Sunday, August 26, 2018

What Is CBD Oil And How Did It Become A $1 Billion Industry?


Published on Aug 25, 2018
Views: 10,378
You might have noticed a lot of products lately that are infused with CBD. But what exactly is CBD? CBD stands for cannabidiol, and it's part of the cannabis plant from which we also get marijuana. We spoke with Martin A. Lee, author of "Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana - Medical, Recreational and Scientific" and the director of Project CBD to find out what exactly CBD is.
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Following is a transcript of the video:
Narrator: With all the weed trucks and imagery all over New York these days, you might think to yourself, "Hey, is marijuana legal now?"
Not quite.
What these companies are selling is actually something called CBD. It's found in everything from lollipops to lattes.
And business is booming.
CBD products are part of what is estimated to be a roughly one billion dollar industry in the United States. And it's perfectly legal.
So, what does CBD have that marijuana doesn't?
Martin Lee: The fact of the matter is we're kind of in the midst of a CBD craze right now.

Narrator: Martin Lee is the director of Project CBD, an educational platform that focuses on cannabis science and therapeutics.

Lee: CBD stands for cannabidiol. That's a component of the cannabis plant that has significant therapeutic properties, but it's not intoxicating. It doesn't get you high like THC.
Narrator: As it happens, not all cannabis plants are created equal. Take a look at these two varieties. One is marijuana, the other is hemp. One gets you high, the other doesn't. The key difference is what's on the inside.

Lee: THC and CBD are the main components of the cannabis plant.
Narrator: THC is what makes you feel high, and marijuana plants are loaded with it.
Dave Chappelle: I don't know about y'all, but I can't even move.
Narrator: Hemp, on the other hand, has hardly any THC at all. But what it lacks in THC it makes up for with higher amounts of CBD. Now, CBD won't get you high, but it does have a redeeming quality: it's legal. And at least according to the marketing, it has a relaxing effect. So since this stuff is all the rage, let's see how it's made.
So, once you have a cannabis plant, one simple way to make extract can be done in your own kitchen.
Lee: As simple as using olive oil or butter and heating the trim from the plant or a little bit of the green material from the plant. Obviously that's not very useful for mass industrial production, to be cooking up something in your kitchen with butter and cannabis.
Narrator: But the more common way involves a specialized, complex machine.
Lee: One very widespread way is using what's called a supercritical CO2 extraction. It's ground up to have the texture initially of like a coffee grind. And it's poured into vessels, literally, of a supercritical CO2 machine. It will stay in that machine for upwards to 24 hours under different pressures and temperatures at different times of the extraction process. And ultimately you'll end up with a thick, golden oil that's very waxy in texture.
Narrator: You can also extract it using ethanol and hydrocarbons.
You can find this oil in a number of different products these days.
Lee: It can be administered in various different forms. It might be ingested, it might be applied topically.
Narrator: They even have CBD oil products for your pets. I stopped by a cafe in New York which sells all sorts of CBD-infused products. I tried a CBD matcha latte and a CBD macaroon. These snacks tasted great, and I felt a little more relaxed after, but it was hard to tell if the CBD was actually doing anything for me or if it was all in my head.
Scientists are actually still trying to figure out exactly how CBD affects the body.
Lee: So, there really is a scientific basis for understanding why CBD can work, but we're still really a long way of mastering the hows.
Narrator: Still, CBD may have more benefits than just a relaxing afternoon. Some initial studies have shown that CBD can help with a number of different medical conditions. In fact, in June 2018, the FDA approved the first CBD drug, Epidiolex, which is used to treat epilepsy.
So, who knows?
Perhaps we'll be seeing CBD in more places than just cannabis-decorated
vans in the future

Friday, August 24, 2018

Wait-and-See Here In The Ozone On Main Street Mesa

If a stroll-in-the-shade provided by the storefront colonnades on Main Street yesterday afternoon in the high-heat is any way to measure visible progress by eye-sight evidence, the old LeBaron Building is getting gutted-out to make space for a comedy club, and two new businesses are in-place joining a line-up west of Macdonald Street on the north side -  a gamer's lounge, a tattoo parlor, and a leather shop to add to 'the eclectic mix' of downtown attractions.
Readers of this blog might like to notice that towering way above and dominating all the one-story buildings is the tallest building in the historic downtown heritage area, the 15-story Courtyard Towers, an assisted-living facility on Robson Street. That's not even the top of the building in the image from yesterday, but it clearly shows how out-of-scale and out-of-proportion to the surrounding streetscape a building of that size really is . . .more than two years ago it was sold for $21,000,000. 
The LeBaron Building, sold last year, has a lot of history to tell how early Mormon business owners expanded into real estate speculation here in downtown. You can find out in the following official historic preservation sources: 
1 https://www.mesaaz.gov/residents/historic-preservation/robson-historic-district

