Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cannabis in Washington relates to a number of legislative, legal, and cultural events surrounding the use of cannabis (marijuana, [a] hashish, THC, kief, etc.).On December 6, 2012, Washington became the first U.S. state to legalize recreational use of marijuana and the first to allow recreational marijuana sales, alongside Colorado.
2012: legalized by Washington Initiative 502. The law permits anyone over 21 to carry 1 oz (28 g), and it requires licensed sellers, distributors, and growers. Home growing is not allowed except for medical use. [214] First state to legalize recreational marijuana on December 6, 2012, four days before Colorado. [215] West Virginia
You can’t consume marijuana in public or be under the influence of marijuana while driving in Washington state. Idaho marijuana laws The possession, growing, selling, distribution and use of ...
1998: Oregon, Alaska, and Washington all legalize medical cannabis through ballot measure. [30] Nevada also passes a medical cannabis initiative, but it requires second approval in 2000 to become law, as per the state constitution. [31] 1999: Maine legalizes medical cannabis through ballot measure. [30]
Initiative 502 results by county, with number of votes shown by size, yes in orange and no in blue. Washington Initiative 502 (I-502) "on marijuana reform" was an initiative to the Washington State Legislature, which appeared on the November 2012 general ballot, passing by a margin of approximately 56 to 44 percent.
The study, published Tuesday in JAMA Network Open, quizzed nearly 110,000 patients of a Kaiser Permanente integrated health system in Washington State about their attitudes towards marijuana, then ...
Still, those in the state sounded off on the legalization of psychedelics via Question 4 — which proposed making it legal for "persons aged 21 and older to grow, possess, and use certain natural ...
Legality of medical and non-medical cannabis in the United States. Areas under tribal sovereignty not shown. Cannabis regulatory agencies exist in several of the U.S. states and territories, the one federal district, and several areas under tribal sovereignty in the United States which have legalized cannabis.