back to article Totally uncool California bureaucrats shoot down drone weed delivery

California says its impending legalization of recreational marijuana will not include skies full of herb-toting drone delivery bots. A set of rules [PDF] handed down from the state's Bureau of Cannabis Control mandates that any delivery services operating in the state only use cars to make their drop-offs. The ruling expressly …

  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Manna from heaven

    > "Much of the reasoning behind the rules appears to be safety-related."

    I'll say. We sure don't want those pretty pretty packages to inadvertently come down in a school yard, now do we? And I suppose the same will apply to booze deliveries or any other restricted substance or device.

    Pretty much takes all the fun out of drone deliveries, except for the novelty factor.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Manna from heaven

      I blame Obama!

  2. Kernel

    Safety?

    "Much of the reasoning behind the rules appears to be safety-related."

    My thinking might be wrong here, but it seems to me that one of the big advantages of legalizing pot is that it becomes just another product, like alcohol or tobacco, and with readily availability I would expect the price and risk to supply chain participants to drop to similar levels, thus eliminating most of the motive for criminal involvement.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Safety?

      The rules being reasoned about here are not the ones regarding use of pot. It's the regulations built around its sale and handling. A drone is not at all secure, so they won't allow pot to be transported in them, period.

      1. Kernel

        Re: Safety?

        So why don't the same rules apply to alcohol or tobacco?

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Safety?

          "So why don't the same rules apply to alcohol or tobacco?"

          A lorry taking a delivery to a corner shop that includes a case of Vodka doesn't require a police escort. A lorry full of vodka from the factory might be randomly selected for an unmarked escort, along side the alarms and tracking from a control room with priority lines to all relevant police forces.

          I used to work in a control room that handled high value transports like tobacco and alcohol. Drivers with a £10mil load would rather leave without any tracking system or alarm than be late home for dinner. The relevant legislation for this is technically a clause in tax rules, the insurance company is liable for tax on stolen or missing goods.

          They are writing a new set of rules that apply to a group of people who have traditionally wanted open fields of drugs. I suspect these rules are for that part of the industry, the word "delivery" didn't traditionally mean to consumers. Those rules come later...

          1. Eddy Ito

            Re: Safety?

            Now I'm confused. I thought we were talking to consumer deliveries like pizza not deliveries to distribution outlets. In any case alcohol and tobacco require age verification and I don't see a drone doing that although I suppose you could let it scan your ID card. Not that it ever stopped straw purchases of booze and cigs.

            I guess the pressing question is does an Uber/Lyft qualify as a commercial vehicle and what about the Domino's delivery guy who supplied most of the folks on campus back in the day?

    2. HamsterNet

      Re: Safety?

      The prices don't come down, but punters will be willing to pay more for guaranteed quality, the ability to browse the wares in a nice shop, pay by card, all whilst avoiding the classical nefarious and unreliable distributors.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Safety?

        I would still expect prices to come down....and then up again when the goverment use their new monopoloy to slap a protection racket tax on it.

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    A real buzzkill

    Literally.

  4. frank ly

    The reason

    They don't want the drones to get too high.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: The reason

      I think it's more of a problem when they come down.

  5. Bump in the night
    Windows

    Too bad

    It would have been the ideal payload to revenue ratio. Figuring one ounce getting about 2 or 3 hundred dollars.

  6. davenewman

    So what has the state of California got against rail freight? Locked containers on a train are safer than cars.

    1. Prst. V.Jeltz Silver badge

      well from what ive seen in the movies trains in america are mobile dos-houses ,knocking shops , free buses , a mobile buffet of whatever goods you want to take home ...

      1. Elmer Phud

        And always being held up by desperadoes or D.H. Lawrence.

  7. Aladdin Sane

    You don't allow drone delivery?

    It'd be a lot cooler if you did.

    1. Trigonoceps occipitalis

      Re: You don't allow drone delivery?

      Yes, its all those fans.

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