While a group of citizens in Pueblo, Colorado attempted to kill the city’s burgeoning recreational marijuana industry, their attempt to ban all retail licenses failed on election day — and now the city’s cannabis industry and their partners say they will build the National Marijuana Museum in the southern Colorado city.

“We were the first to legalize, regulate and tax adult-use retail marijuana, and now, the first to decisively defeat prohibitionists in a do-over vote. With our community’s rich history tied to marijuana, it is only fitting that the National Marijuana Museum should be located here — to be owned by the people, for the people.”


The Oakland Museum of California had an entire exhibit dedicated to cannabis for much of 2016.


A citizen-organized group will kickstart the planning for the National Marijuana Museum in Pueblo, according to a media release. The group said future announcements will be made via its Facebook page.

Branson Haney, CEO of veteran home-builder Legacy Homes of Pueblo, will steer the community-based steering committee, according to the release. According to his online bio, Haney is the chairman of the board for the Colorado Association of Home Builders, a past president of the Pueblo Association of Home Builders and an ongoing builder representative for the National Association of Home Builders. He received his MBA from the University of Denver.

“With now more than 30 states having legalized marijuana, we have entered a new era where society is finally acknowledging that the benefits of legalized cannabis far outweigh the costs,” Haney said in the release. “With Pueblo County as the leader in the national legalization effort, it is now time to lead the effort on improving education and knowledge of marijuana’s rich history — scientifically, socially and culturally. And we’re going to do it right here in Pueblo, Colorado.”

The city and county of Pueblo have embraced the legal cannabis industry moreso than most other Colorado municipalities — with 420-friendly legislation that includes one of the state’s only permits for the outdoor commercial cultivation of marijuana.


This article was first published on TheCannabist.co.