LACEY Kim Ridgway and her wife, Kimberly Bliss, can well envision the shop they plan to open where theyll put the accessories, the baked goods and the shelves stacked with their valuable product: jars of high-quality marijuana.
Like many so-called potrepreneurs throughout Washington and Colorado, theyre scrambling to get ready for the new world of regulated, taxed marijuana sales to adults over 21 even though the states havent even figured out how they are going to grant licenses.
Farmers and orchardists are studying how to grow marijuana. Some medical pot dispensaries are preparing to switch to recreational sales. Labs that test the plants potency are trying to figure out how to meet standards the states might develop.
Its a lot of work for something that might never happen.
We dont want to devote all our time and finances to building a business, only to have the feds rip it out from under us, Bliss said. Theres a huge financial risk, and a huge personal risk. We could end up in federal prison.
While marijuana remains illegal under federal law, both states legalized the possession of up to an ounce of marijuana last November and are setting up rules to govern state-licensed growers, processors and retailers.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who appeared Wednesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the Justice Department has not yet decided whether to sue to block the measures. State laws can be trumped if they frustrate the purpose of federal law.
A group of former Drug Enforcement Administration heads and the United Nations drug control group this week renewed calls for the administration to sue, and some legal scholars say its hard to see how the schemes would survive a court challenge.
Nevertheless, tempted by dreams of changing peoples perception of pot and making some decent money, Bliss and Ridgway are meeting with lawyers, recruiting investors, sketching store plans and scoping locations all in the hopes of a grand opening on their first wedding anniversary.
After 28 years together, they got married in December on the first day the states new same-sex marriage law allowed it. They say they like the idea of becoming pioneers in the cannabis industry, too.
Hilary Bricken, a Seattle lawyer advising those interested in the marijuana industry, said shes heard from people in many walks of life. Among them are a consulting firm that wants to help state-licensed growers make their operations environmentally friendly; a plant nursery that figures it already has the greenhouses; and a struggling chocolatier who sees financial salvation in pot chocolate.
Its super-exciting, and its a testament to the power of industry, she said. Its a solution for many people that are hurting economically right now, and for better or worse, theyre brave.
These are the people who are going to push the buck to change the national conversation, Bricken said.
Her law firm, Harris and Moure, has been advising clients to write business plans that cover everything from where theyre getting their seed money and insurance to their security plans and protocols describing how theyll treat their employees or shareholders.
Kristi Kelly, owner of the Good Meds dispensary chain in the Denver area, is shopping for real estate and lining up investors for a potentially big expansion to the recreational market while she awaits the DOJs decision.
She had some words of caution for green-eyed entrepreneurs looking to cash in on pot, though.
Whatever you think its going to cost, its probably going to be 10 times that, Kelly said.
Since 2009, when Colorados medical pot industry was booming, Kelly has seen many growers and sellers go bust. The industry has declined by at least a third since then, thanks in part to federal crackdowns and natural market adjustment.
Josh Chudnofsky, a 32-year-old who grows medical marijuana for patients in Snohomish, northeast of Seattle, wants to position himself to obtain a growers license, but isnt sure how.
Do I try to get an agricultural license and try to transfer it to a pot license? Do I get a small-business license? he asked. Ive been calling around but nobody has any answers.
In the meantime, hes been making tentative plans to expand his 30-plant grow operation. He has lined up investors, checked on industrial and commercial spaces he could rent and talked about buying his own building. He has no criminal record, he noted, and he doesnt want one. If he doesnt get a license, he wont do it.
Ridgway, 50, and Bliss, 52, dont have much experience in the pot business, but Ridgway is an authorized patient and said shes been around dispensaries enough to know how they work. She uses marijuana to treat arthritis and severe anxiety; Bliss uses it occasionally to relax after work.
They have another thing going for them, they said: They previously worked at a wholesale meat company run by Ridgways family, and know what its like to have nitpicking inspections and regulations.
Ridgway hasnt worked since the company closed in 2010, and Bliss works as a part-time bookkeeper for a restaurant. Opening a marijuana store would give them earning potential they dont otherwise have as under- or unemployed women in their 50s, they said.
But their primary goal is to help change attitudes by helping to teach people how useful cannabis can be in its medical, recreational and industrial uses. Bliss said it will not only increase state tax revenue but benefit the entire community.
Smiling, she added: Im not going to be used to having that kind of money.


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