2. https://www.mesaaz.gov/residents/historic-preservation/evergreen-historic-district 
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Here at 138 W Main Street, next to Pomeroy's Men's Store & Mission Outfitters where ReVived had a short one-year life, is Buckhorn Village that opened on August 4, 2018








Here next door at 140 W Main Street is Atomic Age Modern, planning to open tomorrow





If that doesn't make you beyond-thrilled and beyond-excited, there's one new development Off Main Street located at 155 S Hibbert Street that might. It's been in-the-works for three years, built on top of a long-vacant unused tract of city-owned land that fills-in open space inside The Old Donut-Hole . . . there's a lot of history there, some unknown.
More on that in a later post
 

Word-of-The-Day: "Various" | Illustrated + Used by Mayor John Giles

DEFINITION from The Oxford Dictionary:
adjective different from one another; different kinds or sorts.
Examples: ‘dresses of various colours’, ‘his grievances were many and various’
Synonyms: diverse, different, differing, varied, varying, a variety of, dissimilar, disparate, assorted, mixed, sundry, miscellaneous, variegated, heterogeneous
determiner More than one; individual and separate.
Examples: ‘various people arrived late’
Synonyms: numerous, many, several, copious, abundant, profuse, countless, innumerable, large number of, multiplicity of 
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It's almost always thrilling and exciting to watch and listen to John Giles conducting all-too-brief so-called "Study Sessions" for the agenda items of upcoming  meetings. Jivin' John Giles somehow manages to blow-through in less than five minutes at a public meeting the entire 33-item Agenda for next week's City Council meeting on 27 August 2018.
Except for one question vocalized by District 2 Councilmember Jeremy Whittaker regarding a denial on Items 8b and 8c, any reasonable person could ask if your elected government appears to be brain-dead . . .
Watch the YouTube video upload provided by Mesa Channel 11 to see for yourselves
IT'S AN IMPORTANT MEETING three days from today.
Please note that THERE WERE NO QUESTIONS ASKED by anyone after Giles thumbed through the pages noting "various this" and "various that" in reference to contracts, ordinances, resolutions, and a special Public Hearing on 9 Zoning Cases.
One item was removed from The Consent Agenda - an city annexation case. 
T one
 
 

The President & The Porn Star (Nothing about David Pecker?)

Listen for yourself
Published on Aug 24, 2018
Views-to-upload time on this blog: 54,138
Any other President would have resigned by now. But we're talking about Donald Trump

A Re-View: City of Mesa Planning & Zoning Board Meeting 16 May 2018

Why take another look at this meeting from three months ago with a running-time over two hours? (02:18:35)

There are some important details ....Bookmark this post for future reference

Feedback Wanted: City Survey Underway To Update Housing "Master Plan" Here In Mesa

Don't know about you, dear readers, but there's somethin' suspicious about all these "canned surveys" where city officials state they're looking for feedback
But let's take it at face-value when the City of Mesa Community Services Department says they are interested in hearing about the quality of housing and neighborhoods in Mesa. All Mesa residents are invited to take part in a survey to provide opinions and experiences of their current housing situations. This includes all those who rent or own a home. The feedback received will help the City identify and establish housing and community development priorities for the next 10 years.
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Please note that the survey will close Aug. 31.
HERE'S THE LAST QUESTION SO YOU CAN THINK ABOUT FIRST:
#16  What is the most important thing that you think Mesa could do to improve the quality and affordability of homes in town?
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There are 15 Multiple-Choice questions ranging over basic household and income data, whether you plan to rent/own, move or purchase, demographics, etc
Then some hypotheticals with fixed options:
  
Hypothetically, if you were to rent, what type of home would you look for?

Hypothetically, if you were looking to purchase, what type of home would you look for?
    
Hypothetically, what type of neighborhood would you be looking for?



