
1 minute read
RULES
familiar with marijuana testing facilities and were opposed to manufacturing marijuana products. None of the items had the councilor support to put it to a vote.
Calderon said the nal item, licensing places to allow public marijuana smoking, is one of the new options. A restaurant or bar could apply for
John Bass, Broom eld resident who retired from the construction industry after a cancer diagnosis said relief from the cost of medicine is key.
“I accidentally got a bill once for my treatment and it was only $13,000 a shot,” Bass said..”And I just freaked out. I’d just gone on Medicare and I didn’t know how to x it.”

Former Greeley Dentist Rocky Kron, a Kaiser Permanente customer now, took it a step further, saying it medical groups save money and make medicine better.
“I’m a huge supporter of community health centers and I think my experience with Kaiser Permanente has been better because of the coordination of bene ts, similar to what Congresswoman Caraveo was talking about with Salud,” Kron said..” e services are all coordinated and the doctors are all working together in the same plant so they can talk to each other. I think we need to move to a more socialized form of medicine to lower costs and coordinate care.” a license, allowing its customers to smoke on the premises.
“I think we should just leave this alone,” Councilor Peter Padilla said. e measure didn’t move forward, although Councilor Johnston said it was likely inevitable, as well.
“ is is the future, it is going to be coming to all of our cities in Colorado and then elsewhere, so I’d like to be ahead of it and have control. Eventually, someone to try and get this one done, too. I’ll let it sit and won’t make a motion, but I do support it.”