{"id":43581,"date":"2019-02-20T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-02-20T19:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/dunleavy-spokesman-governor-has-no-intention-to-roll-back-legal-marijuana\/"},"modified":"2019-02-20T10:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-02-20T19:00:00","slug":"dunleavy-spokesman-governor-has-no-intention-to-roll-back-legal-marijuana","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/dunleavy-spokesman-governor-has-no-intention-to-roll-back-legal-marijuana\/","title":{"rendered":"Dunleavy spokesman: Governor has no intention to roll back legal marijuana"},"content":{"rendered":"
Recent appointments<\/a> and proposed changes<\/a> by Gov. Mike Dunleavy to a state regulatory board has some in the legal cannabis industry confused about his intentions, but a spokesman said Wednesday the first-term Republican has no intention of changing the fact that broad use of marijuana is legal in Alaska.<\/p>\n Spokesman Matt Shuckerow also said that Dunleavy has no desire to push the industry in one direction or the other.<\/p>\n Dunleavy has made new appointments to the five-member Marijuana Control Board even as he plans to propose repealing its existence.<\/p>\n His appointment of Vivian Stiver, a marijuana critic, has riled industry members who have cast her as a prohibitionist. Stiver would replace Brandon Emmett, who is one of two industry representatives on the five-member board. State law allows up to two seats to go to industry representatives though one of the seats could go to a member of the general public.<\/p>\n [Marijuana industry thinks governor trying to undo legalization in Alaska]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n The board began a three-day meeting Wednesday in Juneau. Voters in 2014 approved legalizing the use of recreational marijuana by those 21 and older.<\/p>\n Shuckerow said repealing the board would require legislative approval and it’s important to have a functioning board as that process plays out. State Commerce Commissioner Julie Anderson has said that Dunleavy intends to propose transferring the board’s responsibilities to the commissioner.<\/p>\n Further details on what Dunleavy is planning are expected when he introduces the repeal legislation, Shuckerow said.<\/p>\n Other states handle cannabis regulation at the agency level, and Chris Lindsey, senior legislative counsel with the Marijuana Policy Project, said as long as the agency has a clear mandate and supports the program, everything should be fine.<\/p>\n [Juneau marijuana sellers have biggest year yet]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n But Stiver’s appointment has fueled uncertainty in the industry so a proposal like this has left people to “kind of look for the conspiracy,” Lindsey said.<\/p>\n The appointment “calls into question everything that the governor might be trying to do now,” he said.<\/p>\n Stiver and Lt. Christopher Jaime, an Alaska Wildlife Trooper appointed to the board’s public safety seat, are subject to legislative confirmation. Shuckerow has said Dunleavy believes Stiver would bring a valuable perspective to the board.<\/p>\n Lacy Wilcox, who serves on the board of a marijuana business association, said Dunleavy should meet with the industry. She worries the public process that has surrounded rule-making so far could be eroded if the board is repealed.<\/p>\n [Alaska regulators approve rules for onsite marijuana use]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n