Oregon's Portland International Airport Allows In-State Travelers To Carry Marijuana | HuffPost - Action News
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Posted: 2015-07-14T00:28:56Z | Updated: 2015-07-14T03:23:03Z Oregon's Portland International Airport Allows In-State Travelers To Carry Marijuana | HuffPost

Oregon's Portland International Airport Allows In-State Travelers To Carry Marijuana

New pot policy allows carry-on weed for high-flying Oregonians.
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LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 19: Dave Warden, a bud tender at Private Organic Therapy (P.O.T.), a non-profit co-operative medical marijuana dispensary, displays various types of marijuana available to patients on October 19, 2009 in Los Angeles, California. Attorney General Eric Holder announced new guidelines today for federal prosecutors in states where the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes is allowed under state law. Federal prosecutors will no longer trump the state with raids on the southern California dispensaries as they had been doing, but Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley recently began a crackdown campaign that will include raids against the facilities. Cooley maintains that virtually all marijuana dispensaries are in violation of the law because they profit from their product. The city of LA has been slow to come to agreement on how to regulate its 800 to 1,000 dispensaries. Californians voted to allow sick people with referrals from doctors to consume cannabis with the passage of state ballot Proposition 215 in 1996 and a total of 14 states now allow the medicinal use of marijuana. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
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Portland International Airport will allow travelers within Oregon to carry amounts of marijuana legalized by the state's recreational marijuana law, which took effect this month. 

"For those flying to other cities in the state of Oregon, traveling with marijuana is allowable as long as that passenger meets all the other legal requirements of the state law," said Steve Johnson, spokesman for Port of Portland, which owns and operates the airport, told The Huffington Post on Monday. 

Passengers flying within Oregon need take no special steps before their flight, Johnson said. Travelers simply must pass through the usual Transportation Security Administration checkpoints. If a TSA officer discovers marijuana, they'll notify airport police, who will make sure that the passenger's marijuana doesn't exceed one ounce  and that their boarding pass shows an Oregon destination. 

TSA officers don't actively search for marijuana  or other drugs before flights. But because federal law still makes marijuana illegal, TSA agents are required to enforce it. Travelers with marijuana who are leaving the state will be asked to dispose of the pot before carrying on with their travel plans, Johnson explained. Any travelers found with more than the legal amount or who otherwise weren't in  compliance with state law could be subject to state and federal penalties.

Oregon's recreational marijuana law went into effect  on July 1. The same day, the airport revised its pot policy.

Oregon legalized recreational marijuana in 2014, as did Alaska and the District of Columbia. Colorado and Washington state were the first states to legalize marijuana for recreational purposes, in 2012. 

Major airports in states that have legalized recreational marijuana have varying policies regarding passenger transport of cannabis.

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in Washington allows passengers to travel with a state-legal amount of the drug without checking boarding passes, explained Perry Cooper, a spokesman for the Port of Seattle which operates Sea-Tac.

Cooper said airport authorities remind passengers found with marijuana that they may land where marijuana laws are different and may face charges, if caught.

Denver International Airport has a strict policy banning possession and public display of marijuana , and forbids the sale of marijuana-themed souvenirs  like socks or hats with a marijuana leaf on airport property. 

“We don’t have any plans to reevaluate our marijuana policy,” airport spokeswoman Laura Cole told HuffPost.

Other Colorado airports have experimented with "amnesty boxes"  for travelers who arrive at the airport with marijuana and want to ditch it before their flight.

Alaska's marijuana law has gone into effect , but its regulatory framework hasn't been finalized by the state, leaving its airports in a holding pattern. 

"It would premature for the airport to put forth any policies or procedures until we know what rules we're supposed to be talking about," said John Parrot, manager of Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport. 

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story stated that DIA installed amnesty boxes for abandoned marijuana, however it has not. It was other Colorado airports that had. The story has been updated.

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