June 5, 2019 Page 3 INSIDE L O C A L N E W S The Week in Review M ETRO page 2 page 7 Adam Smith, founder and executive director of the Oregon Craft Cannabis Alliance is shown a marijua- na variety by Tree PDX marijuana shop owner Brooke Smith at her shop in Portland. Smith is part of a newly formed group that will launch an ad campaign to support mom-and-pop cannabis retailers. Market Awash in Pot New limits considered on supply and demand Oregon is awash in pot, glut- ted with so much legal weed that if growing were to stop today, it could take more than six years by one estimate to smoke or eat it all. Now, the state is looking to curb production. Five years after voters legalized recreational marijuana, lawmak- ers are moving to give the Oregon Liquor Control Commission more leeway to deny new pot-growing licenses based on supply and de- mand. The bill, which passed the Sen- ate and is now before the House, is aimed not just at reducing the huge surplus but at preventing di- version of unsold legal marijuana into the black market and fore- stalling a crackdown by federal prosecutors. pages 10-11 Arts & ENTERTAINMENT Supply is running twice as high as demand, meaning that the surplus from last year’s harvest alone could amount to roughly 2.3 million pounds of marijuana, by the liquor commission’s figures. That’s the equivalent of over 1 bil- lion joints. Across the state, the weed is cultivated in a multitude of fields, greenhouses and converted facto- ries, with 1,123 active producer licenses issued by the OLLC over the past three years. The legislation could be a life- line to some cannabis businesses that are being squeezed by market forces. Retail prices in Oregon for legal pot have plummeted from more than $10 per gram in Octo- ber 2016 to less than $5 last De- cember. At the same time, smaller marijuana businesses are feeling competition from bigger, richer players, some from out of state. Officials worry that some li- cense holders will become so des- perate they will divert their prod- uct into the black market rather than see it go unsold. Opponents say the proposed law will drive growers who are de- nied licenses into the illegal mar- ket, if they’re not there already. Oregon puts no cap on the num- ber of licenses that can be issued. Last June, the OLCC stopped ac- cepting applications so it could process a months long backlog. But under current law, it has no specific authority to say no to oth- erwise qualified applicants. --Associated Press New Deputy Chief of Staff at City Hall O PINION C LASSIFIEDS C ALENDAR pages 12-13 pages 14-15 page 15 Mayor Ted Wheeler has hired Jamal Fox as his new Deputy Chief of Staff. Fox most recently served as a property and business develop- ment manager for Portland Parks and Recreation. His prior expe- rience was marked by becom- ing the youngest member ever elected to the Greensboro, N.C. City Council. He also is a former adjunct political science profes- sor at North Carolina A&T State University. “I am pleased to welcome Ja- Jamal Fox mal Fox to the team. His extensive experience as a former elected leader, educator, and as a commu- nity advocate will be invaluable to our team. I look forward to his leadership as we continue to work hard for all Portlanders,” Wheeler said in a news release. On a personal note, Fox is a proud husband and a new father. He takes over the role left vacant after the Mayor promoted his then Deputy Chief of Staff Kris- tin Dennis to Chief of Staff earlier this year.