A ban on using pot in plain view on Denver front porches appears set to go up in smoke.
The Denver City Council voted on Nov. 26 to ban smoking marijuana on private property if it’s done in public view, in places like front porches or balconies. But just as the controversial decision appeared to be a done deal, the city council reversed course by passing an amendment that would nix the ban.
“It’s setting a false expectation up,” Councilman Albus Brooks, who changed his vote to oppose the ban, told NBC affiliate KUSA-TV. “Because we’re not going to address this issue. We don’t have the resources to do it.” Brooks’ change of heart was enough to alter the fate of the ordinance to 7-6 against, blocking the front porch ban from moving forward.
Law enforcement officials were already skeptical of the ban. Upon the initial vote in favor of the ban, Denver’s police chief stated that the front-porch ordinance would be law enforcement’s lowest priority.
But front-porch smokers are not quite in the clear. A final vote on the amendment to do away with the ban is scheduled for next week.
Marijuana advocates, not surprisingly, oppose the ban. Mason Tvert, communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project, told reporters the porch ban doesn’t make sense. “Currently, it is entirely legal for adults to consume alcohol and cigarettes in public. It is irrational to make it illegal for marijuana smokers not to be able to do the same,” he said.









