Nevada launches sales of legal recreational marijuana - Action News
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Nevada launches sales of legal recreational marijuana

Nevada is now the fifth U.S. state with stores selling marijuana for recreational purposes. Sales are expected to overtake all other states thanks to the millions of tourists who flock to Las Vegas.

Cannabis dispensaries open along Las Vegas Strip

People wait in line at the Essence cannabis dispensary on Saturday. (John Locher/Associated Press)

Nevada became the fifth state in the U.S. with stores selling marijuana for recreational purposes, opening a market early Saturday that is eventually expected to outpace any other in the nation thanks to the millions of tourists who flock to Las Vegas.

People began purchasing marijuana shortly after midnight, just months after voters approved legalization in November and marking the fastest turnaround from the ballot box to retail sales in the country.

Hundreds of people lined up at Essence Cannabis Dispensary on the Las Vegas Strip. People were excited and well-behaved as a lone security guard looked on. A valet was available to park the cars of customers.

A cheer erupted when the doors opened.

Those 21 and older with a valid ID can buy up to an ounce of pot. Tourists are expected to make nearly two of every three recreational pot purchases in Nevada, but people can only use the drug in a private home.

Banned in public areas

It remains illegal to light up in public areas, including the Las Vegas Strip, casinos, bars, restaurants, parks, convention centres and concert halls places frequently visited by tourists. Violators face a $600 fine.

And driving under the influence of marijuana is still illegal.

Ken Butler of Colorado smells a cannabis sample at Essence Vegas Cannabis Dispensary after the start of recreational marijuana sales began in Las Vegas. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Despite the limits on where people can get high and restrictions on where the industry can advertise, dispensaries worked furiously to prepare for the launch. They stamped labels on pot products, stocked up their shelves, added security and checkout stations, and announced specials.

Desert Grown Farms hired about 60 additional employees. Workers in scrubs, hair nets and surgical masks slapped stickers on sealed jars this week as others checked on marijuana plants or carefully weighed buds.

In Nevada, marijuana use is prohibited in casinos, bars, restaurants, parks and at concerts. (Associated Press)

"It would be a good problem to have if I couldn't meet my demand," said CEO Armen Yemenidjian, whose Desert Grown Farms owns the only dispensary that is selling recreational pot on the Las Vegas Strip, across the street from the Stratosphere hotel.

Some dispensaries took to social media to spread the word or tried to draw in buyers with special events. Some planned to give away free marijuana to their first 100 customers or throw parties with barbecues and food trucks later in the afternoon.

Some facilities are in strip malls, while others, in stereotypical Las Vegas fashion, are in neighbourhoods shared by strip clubs.

Nevada joins Colorado, Oregon, Washington and Alaska in allowing adults to buy the drug for recreational use, something that's still banned by the federal government.

The Canadian government tabled legislation in April to regulate the recreational use, sale and cultivation of marijuana.