For the legal pot industry, 2018 was a gold rush

/ AP

Michigan legalizes recreational marijuana

Portland, Ore. – The last year was a 12-month champagne toast for the legal marijuana industry as the global market exploded and cannabis pushed its way further into the financial and cultural mainstream.

Liberal California became the largest legal U.S. marketplace, while conservative Utah and Oklahoma embraced medical marijuana. Canada ushered in broad legalization, and Mexico's Supreme Court set the stage for that country to follow.

U.S. drug regulators approved the first marijuana-based pharmaceutical to treat kids with a form of epilepsy, and billions of investment dollars poured into cannabis companies. Even Main Street brands like Coca-Cola said they're considering joining the party.

"I have been working on this for decades, and this was the year that the movement crested," said U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, an Oregon Democrat working to overturn the federal ban on pot. "It's clear that this is all coming to a head."

With buzz building across the globe, the momentum will continue into 2019.

Lobbying efforts grow in Washington as more states legalize marijuana

Luxembourg is poised to become the first European country to legalize recreational marijuana, and South Africa is moving in that direction. Thailand legalized medicinal use of marijuana on Tuesday, and other Southeastern Asian countries may follow South Korea's lead in legalizing cannabidiol, or CBD. It's a non-psychoactive compound found in marijuana and hemp plants and used for treatment of several medical problems.

"It's not just the U.S. now. It's spreading," said Ben Curren, CEO of Green Bits, a San Jose, California, company that develops software for marijuana retailers and businesses.

Curren's firm is one of many that blossomed as the industry grew. He started the company in 2014 with two friends. Now, he has 85 employees, and the company's software processes $2.5 billion in sales transactions a year for more than 1,000 U.S. retail stores and dispensaries.

Green Bits raised $17 million in April, pulling in money from investment firms including Snoop Dogg's Casa Verde Capital. Curren hopes to expand internationally by 2020.

"A lot of the problem is keeping up with growth," he said.

A bonanza of new jobs

Legal marijuana was a $10.4 billion industry in the U.S. in 2018 with a quarter-million jobs devoted just to the handling of marijuana plants, said Beau Whitney, vice president and senior economist at New Frontier Data, a leading cannabis market research and data analysis firm. Many other jobs don't involve direct work with the plants, but they're harder to quantify, Whitney said.

Investors poured $10 billion into cannabis in North America in 2018, twice what was invested in the last three years combined, he said, and the overall North American market is expected to reach more than $16 billion in 2019.

"Investors are getting much savvier when it comes to this space because even just a couple of years ago, you'd throw money at it and hope that something would stick," he said. "But now investors are much more discerning."

Sweeping through states

Increasingly, U.S. lawmakers see that success and want it for their states. And nearly two-thirds of U.S. states now have legalized some form of medical marijuana.

Voters in November made Michigan the 10th state — and first in the Midwest — to legalize recreational marijuana. Governors in New York and New Jersey are pushing for a similar law in their states in 2019, and momentum for broad legalization is building in Pennsylvania and Illinois.

"Let's legalize the adult use of recreational marijuana once and for all," New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said last week.

State lawmakers in Nebraska just formed a campaign committee to put a medical cannabis initiative to voters in 2020. Nebraska shares a border with Colorado, one of the first two states to legalize recreational marijuana, and Iowa, which recently started a limited medical marijuana program.

"Attitudes have been rapidly evolving and changing. I know that my attitude toward it has also changed," said Nebraska state Sen. Adam Morfeld, a Democrat. "Seeing the medical benefits and seeing other states implement it … has convinced me that it's not the dangerous drug it's made out to be."

Roadblocks remain in place

With all its success, the U.S. marijuana industry continues to be undercut by a robust black market and federal law that treats marijuana as a controlled substance like heroin. Financial institutions are skittish about cannabis businesses, even in U.S. states where they're legal, and investors until recently have been reluctant to put their money behind pot.

Marijuana businesses can't deduct their business expenses on their federal taxes and face huge challenges getting insurance and finding real estate for their brick-and-mortar operations.

