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Colorado's Legal Pot Growers Grumble About RFID Tagging

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Colorado's Legal Pot Growers Grumble About RFID Tagging
By Karen Weise March 13, 2014

tech_pot12__01__970-630x420.jpg

Photograph by Morgan Rachel Levy
A canary-yellow tag placed on each plant emits an RFID signal that allows officials to track crops from bud to blunt


Imagine if a vintner had to keep track of every grape. That’s a little like the task facing Colorado’s marijuana growers, whose free-spirited ways are slowly adjusting to regulations that have sprung up around their newly legitimate business. Under the state’s rules, pot merchants, who must grow most of what they sell, have to put a microchip on each plant so it can be recorded and monitored in Colorado’s Marijuana Inventory Tracking Solution. “A flower child dies a small, painful death every time a MITS tag is issued,” says Elliott Klug, who owns Denver dispensary Pink House Blooms.

A canary-yellow tag placed on each plant emits a radio frequency identification signal (RFID) that allows officials consulting a statewide database to track crops from bud to blunt. Tags with 24-digit IDs are staked into the soil or wrapped around individual plants while they grow in the dirt or hydroponically. The tags travel with the plants through a growhouse to harvest and as the pot flowers are dried and cured for flavor. For shipment to stores, each strain gets grouped into a batch that receives matching RFID tags, which remain on the packages until sale. During scheduled and unscheduled visits to dispensaries or growhouses, state officials use RFID scanners and electronic inventories to ensure that none of the plants go missing.

On March 10, Colorado reported that revenue from marijuana taxes and fees totaled more than $3.5 million in January, the first month recreational pot was legal. Governor John Hickenlooper’s proposed budget for the coming fiscal year estimates that marijuana taxes will top $134 million.

The tag system was designed by Franwell, a Lakeland (Fla.)-based company that sells crop-tracking software, and makes up the technical backbone of Colorado regulatory efforts to monitor pot sales. Each plant tag costs 45¢; the batch package tag is 25¢. Growers say costs add up. For many, the bigger frustration is having to enter the data twice: once into their own accounting databases and again into the MITS system, which isn’t compatible with most other programs. “Plugging and chugging numbers is what most of my management staff is doing now,” says Jessie Levy, a store manager for the dispensary Native Roots. Given the potential margin for error, says Klug, the stakes, which could include loss of license and criminal charges, are absurdly high. When a plant dies, he follows a lengthy ticketing procedure to document and delete it from the system. “It’s like, guys, it’s a plant,” he says.

continued: http://www.businessweek.com/article...-legal-pot-growers-grumble-about-rfid-tagging
 
“A flower child dies a small, painful death every time a MITS tag is issued,”

Yeah, the old days are gone. but at least the flower children aren't going to jail anymore.
 
this sounds a bit like a pain in the ass but POT IS LEGAL of course there are gonna be some lame ass gov mandated " accountability" requirements placed on a new system. this is just a system the state can use to ensure it gets its tax money from every plant and its pretty similar to the inventory systems in any other business. these days pretty much all products created and sold are tracked and categorized and labeled from creation to sale to use to disposal. this is what an industry must do to be viewed as legitimate and accountable to outside scrutiny.
 
It is absolutely fucking ridiculous, they are still acting like cannabis is some sort of hazard. If someone losses a liquor bottle do they have to do all these bullshit, expense-creating things to make sure it is catalogued properly? Imagine if every bottle of beer someone had at a store needed to be tracked like this. This is just another underhanded attempt to attack weed by increasing costs and inflating the bullshit RFID tag industry.

They literally sell it at the artificially inflated market price or higher. Am I the only one who sees a problem here? Every baby step gets athlete's foot and smashed with a hammer. Illegality increases the cost of a product at least tenfold yet legality here failing to rectify this.
 
There probably are RFID chips in every bottle, at least every case. I'm not in the industry so I don't know, but those things can be tiny, plenty of products have them already to track them from creation through to sale. It's nothing new.

There's no way that any capitalist would legalize any drug if there wasn't any money in it.. I don't really understand that side of your argument. If there is no tax revenue from pot, why would anyone with actual power in this fucked up world allow it to happen. Remember kids, money makes the world go 'round, that's why as a species we are so fucked up.

They'll RFID people as soon as they can.. can't you see the signs? Oh wait, mobile phones. They don't need to put a chip in us, we all willingly have a UID on us at all times.
 
You could tax it and still have it cost no more than gourmet coffee grounds. It is the fact that they are raping every last cent out of it that is sickening. It is a minimally processed plant product. This value is contrived out of taboo and needless regulation. The industries that use those tags are not required to by law so it is completely different than what is happening with weed. Sure, there are legitimate reasons to track a product but this is compulsory and not needed.
 
_DOA_ said:
Every baby step gets athlete's foot and smashed with a hammer.

That was my feeling as well. It seems like people will invariably line up to gain a freedom, only to lose another. How many industries are "illegitimate" because they don't use RFID tags from seed to sale? Are all tobacco growers forced to use RFID tags? Cabbage growers?

Why can't the government track sales and ensure tax revenue without the use of RFID tags at every step?

opi8 said:
They'll RFID people as soon as they can.. can't you see the signs? Oh wait, mobile phones. They don't need to put a chip in us, we all willingly have a UID on us at all times.

Not all of us have a cell phone. I don't.

Proponents of human chipping say having an implant is more secure than carrying an external RFID tag. But you can already avoid sniffers by placing a Faraday cage/sleeve around your devices and whatnot. If people are chipped (or tattooed) with RFIDs, will some turn to wearing Faraday gloves on their hands?
 
Okay, so here's my farfetched conspiracy theory - perhaps the company who manufactures those RFID tags is run by (or employs) a group of individuals who stood to lose something financially once cannabis sativa was legalized in CO and WA =D
 
You could tax it and still have it cost no more than gourmet coffee grounds. It is the fact that they are raping every last cent out of it that is sickening.

Unfortunately, this what the government has done. In this instance especially and unfortunately it pushes people away from the system. It's certainly booming but there will be a black market if prices aren't reasonable to consumers.
 
That was my feeling as well. It seems like people will invariably line up to gain a freedom, only to lose another. How many industries are "illegitimate" because they don't use RFID tags from seed to sale? Are all tobacco growers forced to use RFID tags? Cabbage growers?

Why can't the government track sales and ensure tax revenue without the use of RFID tags at every step?

The difference is those are federally legal in the US and cannabis isn't. Those states are surrounded by states were it is not legal so it not surprising at all they'll do what ever they can to prevent it from being trafficked over there. It needs to federal; leaving it at a state level just creates a huge mess.
 
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