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Oh no! the Nasal Rangers

Al Botross

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http://dailycaller.com/2013/11/12/m...r-for-sniffing-out-marijuana-odor-violations/


When citizens of Denver inevitably complain about the smell of legalized marijuana, it will be a job for the “Nasal Ranger” to sniff out justice.
Although it sounds like something written by the satirical website The Onion, the Nasal Ranger is a real thing used by the official odor investigators of the Denver Department of Environmental Health.
Far less cool than a cape, it’s a bullhorn-like cone that investigators like Ben Siller clamp around their noses to figure out if something is smelly enough to earn a citation from the city.
Seeing someone using a Nasal Ranger on the streets used to be something of an oddity, employed only in instances where neighbors have complained about industrial operations like a pig-ear dog treat factory or due to the smoke from a wood-fired pizza joint, according to the Denver Post.
But they were poised to become much more ubiquitous when Denver first proposed to make the very smell of marijuana in public a crime. Originally, the city council considered banning pot smoke from wafting over a neighbor’s back fence or being detected on the tourist-popular 16th Street Mall. Opponents raised enough of a fuss that the council backtracked, although its members are still considering some restrictions on the skunky smell of marijuana.
“Odor can be subjective,” Council President Mary Beth Susman told the Post. “It’s hard to legislate odor. The strength that is required to register on the Nasal Ranger is something we need to look at. I also wonder if people will get used to the smell and the dislike of it now may change over time.”
As absurd a tool as it may seem, the Nasal Ranger, which costs about $1,500, is meant to remove the subjectivity from figuring out how bad something smells. To trigger a citation, according to Denver regulations, the device must measure a ratio of stinky air to clean air of at least 7:1.
Siller told the Post that only very strong smells will register that high.
But he still has to respond to complaints about pot stores, which have been on the rise since 2009, when medical marijuana dispensaries and grow operations became much more common in Denver. Denver’s 7News reported that complaints about pot smells doubled from 2010 to 2012.
“Initially, we received complaints just because [marijuana businesses] were starting up,” Siller told 7News. “And some of those complaints were just because of the unknown that there was this new business in the area with odor coming from the facility.”
The city’s Department of Environmental Health expects another spike in complaints starting in January, when licensed retail marijuana stores open their doors for the first time. The department will hire additional noses to cope with them.
“We are going to be increasing our staff level, adding a person that would be devoted strictly to dealing with marijuana,” environmental operations manager Gary Lasswell told 7News.
 

teemu shalanie

WeeDGamE StannisBaratheoN
Veteran
I want to apply , then be the bad ranger of nasal rangers, take bribes , shake down hippys for free smoke , ahhhh if only I was a yanky , ( oh no.....is that hate speech )

TS
 

Jhhnn

Active member
Veteran
Haters gonna hate, particularly when they can dress up as goody two-shoes. They'll be getting nowhere fast in Denver, bet on it. The notion that the City Council is "considering" the Mayor's proposals wrt cannabis odor is laughable. They won't touch it with a pole. It'll just die quietly from neglect.

They're giving it all the "consideration" it deserves.
 

supermanlives

Active member
Veteran
we need the nasal ranger on public transportation . ya some folks seem to shower in their choice of stink.ya so fucking strong an overpowering at times it has made me feel sick. yall don't need half a bottle of cologne \perfume
 

Stoner4Life

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aaff1451_zpsfeffa731.jpg


 

Al Botross

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http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way...smell-o-scope-targets-marijuanas-skunky-scent

NasalRanger_wide-21951da7cda6ee3a5e71021cfb84d52ee07afa9f-s4-c85.jpg


A man uses the Nasal Ranger to detect smells in the southern U.S., in this photo provided by St. Croix Sensory. In Denver, the device is being used to monitor complaints of strong marijuana smells.

A man uses the Nasal Ranger to detect smells in the southern U.S., in this photo provided by St. Croix Sensory. In Denver, the device is being used to monitor complaints of strong marijuana smells.
Courtesy of Nasal Ranger

Recreational marijuana is . But that doesn't mean residents want the air to smell like a pot rally. Denver is getting more calls to enforce an odor ordinance that can impose a buzz-killing fine on violators. To find them, the city relies on a device called the Nasal Ranger.

And that's where licensed smell investigator Ben Siller comes in. A member of Denver's Department of Environmental Health, he's trained to use an olfactometer to determine if people are breaking laws that protect the purity of Denver's air.

Siller responds to citizens' odor complaints — an increasing number of which are tied to the rise of odiferous marijuana grow facilities. A recent story about him began this way:

"Ben Siller looked ridiculous on a recent afternoon, standing on a downtown Denver street corner with a giant device clamped to his face sniffing the air for odorous evidence of marijuana."

The Nasal Ranger is a cone-shaped device resembling a megaphone that's made by , a company based in Minnesota. It samples the air to help an operator detect the presence and strength of odors. As others have noted, the device looks like a scaled-down and streamlined version of the Smell-O-Scope created by Professor Farnsworth on the TV series .

In Denver, the scent of marijuana would have to be very strong — exceeding a level of detection when one volume of the scented air is combined with seven volumes of clean air — to trigger a formal response and possible fine.

Siller tells the Post that it's been nearly 20 years since anyone broke that threshold. A violation could bring a fine of up to $2,000, Denver's reported this summer.

Many expect Siller and his colleagues to get more calls as Colorado's pot industry continues to mature. The state's first stores selling marijuana for recreational use are scheduled to open in January.

