DENVER — Flowhub has all the trappings of a typical software company, from the cold brew coffee and kombucha on tap at its hip WeWork office space here to its smooth pitching, hoodie-wearing CEO.
But this fast growing, four-year-old company has an unusual customer: Pot shops.
"It's not Spicoli and his three friends running a dispensary," said CEO Kyle Sherman, referring to the stoner anti-hero in the movie "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." Flowhub's software has processed more than $1 billion in cannabis sales, helping companies track cash and inventory and stay compliant with Colorado's regulations.
"It's a real business," Sherman said.
Now five years into its experiment with a legal, commercial market for the intoxicating drug, Colorado offers a picture of what marijuana legalization might look like in Minnesota and across the country. With licensed companies legally growing tens of thousands of plants, supply has flooded the market, and prices are dropping. As the novelty has worn off, sales have steadied somewhat, too, but Colorado and its cities are collecting millions in new tax revenue. The industry is sprouting new, ancillary firms like Flowhub — think pick and ax companies during the 1849 gold rush — and recruiting more conventional business pros like accountants, software developers and digital marketing gurus.
Advocates of legalization are pushing hard in Minnesota and see an opening after the Democrats' sweeping victory in the 2018 election, with Gov. Tim Walz ready to sign a bill. The GOP-controlled Senate will hold a hearing Monday on a measure to legalize recreational marijuana, similar to Colorado. Other approaches being debated include the creation of a task force to study the idea or a state constitutional amendment to let voters decide. Advocates say legalization would properly regulate and tax a drug that many Minnesotans use anyway, thereby ending a prohibition regime and keeping people out of jail for low-level offenses.
'They mirror each other'
Legalization's opponents, however, say Colorado should not be mimicked. They point to data since voters approved legalization here in 2012 that show an increase in both property crime and violent crime; a nearly twofold jump in traffic deaths in which drivers had marijuana in their system; and heavy use among some adults. Although use among children has actually declined in recent years, according to one survey, high schoolers are showing a preference for products with higher concentrations of tetrahydrocannabinol — the psychoactive ingredient of cannabis known as THC.
"The biggest issue is the commercialization of marijuana," said Tom Gorman, director of the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area. His team falls under the federal Office of Drug Control Policy and is focused on enforcing federal law, which says marijuana is illegal — encapsulating the plant's uncertain legal status in Colorado.