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Breukelen advocaat
02-25-2008, 09:51 PM
Oakland School Turns Out Pot Club Pros

By LISA LEFF â?? 2 hours ago

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) â?? You know you're in a different kind of college when a teaching assistant sets five marijuana plants down in the middle of a lab and no one blinks a bloodshot eye.

Welcome to Oaksterdam University, a new trade school where higher education takes on a whole new meaning.

The school prepares people for jobs in California's thriving medical marijuana industry. For $200 and the cost of two required textbooks, students learn how to cultivate and cook with cannabis, study which strains of pot are best for certain ailments, and are instructed in the legalities of a business that is against the law in the eyes of the federal government.

"My basic idea is to try to professionalize the industry and have it taken seriously as a real industry, just like beer and distilling hard alcohol," said Richard Lee, 45, an activist and pot-dispensary owner who founded the school in a downtown storefront last fall.

So far, 60 students have completed the two-day weekend course, which is sold out through May. At the end of the class, students are given a take-home test, with the highest scorer â?? make that "top scorer" â?? earning the title of class valedictorian.

Before getting to Horticulture 101, the hands-on highlight of Oaksterdam U, the 20 budding botanists, entrepreneurs and political activists at a recent weekend session sat politely through two law lectures and a visiting professor's history talk.

In the lab, Lee measured plant food into a plastic garbage can and explained how, with common sense, upgraded electrical outlets, a fan and an air filter, students can grow pot at home for fun, health, public service â?? or profit.

Lee explained to his students how to prune and harvest plants, handing the clipping shears to a woman who wasn't sure how close to the stalk to cut without damaging it. He offered his thoughts on which commercial nutrient preparations are best, as well as the advantages of hydroponics, or soil-free gardening.

During a discussion of neighbor relations, he warned against setting boobytraps to keep curious kids out of outdoor gardens.

Students gave various reasons for enrolling. Some said they were simply curious. Others said they wanted tips for growing their own weed, although judging from the questions, a few were ready for the graduate seminar Lee recently added to the curriculum.

Jeff Sanders, 52, said he has been buying medical marijuana since 2003, but wants to open a dispensary in the San Joaquin Valley because he doesn't like having to drive up to San Francisco and paying the markup.

"I see it as a good thing. You are giving back to the community," Sanders said.

Patrick O'Shaughnessy, 37, said he started smoking pot regularly for the first time about a year ago to treat his chronic migraines, depression and anxiety. After attending class, he said felt more confident about growing his own, which he wants to do because the dispensary he frequents often sells out of his favorite strain.

Oaksterdam U draws its name from the jokey nickname for a section of Oakland where some of California's earliest medical marijuana dispensaries took root. The nickname in turn was inspired by the city of Amsterdam, in Holland, where pot use is tolerated.

At one point, the Oaksterdam neighborhood had at least 15 clubs and coffee shops selling pot, a number that dwindled to four when the city started issuing permits and collecting taxes from them a few years ago.

California was the first of a dozen states that have legalized marijuana use for patients with a doctor's recommendation.

Despite periodic raids by federal drug agents and the threat of prosecution, clubs and cooperatives where customers can buy the drug of their choice have proliferated; California has 300 to 400, according to advocacy groups.

Entry-level workers are paid a little more than minimum wage, while "bud tenders," can make over $50,000 a year, and owners and top managers more than $100,000, Lee said. But there's also a certain amount of risk â?? and not just financial, but legal.

Michael Chapman, an assistant agent in charge with the Drug Enforcement Agency's San Francisco office, said authorities are aware of Oaksterdam U and don't see any reason to shut it down. Talking about marijuana is not illegal, and while a small amount of pot is kept on the premises, the DEA tries "to concentrate our case work on the most significant violators," he said.

Still, Chapman said he doesn't like Lee's effort to wrap cannabis education in a cap and gown.

"I think they are sending the wrong message out to the community and it's something that could only facilitate criminal behavior," he said.

The Associated Press: Oakland School Turns Out Pot Club Pros (http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jYHN4gdAHV9I6D8_eoKW7hbrxMFgD8V1H8L00)

8182KSKUSH
02-25-2008, 11:31 PM
Oakland School Turns Out Pot Club Pros

The Associated Press: Oakland School Turns Out Pot Club Pros (http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jYHN4gdAHV9I6D8_eoKW7hbrxMFgD8V1H8L00)

Wow!
This guy figured out how to make some $$ legally with marijuana! I want to copy cat this!!! What a great job, marijuana educator, they need to be careful though. What the DEA is saying now, may not be how they feel in the future. While the possesion is small, I could forsee them trying to use RICO laws to arrest and prosecute these people much like they do with the mafia, I am not saying that it would be right, just saying what they may do. Imagine if they start impacting the growing community, and start turning out alot of growers, I could easily see the DEA saying that it is a "conspiracy" and justify charges other than common possesion, especially if this guy owns a clinic, and starts buying from his students, "vendors". See where I am going with that!

That being said I love the idea! Very minimal risk with prosecution at the moment, high demand type of business, I have also wondered about "grow consultants", people that could help others set up small scale personal grows and advice, as well as be vendors for hydro or nute companies. Just someone that would be providing a more service oriented type of business that is centered around growing, without actually growing. Like they said, it's not illegal to teach and help people. A grow consultant could even come and manage or maintain home grows for people that couldn't or didn't want to deal with it themselves, but would like to have it in their home. I think it would work, hell fucking people here in socal pay people to put up their xmas trees for christ sake!:D
It would have an excellent positive impact on the cannabis community locally, increase the amount of cannabis available locally, minimize risk by encouraging small scale personal grows, and maybe encourage much more reasonable pricing in the cannabis community.
America Land of Oppurtunity!:D