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One toke over the state line

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Thursday, May 9, 2013 11:07 PM

Traveling in the clouds

“Marijuana tourists” are expected to converge on Colorado and Washington, hoping to score without fear of handcuffs, because voters in those states legalized recreational pot last November. That “already, hotels in Seattle and Denver are reporting numerous requests for reservations by pot supporters planning visits.”

The ballot measures didn’t prohibit purchases by out-of-staters, so now, both state governments are scrambling to craft regulations limiting tourists to small purchases.

A special Colorado “task force” of cops, marijuana businesspeople and legislators recommends signs be installed in airports and along the state’s borders “telling visitors they can’t take pot home,” AP reports. Dan Pablon, a Denver legislator, insists, “Marijuana purchased in Colorado must stay in Colorado.”

Fabulous Las Vegas

The millions of tourists on the Las Vegas Strip might have a hard time finding any trace of local history, given the proliferation of ever-more-absurd casino hotels mimicking exotic destinations –– the Statue of Liberty, the Eiffel Tower, Egyptian pyramids, and who knows what else. But local officials are promoting a landmark that has been flashing since 1959 (around the time, many imagine, that Las Vegas history began). We’re talking about the 25-foot-tall, diamond-and-star-shaped neon sign that proclaims: “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas.”

“People come from all over the world and want their picture taken ... by the sign,” Clark County Commission Chairman Steve Sisolak told the Las Vegas Review-Journal recently. “It’s oftentimes impossible to get a parking space (near it).”

Rest assured: County officials are spending $800,000 to add about 20 new parking spaces near the fabulous sign, along with “button-controlled crosswalks and traffic lights to make pedestrian access easier,” the Review-Journal reports. Mark Rumpler, a “tribute artist” who dons a white leather Elvis Presley costume to pose with the sign for tourists’ snapshots, is among those happy about the improvements.

One-percenter travel

Western “luxury hotels” are offering innovative high-end outdoor recreation experiences to attract wealthy customers, reports The Wall Street Journal. The Hotel Jerome in Aspen, Colo., advertises an “ultimate adventure package” that includes “a three night stay in a Deluxe King room, a snowshoe tour (with lunch) and a twilight dog sledding excursion through the still, snowy wonderland of Aspen,” for $2,150 per couple.

However, “some programs don’t fly,” the Journal observes. “The Resort at Pelican Hill in Newport Beach, Calif., created a $5,000-per-person, two-night stay that included one day of fishing and another of picking produce, each accompanied by a resort chef” who ended it with dinner — “it was too complicated.”

The Ritz-Carlton in Dana Point, Calif., tried to hire professional surfers to give lessons to guests, but scheduling the lessons “becomes a challenge,” a hotel spokeswoman told the Journal, as the pesky surfers rank the work below their top priority; you never know when they’ll “fly off to go where the waves are.”

Effluent for the Affluent

Cruise ships dump their waste products in coastal waters, so voters in the northernmost state passed a 2006 ballot measure banning such dumping — a futile rebellion, it turns out. The law would have become effective in 2015, but the “cruise industry” persuaded Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell and fellow Republicans to override the voters in February. The Legislature passed Parnell’s bill, which allows cruise ships to “indefinitely discharge ammonia, a product of human waste, and heavy metals, dissolved from ship plumbing,” reports the Anchorage Daily News.

“Ammonia can contribute to algae blooms and harm shellfish. Copper, a heavy metal, has been shown to hurt the homing sense of salmon — their ability to smell — in freshwater.” State regulators do require cruise ships to treat raw sewage before discharging it, and the industry argues that it in the total discharge streams will be quickly diluted by seawater. But ban supporters — including “fishing groups, environmentalists, Alaska Native organizations and residents of coastal communities” — have their doubts.

Ray Ring is a senior editor for High Country News based in Bozeman, Montana (hcn.org).

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