"Until you have complete federal legalization, you're going to be living with that structure," said Marc Press, a New Jersey attorney who advises cannabis businesses.

At the start of the year, the industry was chilled when then-U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions rescinded a policy shielding state-licensed medical marijuana operators from federal drug prosecutions. Ultimately the move had minimal impact because federal prosecutors showed little interest in going after legal operators.

Sessions, a staunch marijuana opponent, later lost his job while President Donald Trump said he was inclined to support an effort by U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner, a Colorado Republican, to relax the federal prohibition.

A Democratic push

In November, Democrats won control of the U.S. House and want to use it next year to pass legislation that eases federal restrictions on the legal marijuana industry without removing it from the controlled substances list.

Gardner and Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren have proposed legislation allowing state-approved commercial cannabis activity under federal law. The bill also would let states and Indian tribes determine how best to regulate marijuana commerce within their boundaries without fear of federal intervention.

If those provisions become law, they could open up banking for the marijuana industry nationwide and make it easier for cannabis companies to secure capital.

Blumenauer's "blueprint" to legalize marijuana also calls for the federal government to provide medical marijuana for veterans, more equitable taxation for marijuana businesses and rolling back federal prohibitions on marijuana research, among other things.

"We have elected the most pro-cannabis Congress in history, and more important, some of the people who were roadblocks to our work … are gone," Blumenauer said. "If we're able to jump-start it in the House, I think there will be support in the Senate, particularly if we deal with things that are important, like veterans' access and banking."

First published on December 27, 2018

© 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the legal pot industry, 2018 was a gold rush

It exploded into a $10 billion business with more than a quarter-million new jobs in the U.S. alone, despite barriers

updated 0M ago

How ordinary people get duped into becoming "money mules"

As the FBI cranks up its enforcement efforts against financial scams, it's also warning Americans about them

updated 34M ago

EPA still hasn't acted a year after proposing ban on deadly chemical

The chemical is so dangerous the EPA's own scientists decided it should be prohibited for all consumer and most professional uses

1H ago

Workers in these 20 states are getting a raise Jan. 1

More than half the states across the country now require higher minimum pay than the federal government's $7.25 an hour

2H ago

Will stocks rise in 2019? Fasten those seatbelts

No matter which way stocks go — and Wall Street has ample arguments for either direction — expect a gut-wrenching ride

updated 47M ago

After Trump's visit, Iraqi lawmakers demand U.S. withdrawal

Politicians from both sides of Iraq's political divide are calling on parliament to vote to expel American troops

updated 44M ago

ICE drops off hundreds more migrants in Texas, New Mexico

That raises the total number of people released this week to more than 1,000

updated 3M ago

Trump doubles down on Democrats about shutdown

Lawmakers will reconvene Thursday to try to broker an agreement and reopen the government

10H ago

Trump makes surprise Christmas visit to Iraq to meet with troops

"President Trump and the First Lady traveled to Iraq late on Christmas night," Sarah Sanders tweeted

8H ago

Timeline reveals final days of migrant boy who died in custody

Before he died on Christmas Eve, the 8-year-old spent a week in America

20H ago

After Trump's visit, Iraqi lawmakers demand U.S. withdrawal

Politicians from both sides of Iraq's political divide are calling on parliament to vote to expel American troops

updated 44M ago

American becomes first person to cross Antarctica alone, without help

Colin O'Brady's epic 54-day, 930-mile journey was previously thought to be impossible and was almost all uphill

3H ago

Indonesia raises danger level for deadly island volcano

Alert level at second-highest on the country's scale as aviation officials order flights rerouted away from the area

3H ago

Firefighters spray water from high-rises to fight air pollution in India

New Delhi recorded one of year's highest pollution levels on Sunday, which comes mostly from diesel cars, coal-fired power plants, and crop burning

4H ago

Sister Wendy Beckett, BBC art historian, dead at 88

Beckett rose to fame in the 1990s as she hosted unscripted BBC shows from galleries and museums around the world

