Recreational Marijuana Clubs Planned For Colorado Springs

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Recreational marijuana clubs are currently in the works for Colorado Springs and could start opening in the next few months.

The clubs would be 21 and up, and guests would bring their own bud to smoke.

"We don't want neon lights, we don't want disco shows," said KC Stark, who is planning to open a pot club called Studio A64. "That's not the way Colorado Springs is. We want responsible use by adults in a relaxed, controlled environment."

Stark and his business partner Jack Roth have a clear idea of the kind of club they want to run. They said they have three potential locations where they could open and hope to be operating in the next three months.

"We don't want to sell alcohol," said Stark. "We want to offer fresh pressed juices and organically grown products. Give (marijuana) cooking classes. Be the Martha Stewart Show of cannabis."

"About a century ago it was called the gold rush," said Roth. "Now it's called the green rush."

The pair said they want to avoid requiring a membership fee and make money off of selling food and beverages.

Mark Slaugh, a marijuana advocate who helps businesses comply with cannabis regulations, said he expects to see several pot clubs open this year in the city.

"I've been approached by at least three folks in Colorado Springs looking to open recreational clubs," said Slaugh, CEO of iComply.

Slaugh said he believes the clubs will create jobs, boost revenue, and maybe even make the streets safer.

"It's not going to detrimentally impact our society," Slaugh said. "If anything it may help people drink less. Which, a small reduction in alcohol use actually leads to a larger social benefit than a large expansion of cannabis use. Because it's subjectively safer."

Not everyone agrees with him though.

"I'm totally against it myself," said Colorado Springs resident Brad Ackerman. "I think the government getting more money to spend by taxing it is something I'm totally against as well."

The city of Colorado Springs has yet to start regulating pot clubs. A spokesperson said the city is still looking at all the issues.

A marijuana club in Del Norte shut down the day after it opened because of a landlord dispute. In Denver, Club 64 had a New Year's Eve event but "doesn't have a brick and mortar location," according to the club's attorney, Robert Corry.

"For right now, it's a mobile club," Corry said. "We're actively looking for a permanent location."

Corry said the club charges a $50 yearly membership fee, has 200 current members and 700 people on it's waiting list. The club served alcohol on New Year's Eve and plans to follow suit at other events.

The next event is planned for Feb. 3 in a location that's not yet been announced.

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News Hawk- TruthSeekr420 420 MAGAZINE
Source: krdo.com
Author: Lindsay Watts
Contact: Contact Us - KRDO.com - NEWSCHANNEL 13 ABC - Colorado Springs and Pueblo News, Weather and Sports
Website: Recreational marijuana clubs planned for Colorado Springs | News - Home
 
Wow, the Springs has gotten this far? Moving to Colorado Springs from San Francisco in '83, it was shockingly conservative. Before we moved back to Cali in 2003, Colorado was starting to be invaded by Californians charmed by housing prices and a really fun family place to live. Maybe it was the Californians, maybe it was John Suthers leaving as local D.A. Anyway, the main thing is to not have all the losers hanging out at your recreational club. Your club will be a prototype, of sorts, so please try not to blow it!
 
Heard the same info here. Colorado and Washington state voters advancing to decriminalize recreational weed use. Where the first pot club to open didn't make much of a go of it, shutting after just 24 hours of operation. I think they know well it will do good business. However, being too early in this new law really puts the Feds in a corner. It'll be a while til it settles and before such establishments face opposition.
 
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