Springs teen: Dispensaries not selling to us

By Katie Kerwin McCrimmon

She’s not the stereotypical stoner, zoned out in a haze of smoke and flunking out of school.

Emma is a graduate of Palmer High School in Colorado Springs, known for its prestigious International Baccalaureate program and for attracting a diverse student body.

But Palmer holds another distinction and so does Emma, whose name has been changed to protect her identity.

The downtown Springs school posted one of the highest increases in drug violations reported by any Colorado school in the past four years. In 2007-08, Palmer reported two drug violations; in 2010-11, it was 45.

And Emma, now a successful college student mulling a career in law, is also a regular user of medical marijuana who frequently got high in Palmer’s “party parking lot” during lunch or other breaks from school.

“It’s a lot of fun. You go out to your car, get high and go back,” she said. “We weren’t worried about getting busted.”

Although she’s old enough at 19 to seek an “M” card, a state-issued license for medical marijuana, Emma hasn’t done so. She thinks it’s intellectually dishonest to fabricate an illness to buy marijuana.

“The term ‘medical’ isn’t fooling anyone,” she said. “I don’t think most of the people who have their cards think of it as medicine.”

How young people get medical marijuana

But most young people don’t get medical marijuana directly from the dispensaries anyway, she said. Instead, they get an older friend or sibling to buy for them or they get it straight from licensed growers with extra product.

“They are growing so much marijuana legally that they will go out and find other people to sell it. That’s where the kickback is,” she said.

Connecting with a dealer is simple.

“They find you,” she said. “If you’re downtown and trying to solicit somebody to buy cigarettes outside a gas station, it’s safe to assume you also smoke pot.”

Perhaps the easiest way to buy is through an older friend or sibling.

“Certain dispensaries have coupons where you can get two ounces for the price of one,” she said. “If a kid can search through High Times magazine and find a coupon, then you find a friend who can cash it in.”

She described her high school friends who smoked as discriminating shoppers who searched for bargain prices on medical marijuana because it’s generally less expensive, higher quality and perceived to be safer than street pot.

One thing they didn’t do, Emma said, was walk in to a dispensary near Palmer. She mapped them for a school project last year, but said the dispensaries won’t sell to kids and too many people would see a teen loitering outside.

Dispensaries near Palmer High

An investigation by Education News Colorado, Solutions and the I-News Network found as many as eight dispensaries are located within a mile of Palmer.

One, called Indispensary, is kitty-corner from the school’s front door, separated by a small park.

Judy Negley, left, co-owner of Indispensary, a medical marijuana dispensary in Colorado Springs, talks to manager Christy Kress. Photo by Joe Mahoney / I-News (Micaela Watts)

Indispensary co-owner Judy Negley said hers was among the 23 medical marijuana facilities located within 1,000 feet of a school that were recently targeted in a federal crackdown.

Negley said her shop doesn’t sell to anyone under 18 without a state-issued marijuana card. Statewide, fewer than 50 cards have been issued to youth that age.

Students without cards have zero access to their product, she said.

“It would be so difficult for them to get in. They could break in,” she said. “But in our dispensary, they have to go through two locked doors. There’s surveillance everywhere. They have to present credentials in a neutral area.

“I don’t think dispensaries are the problem,” added Negley, the mother of a Palmer student. “The kids are smart enough to know that.”

Emma and other students interviewed said they don’t believe the proximity of dispensaries to schools has made marijuana easier to buy.

“I haven’t heard of a single dispensary anywhere selling to somebody without a card,” she said. “The kids who are smoking weed and getting high at Palmer are not getting it from the dispensaries.”

So what do students like Emma think policymakers should do about the spike in drug violations at schools?

“Regardless of the legality of pot, we will continue to smoke it,” she said. “I don’t think people see it as positive or as medicine. It’s still a drug. People do it more to get high … but it’s viewed as safer than the alternatives.”

Contact Katie Kerwin McCrimmon of Solutions at katherine.mccrimmon@ucdenver.edu.

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