School Of Pot Offers "Higher" Education
Oakland Trade School Prepares People For Jobs In California's Medical Marijuana Industry
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A binder showcasing high-grade marijuana buds and other cannabis are displayed at the Coffeeshop Blue Sky dispensary, Saturday, Feb. 16, 2008, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Dino Vournas)
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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 - make that "top scorer" - 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 - 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.
I think they are sending the wrong message out to the community and it's something that could only facilitate criminal behavior.
Michael Chapman, an assistant agent at the DEA's San Francisco officeJeff 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 - 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.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 38 Commentsthe abundance of pot entrapenuers flooding the market, new uses in more regions for farmers, and land owners alike, ...Think that **** wont boost the economy? Oh,... Also, as a father, proud buisness owner, taxpayer, "pot-head", and damn fine American, I dont find any thing wrong with employing some one who smokes weed, even at lunch! A Happy Worker Is A Good Worker! Plus, how many corperate professionals,or hospital employee's get a helluva good buz on during lunch break? dont know? go to a BAR for lunch one day, not to a ''pub &grill''. the benefits of marijuana and possible commercialization, far exeed those of the negative qualities, those tiny little crumbs of bebate held on too by the muther ****** yuppies. you wouldnt think they'd give all the money and majority vote to the sheltered, ignorant folk,... but they did. thnx 4 yr time!!
You cannot compare a person being drunk with a person who is high. In any situation. When you are driving stoned, in some cases, you would develope a minor case of paranoia, which makes you catiously drive, keeping your eyes EVERYWHERE, and always feeling like a cop is right on your arse. And I agree with bobnjersey. There are so many other people out there driving like a bat out of he11, talking on the phone, reading a book, etc. So, for people who are afraid of other people driving while stoned.......take a couple puffs and chill out, dude!!!
Puff, puff, pass...Puff, puff, pass!!!
Roll it up,
Light it up,
Smoke it up,
Inhale....Exhale....
Posted by runningralph
That''s right, only the employer should be allowed to smoke it.
One of the old oil barons responded to the question of Prohibition with:
"I''m all for it as long as I can still get a drink!"
How about we make it legal for everyone but business owners. After all, their jobs are way too important to be performed while stoned.
[Posted by rf35 at 11:34 AM : Feb 26, 2008]
you are already sharing the road w/ a large contingent of folks who have less than ideal attention to the task at hand ... including eating, reading, attending to the kid in the back seat, putting on makeup, swithing the radio station, and talking on the cell phone.
cell phone use alone has been shown to be worse than being over the dui limit.
Posted by taylpatr at 07:26 PM : Feb 25, 2008
So if it is smoked at lunch, the effects last the rest of the work day and probably during his drive home. If he smoked it before work, it lasts from the time he drives to work until at least lunch. Personally, I''d rather not share the road with someone high on pot. How about having your doctor smoke a joint over HIS lunch hour, then perform brain surgury on you? Or did that already happen?
I like that name,,reminds me of Oakishpines.
Anyone have any chips? Got the munchies.
Posted by oneturdyone at 05:31 PM : Feb 25, 2008
I would respectfully disagree with your position that the US accepts tobacco ... the do gooders are trying to irradicate smoking and soon it will be illegal to smoke in your own home .. California passed a law that says you cant smoke in your car if you have kids ..
As for alcohol they stick thier heads in the sand .. and we all know the trajedy of young adults crashing the car and killing each other ..
Dope is dope .. huge insurance liability for dope smokers who go to work .. it will never be legalized in the workplace ...
But if you yearn for the good old days of liberty and risk, you won''t get that back without a revolution. Our nation is in the grip of do-gooders who will not give up their power over your life without a fight--as in killing and bloodshed. Yes, they care so much about your welfare that they will kill you.
Let''s see, pot headed incompetents if they don''t, religious zombies, Christo-taliban if they do. People who think Pat Robertson discusses with God who the next president will be. People who think Jerry Falwell is an agent of the Creator.
Nope, forget the religious BS and go with the pot!
This means dangerous drug gangs, drug dealers, and even terrorists are making BILLIONS of dollars each year because of their monopoly on all profits from the black market.
STOP THE MADNESS!
www.MPP.org
[Posted by jsilver2th at 04:52 PM : Feb 25, 2008]
i used to know a john silvertooth that lived in las vegas ... might this be you?
This nation accepts tobacco use, despite its death grip on its users. This nation accepts alcohol use despite the prohibition act. So when the bloody bell is the prohibition of THC going to be lifted? Is the lack of forward progress in this due to the pacifist state of mind of the majority of users?
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