - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Ketoprofen - false positive for THC Kidney infection - false positive for Amphetamines, THC, Ecstasy, and
Opiates Liver Disease - false positive for Opiates, Ecstasy, THC and Amphetamines
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Marinol false positive for Marijuana (THC)
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Meclomen - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Mediprim - false positive for marijuana
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Medipren - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Midol - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Motrin - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Nalfon - false positive for Marijuana, Amphetamines, Barbituates, Benzodiazephines, Methaqualone
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Naprosyn - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Naproxen (Aleve) - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Navonaprox - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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NSAIDS - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Nuprin - false positive for THC
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Orudis KT - false positives for THC
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Oxaprozin - false positive for THC, Marijuana, Benzodiazepines
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Pamprin - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Pantoprazole - false positive for THC
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Phenergan - false positive for THC, Methadone Prescription NSAIDS
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Promethazine - false positive for THC
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Promethegan - false positive for THC Proton pump inhibitors - false positive for THC
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Protonix - false positive for THC
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Relafen - false positive for Marijuana Riboflavin (vitamin B2) - false positive for THC
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Rufin - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Sustiva (Efanirenz) - false positive for THC or Marijuana
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Tolectin® - false positive for THC, Marijuana
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Voltaren - false positive for THC, Marijuana
@theobserver if you fail the test they give you more expensive one that is much more accurate. They don't waste that test system on the vast majority of people, who show up clean regardless of how many poppy seeds or Advil they've eaten.
 @Playanekes  @theobserver And you are correct. I was just saying that if a person was a hard core toker, and they were worried about the p!ss test, then they would try almost any excuse to explain why they popped positive for THC.Â
Actually, I heard the most accurate drug test is the hair follicle test.