17H ago

Police say there is video of alleged Kevin Spacey sexual assault

According to the statement from police, the victim said "his girlfriend didn't believe him," so he "Snapchatted the video" of Spacey allegedly touching him

9H ago

Miley Cyrus confirms marriage to Liam Hemsworth

Miley Cyrus, 26, wore a Vivienne Westwood gown in the black-and-white photos

14H ago

Sister Wendy Beckett, BBC art historian, dead at 88

Beckett rose to fame in the 1990s as she hosted unscripted BBC shows from galleries and museums around the world

17H ago

Get to know the 2018 Kennedy Center Honorees

CBSN previews the big night with highlights from the honorees' recent interviews

11H ago

Terrence Howard re-proposes to ex-wife Mira Pak

Howard and Pak divorced in 2015 and share two sons

22H ago

Russians probe mysterious hole in space capsule

A Russian cosmonaut who recently returned to Earth is revealing more details about the mysterious hole in a Soyuz capsule docked to the International Space Station

Dec 25

"Ring of Fire" volcano triggered deadly tsunami

The deadly tsunami that struck Indonesia​ this weekend is just the latest in a series of seismic disasters along the "Ring of Fire"

Dec 25

Upcoming app aims to give you big leg up in online privacy battle

FigLeaf's offering seeks to let you learn where your personal data's been been leaked across the internet and arm you with new tools to stay private

Dec 24

In esports, parents push young players to excel

Forget soccer or piano lessons – these days, some parents are encouraging their kids' interest in video gaming

Dec 24

SpaceX launches Air Force's most powerful GPS satellite ever built

Running five days late, SpaceX launched a next-generation navigation satellite Saturday

Dec 23

Surgery center alerts 3,778 patients about possible infections

Health officials want people to get tested for HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C

16H ago

Does America's workforce have a drug problem?

Laboratory data show that drug use in health care, retail and other U.S. industries is on the rise

Dec 24

Blood pressure medication recalled after cancer-causing chemical found

FDA announces that Torrent Pharmaceuticals Limited is voluntarily recalling two lots of Losartan potassium tablets

Dec 23

University Of Maryland confirms 40 adenovirus cases

One student at the university has been hospitalized with the illness

Dec 22

164,000 pounds of raw ground turkey products recalled

"Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them"

Dec 24

For the legal pot industry, 2018 was a gold rush

It exploded into a $10 billion business with more than a quarter-million new jobs in the U.S. alone, despite barriers

updated 0M ago

How ordinary people get duped into becoming "money mules"

As the FBI cranks up its enforcement efforts against financial scams, it's also warning Americans about them

updated 34M ago

Workers in these 20 states are getting a raise Jan. 1

More than half the states across the country now require higher minimum pay than the federal government's $7.25 an hour

2H ago

Will stocks rise in 2019? Fasten those seatbelts

No matter which way stocks go — and Wall Street has ample arguments for either direction — expect a gut-wrenching ride

updated 47M ago

"Certified organic" grains? Certifiably not, prosecutors say

Prosecutors describe $142 million fraud in which businesses and individuals paid premium for ordinary corn, soybeans, wheat

14H ago

Police say there is video of alleged Kevin Spacey sexual assault

According to the statement from police, the victim said "his girlfriend didn't believe him," so he "Snapchatted the video" of Spacey allegedly touching him

9H ago

Manhunt for suspected cop killer

The suspect was seen on surveillance video buying several packs of beer before getting back into his Dodge Ram pickup truck, investigators said

updated 10M ago

Audio of 911 call shows student’s concern before ex-boyfriend killed her

Lauren McCluskey, 21, grew increasingly concerned about the handling of her harassment complaint before her ex-boyfriend killed her

Dec 25

New DNA tests ordered in 1983 Chino Hills, Calif. quadruple slayings

Calif. Gov. Jerry Brown says Kevin Cooper deserves one last shot at proving his contention that he was framed

Dec 25

Kevin Spacey charged with sexual assault

The charge comes more than a year after a former Boston news anchor came forward with allegations the disgraced actor sexually assaulted her teenage son at a bar in 2016

Dec 25  Original Article