Cannabis Action Network

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Formation1989 (1989)
Founders
  • Debby Goldsberry
  • Doug McVay
  • Rick Pfrommer
  • Monica Pratt
TypeNonprofit organization
PurposeCannabis education; cannabis policy reform
Cannabis Action Network
Formation1989 (1989)
Founders
  • Debby Goldsberry
  • Doug McVay
  • Rick Pfrommer
  • Monica Pratt
TypeNonprofit organization
PurposeCannabis education; cannabis policy reform
Headquarters1605 Ashby Avenue, Berkeley, U.S. (formerly)
Region served
United States

The Cannabis Action Network (CAN) is a former U.S. nonprofit cannabis policy reform organization, active between 1989 and 2008. The organization strove to "encourage sensible cannabis use" and advocated for "safe access for responsible adults and patients"[1] through the "challenge to the laws of the United States and the individual states prohibiting the possession and distribution of marijuana".[2]

Constituted as a loose informal network of local groups, the CAN was involved in advocacy, capacity-building, and education, the organization of political and cultural rallies and conferences, and legal assistance.

Based on an informal group of friends active since 1986, the Cannabis Action Network (CAN) was founded as a state nonprofit corporation in Lexington, Kentucky in 1989 by Doug McVay, Monica Pratt, Rick Pfrommer, Kevin Aplin, and Debby Goldsberry.[3]

During its first years, the group held information booths in various cultural events in Kentucky and Louisiana, and increasingly in California.[4] In 1992, CAN moved its headquarters to Berkeley.[1]

CAN organized its first rally one year later at People's Park, with the participation of Dennis Peron. On 20 April 1995, CAN organized its first 4/20 event in San Francisco, an event which would become a key activity for the group in the following decades.[5]

In the late 1990s, CAN members Jim McClelland, Don Duncan, and Goldsberry used the Berkeley Patients Group dispensary "as a platform for activism, mobilizing patients, and working to insure a favorable political climate for dispensaries in Berkeley."[6]

By the mid-1990s, under the impulsion of its U.S. hemp tour, numerous CAN chapters appeared across the country. One of these, the Florida CAN, was constituted in 1998 and has remained active after the nationwide Cannabis Action Network suspended its activities in 2008.[7]

Even after the formal suspension of its activities, CAN remained an important part of cannabis activism in the United States, as its members got involved in various other advocacy projects. CAN has been credited for "[fulfilling] an important niche in re-establishing a politically viable cannabis law reform movement in America."[8]

Activities

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