 

City survey underway to update the Housing Master Plan
July 31, 2018 at 6:21 pm
The City of Mesa Community Services Department is looking for feedback while currently updating the Housing Master Plan. The department is interested in hearing about the quality of housing and neighborhoods in Mesa.
All Mesa residents are invited to take part in a survey to provide opinions and experiences of their current housing situations. This includes all those who rent or own a home. The feedback received will help the City identify and establish housing and community development priorities for the next 10 years.
The survey will take about 10 minutes and all responses are confidential. Please note that the survey will close Aug. 31.
There will also be weekly raffle drawings every Thursday. To enter, include an email address at the end of the survey. The email used will not be associated with this survey or placed on any listings.

To participate in the survey, visit www.mesaaz.gov/mesaishome.
________________________________________________________________________
Public Information and Communications
Contact: Kendra Wise
Tel. 480-644-6410
kendra.wise@mesaaz.gov

What Drives Sales of Commercial Real Estate Here In Mesa

Just a coincidence in timing perhaps: two items.
Note: It's a Real Estate Investment Trust that negotiated the sales transaction to gain title to an over 250,000 Sq Ft Class A Office Campus located in the heart of Mesa that was delivered by the developers to the commercial real estate market in 2002.
THE RECENT SALE (Note there are no price or financial details)
Source: AZ Big Media
JLL Sells Stapley Center to Artis REIT
August 23, 2018 Real Estate | 17 hours ago |
"On behalf of Invesco Real Estate, a global real estate investment manager, the Phoenix office of JLL has completed the sale of Stapley Center, a three-building, 277,264-square-foot Class A office campus located in the heart of Mesa, Arizona.
The buyer is Artis REIT, a Canada-based real estate investment trust. 
JLL Senior Managing Director Dennis Desmond, Managing Director Lynn LaChapelle and Senior Vice Presidents Peter Bauman and Tivon Moffitt represented Invesco Real Estate in the transaction. JLL Managing Director Dave Seeger serves as Stapley Center’s exclusive leasing broker.
According to JLL, Stapley Center has averaged 90 percent annual occupancy since its delivery to market in 2002 – a rate of performance notably exceeding general market results.
“Artis recognized the value of Invesco Real Estate’s meticulous maintenance at Stapley Center,” said Desmond. “That effort earned the project a 2017 TOBY Building-of-the-Year award for low-rise office buildings in metro Phoenix and has fostered Stapley Center’s exceptionally strong lease performance. Artis is confident that the office campus will continue to outperform the market in the years to come.”
“The East Valley is a highly sought-after market for corporate America and investor interest remains significant for office properties in this area of metro Phoenix,” said Moffitt. “It was a pleasure to work with these two exceptional companies, Artis and Invesco Real Estate, in what was a very smooth sale process.”
Located at 1620, 1630 and 1640 S. Stapley Dr. in Mesa, Stapley Center features three Class A, Energy Star certified office buildings with thoughtfully designed interiors, a full security card access system and on-site management offices.
The property provides immediate access to the US 60 Superstition Freeway and is within walking distance to 20 restaurants, several banks and the neighboring Mesa Grand power center. Tenants at Stapley Center include ADESA, Cirrus Logic and Wallick & Volk."
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TAXPAYER-FINANCED/CITY-FINANCED IMPROVEMENTS: DOLLAR AMOUNT?
Public meeting for Southern Avenue and Stapley Drive Improvements
August 22, 2018 at 2:21 pm
Please join the City of Mesa to discuss the improvements at the intersection of Southern Avenue and Stapley Drive.
The improvements include
  • widening the intersection to include three through lanes on Stapley Drive,
  • a dedicated right turn lane on eastbound Southern Avenue
  • bicycle lanes
  • include underground utilities,
  • new raised medians, curb, gutter, sidewalks, new streetlights and traffic signals.
You are invited to attend a public meeting, where City staff and the design consultant will be available to answer your questions. No formal presentation will be given.
Location: Lindbergh Elementary - Multi-Purpose Room
930 S. Lazona Drive, Mesa AZ 85204
Date: Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2018
Time: 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
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For more information regarding this project, please contact
Rene Powell, Lucy Lopez or Michele Arrollado with the City of Mesa Engineering Public Relations Department at (480) 644-3800.
Si usted tiene preguntas de este proyecto, favor de llamar a Lucy Lopez, con la Ciudad de Mesa al (480) 644-3800.
Engineering Construction
Contact: Rene Powell
Tel. 480-644-3800
rene.powell@mesaaz.gov