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Oregon Lawmakers Consider Early Start To Recreational Pot Sales

 Washington lawmakers say they are confident a bipartisan agreement will emerge to regulate the state's medical marijuana industry.
Austin Jenkins
/
Northwest News Network
Washington lawmakers say they are confident a bipartisan agreement will emerge to regulate the state's medical marijuana industry.

Oregonians could be able to buy marijuana for recreational use much sooner than anticipated.

State lawmakers Thursday debated whether to allow retail pot sales as soon as next month.

While it will be legal for adults to grow and use marijuana starting July 1, you won't legally be able to buy or sell it until retail shops go online next year. That's led some officials to joke that anyone with pot on July 1 will have benefited from an immaculate conception.

Now, lawmakers are considering a plan to allow medical marijuana dispensaries to sell pot to recreational users. That idea pleases Donald Morse, who owns a dispensary in Portland.

"I think it's in the best interest of everyone that we give them a means to obtain marijuana as soon as possible,” he said.

No decision's been made yet. Some lawmakers say they're concerned the state isn't ready for a huge increase in legal marijuana sales.

Copyright 2015 Northwest News Network

Chris Lehman has been reporting on Oregon issues since 2006. He joined the KLCC news department in December 2018 and became News Director in March 2023. Chris was born and raised in Pennsylvania, and graduated from Temple University with a degree in journalism. His public broadcasting career includes stops in Louisiana and Illinois. Chris has filed for national programs including “Morning Edition” and “All Things Considered.”