As that date approaches, the city is tweaking its rules to curtail "open and public" marijuana use, as reported Tuesday. That's when the City Council backed away from a rules proposal that could have exposed people to fines for smoking marijuana in their front yard, or for having the scent escape a window.

"If someone is doing it out on the front porch and my kids are around, it would definitely bother me and after a while I would maybe call it in," Denver resident Karyn Wingard-Manuel tells the city's .

The station also talked to Siller, who said his department often works with people to minimize smells that annoy their neighbors.

"If need be, we'll go out and contact the party, let them know that a complaint has been filed even though there is not a violation and we'll let them know that perhaps there's some way they can work it out," he said.
 

Wiggs Dannyboy

Last Laugh Foundation
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Siller responds to citizens' odor complaints — an increasing number of which are tied to the rise of odiferous marijuana grow facilities. A recent story about him began this way:

"Ben Siller looked ridiculous on a recent afternoon, standing on a downtown Denver street corner with a giant device clamped to his face sniffing the air for odorous evidence of marijuana."

The Nasal Ranger is a cone-shaped device resembling a megaphone that's made by , a company based in Minnesota. It samples the air to help an operator detect the presence and strength of odors. As others have noted, the device looks like a scaled-down and streamlined version of the Smell-O-Scope created by Professor Farnsworth on the TV series .

In Denver, the scent of marijuana would have to be very strong — exceeding a level of detection when one volume of the scented air is combined with seven volumes of clean air — to trigger a formal response and possible fine.

I'd be curious on what that level of smell would seem like to my nose. I wonder if somebody who grows weed would find that amount as bothersome. Somehow I can't imagine the smell of weed growing would be too much, but then again I've never been directly outside a major grow operation, and if they aren't taking care to control odor....might go back to the old rule, too much of anything, even a good thing, can be too much.

I know here in Portland, I'll be driving along a street and all of a sudden...WHAMO...my truck will fill with that beautiful smell. Happens all the time, all the time. To me it's heaven, especially since I haven't been able to have a garden for a few years.
 

Jhhnn

Active member
Veteran
Meh. Anti cannabis forces have lost here in Colorado, but they're still trying, and whining about the smell of the evil weed is part of that, along with the whole "Think of the Children!" bullshit routine.

Thankfully, the Denver City Council seems resistant to their efforts-

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/13/marijuana-legalization_n_4269604.html

There's still some attempt to disallow smoking & gifting on the street or in parks, by instituting civil fines. OTOH, If I can get a permit from the city to have a keg of beer at a baseball game in the park, I ought to be able to do much the same wrt cannabis, I figure. The whole notion is totally unenforceable wrt concerts & festivals, anyway, like our annual 420 party in Civic Center Park. No pot smoking at Red Rocks concerts? Really? Hell, the cops have been pretending it wasn't happening for the last 40 years or so, and I doubt that legalization will increase their vigilance one teensy bit.

I know it's hard for self righteous control freaks to give it up, but they really need to get over themselves.
 

justpassnthru

Active member
Veteran
I first thot this was a joke! lol That article is more than laughable, it is hilarious! I've been in many collectives and the only smell is pure unsmoked cannabis and none from smoking it. Now, IF they use it for outdoor grows...who knows?

It would be nice if the activists would get involved and make the Police carry those smelling machines in their vehicles and RECORD data used for 'probable' cause, instead of relying on the cops 'intuition';
with the car windows UP! I am Sick of cops going thru folks cars!

There must be a way of twisting their gadgets to our desire?:blowbubbles: jpt
 

Warped1

I'm a victim of fast women and slow horses
Veteran
I wonder if that thing picks up cabbage too..cause I love corned beef and cabbage
 

bombadil.360

Andinismo Hierbatero
Veteran
it makes you wonder what kind of low-life is behind the design and production of these 'odor telescopes"...

maybe the world needs technologies that are actually useful for improving the quality of life of everyone and the planet... but not, lets just make useless technologies to fuck with people who are smoking herb instead...

great.
 

Cantharellus

Well-known member
There is a town in the U.P of Michigan that is paying 3500 for one of these because the town "stinks". I wish I lived there because I would sue the hell out of those rubes. They are also breaking out the swabs for DWI's and taking away your drivers license. Gotta love legalization.
 

Slim Pickens

Well-known member
Veteran
There will be fines involved at some point,making the purchase those odor detectors a viable purchase for local governments.They after all,are more interested in making money,than serving the community.

I happened to visit an acquaintance a couple weeks ago.He lives in the older part of town not 2 blocks away from Town Hall and the Popo dept.When I got to his place and got out out of my car,I was immediately greeted by the sweet sweet pungency of a Mj garden.This was not ordinary garden either.This was FrankenStank attaining the tenth magnitude of odor.It had to have been one of my friends neighbors,as my friend uses serious odor abatement.

There is no way that odor could go unnoticed being so close to Leo.No offense intended folks,but we need to be good neighbors,or the powers that be will have to yield to pressure from residents and address the issue.

There is already people squawking about the hemp farms.I foresee trouble if we don't all do our share to limit complaints from people who don't share our fondness of the plant.
 

EsterEssence

Well-known member
Veteran
The smell is one of the biggest bitches of the anti cannabis crowd. You could smell it all over the valley I live in, but they busted hundreds of grows and are still going at it. From what I’ve heard there won’t be any licenses given up here, only medical, which is ok with me, get rid of the Mexican and Hmong cartels that came here to use the pristine valley to grow thousands of plants. GREEDY BASTARDS, SCREWED IT UP FOR EVERYBODY...
 

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