Montana
Debate rages over Montana bill to curb marijuana potency
BILLINGS — Thursday morning, the Montana Legislature held a hearing regarding several cannabis related bills, including SB 443.
If passed, that bill, which is in committee, would limit the THC concentration in a cannabis product.
Those in support say it would protect Montana youth from the hazards of addiction as well as severe damage on the mind and body. Opponents say it could hurt the local economy and consumers who rely on cannabis for medicinal properties.
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Debate rages over Montana bill to curb marijuana potency
The bill intends to reduce THC content in marijuana flower products from 35% to 15%, limit a single serving of edible marijuana to 10 milligrams of THC, and limit all other marijuana products to a concentration of 800 milligrams or less.
“This is a very important bill for the people of Montana, and I think we could send a good message too, across the United States,” said Sen. Greg Hertz, R-Polson, at Thursday’s hearing.
The bill aims to reduce harm for Montana’s youth and their risk for addiction.
Elizabeth Pincolini, an opponent of the bill and owner of Billings Alternative Wellness, which helps people obtain medical marijuana licenses, says if the bill is passed then dispensaries would have to physically alter the chemical makeup of their flower.
According to Pincolini, commercial marijuana flowers contain hundreds of different chemicals, including THC. THC is what causes the psychoactive effects of cannabis.
“Just because you reduce the THC doesn’t mean you’re impacting the high,” she said Friday.
Mack Carmack, MTN News
By reducing the potency of the flower, Pincolini said dispensaries would go out of business trying to adjust the levels in their flower.
“To have dispensaries revamp how they grow is a huge problem. I mean it wipes out inventory. It really is a bad bill. It will affect consumers negatively as well as businesses,” she said.
Bill supporters, such as Steve Zabawa of Billings, believe it could positively impact the community by reducing addiction rates and protect the youth.
Mack Carmack, MTN News
“There’s not much healthy going on by putting a federally illegal drug in your body,” Zabawa said Friday.
Zabawa is the founder of SafeMontana, a group formed in opposition of pro-marijuana laws in Montana.
SafeMontana supports legislation to limit THC consumers to 21 and older, limiting THC potency to 10% or less, controlling revenue from cannabis products, and restricting advertisement for the marijuana industry.
“The problem (with drug usage) is it’s eventually death or life in addiction. Part of one of our bills with the allocation of (cannabis revenue) is to really step up treatment for longer time periods so we have better outcomes,” he said.
Montana
Jury convicts Honduran woman of transporting undocumented immigrant in Montana
MISSOULA, Mont. — A federal jury has found a Honduran woman guilty of illegally reentering the United States and transporting a Mexican national who was in the country unlawfully, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
After a three-day trial, jurors convicted 41-year-old Yolanda Ernestina Soto-Antunez on charges of being in the United States illegally and transporting an undocumented immigrant.
Soto-Antunez faces up to five years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of supervised release. Chief U.S. District Judge Brian M. Morris is scheduled to sentence her on July 9. She remains in custody pending sentencing.
According to prosecutors, a Phillips County sheriff’s deputy stopped Soto-Antunez for speeding on U.S. Highway 2 near Malta on March 6. After requesting assistance from U.S. Border Patrol agents to help translate, authorities determined Soto-Antunez was a Honduran citizen in the country illegally and that her passenger, a Mexican national, was also in the United States unlawfully.
Investigators said they discovered $18,000 in a duffel bag belonging to the passenger. The man told agents he was traveling to Washington to borrow an additional $12,000 from a relative, bringing the total to $30,000. According to court testimony, the money was intended to pay for his sister to be smuggled into the United States, and Soto-Antunez was expected to deliver the funds to a group in Tijuana, Mexico.
Federal authorities also determined Soto-Antunez had previously been deported in June 2012 and illegally reentered the United States in August 2016.
The case was investigated by the U.S. Border Patrol, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Phillips County Sheriff’s Office. The U.S. Attorney’s Office prosecuted the case.
Montana
6K+ Flathead Electric customers without power due to damaged transmission structure
More than 6,000 Flathead Electric customers are without power Thursday evening, and officials say it’s due to a damaged transmission structure.
Reports indicate a transmission structure near the White Oak Gas Station that serves the Bigfork and Somers substations sustained damage.
Crews have been dispatched to assess the damage and determine the safest path to make repairs.
An estimated restoration time has not been released.
View the outage map here.
Montana
Body of kayaker found in Yellowstone Lake
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK — On June 8, people aboard a vessel discovered a body floating near Rock Point on Yellowstone Lake’s northwest shore near Bridge Bay.
The man was identified as Brandon Rhea, 41, of Denver, Colorado. National Park Service rangers responded and recovered Rhea’s body, along with a capsized kayak and personal belongings.
The incident remains under investigation. No additional details were released.
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