Oaksterdam University

Coordinates: 37°48′27.42″N 122°16′8.29″W / 37.8076167°N 122.2689694°W / 37.8076167; -122.2689694

Oaksterdam University
Founded Oakland, California, U.S. (2007 (2007))[1]
Headquarters Oakland, California
Key people
Richard Lee
Number of employees
23
Website OaksterdamUniversity.com

Oaksterdam University is recognized as America's first cannabis college. Located in Oakland, CA, the educational facility and "political institution" was founded in November 2007 by medical marijuana activist Richard Lee to offer quality training for the cannabis industry, with a mission to "legitimize the business and work to change the law to make cannabis legal."[1][2] Its main campus is located in the Oaksterdam area of Downtown Oakland, California. The university once had campuses in Los Angeles, Sebastopol, and Michigan. Currently the only brick & mortar campus resides in Oakland. As of recently, the school has taken their world-renowned program on the road, conducting 2 to 4 day seminars in order to meet the demand for education. Oaksterdam has conducted seminars in Atlantic City, Denver, Las Vegas, Washington D.C., and Orlando, FL, with many more cities on the agenda.

On April 2, 2012, Oaksterdam University was raided by the IRS, accompanied by the DEA and US Marshals Service.[3] Due to the city of Oakland's support of the university, the Oakland Police Department was not informed of the raid. Subsequently, on the same day, there was a shooting in a nearby school. As a result, the Oakland Police Dept. wasn't prepared to handle the numerous protestors (which included city council members ) and respond to the shooting in time. Oaksterdam University continued to put on classes less than 48 hours later. Incorrect reports often cite that the event was conducted by the DEA. Although the university was only one of many businesses under the corporate umbrella subject to the investigation, it was the Oaksterdam University name that was mentioned in the news due to its on air and international recognition. No charges have been filed. Richard Lee retired, dissolving his interest in his businesses, paving the way for a new generation of leadership.

History

Activist Richard Lee was inspired to create Oaksterdam University after visiting the Cannabis College in Amsterdam. Lee recalled:

"In November of 2006 I visited Amsterdam and saw the Cannabis College there. I've seen in California that there are not enough good people who want to work in the cannabis industry in a professional way, who want to pay taxes and obey regulations and help improve their community. I came back from Amsterdam and the idea just popped into the back of my head..."[1]

The university offered its first classes to 22 students in November 2007.[1] As of November 2009, the university has thus far graduated nearly 25,000 students from over 30 countries.[2]

A masked DEA agent during the April 2nd raid

Raid

On April 2, 2012, Oaksterdam University was raided by the IRS, accompanied by the DEA and US Marshals Service.[3] The raid additionally targeted Coffeeshop Blue Sky and the Oaksterdam museum, both affiliated with Oaksterdam University. A number of the university's assets were seized, including plants, records, computers and bank accounts.[4]

After the raid, Oaksterdam University officials stated that they would immediately reopen.[5] Founder Richard Lee said following the raid that he'll be giving up ownership of the organization, citing mounting debt and concern for incurring federal charges.[4][6][7] School officials continued to teach classes. The university has since graduated 25,000 students and continues to add more programs. .[6]

Curriculum and tuition

The university's curriculum reaches all aspects of the medical marijuana industry, from horticulture to legal issues, politics, history, civics, economics, extracts, topical applications, business management, dispensary management, delivery business, cooking with cannabis and much more.[8][9]

Tuition ranges between $35 and $45 per credit hour. The school has 2 main programs, the Classic Curriculum is a more comprehensive track, that teaches you everything about the industry and the horticulture track, which teaches you everything about growing cannabis. Each program can be taken in either 14 week semesters, offered in the summer, spring and fall or every other weekend in fast track, seminar format. Seminars are 2 to 4 days, conducted on weekends, which include lessons and lectures on politics, legal issues, horticulture, as well as business management. The 14 week classic semester schedule is offered for $1195 while the 14 week horticulture semester and hands on labs goes for $1495. Seminars are a few hundred dollars less. Oaksterdam University recently offered a CME and CNE course in Orlando, FL where physicians and nurses received continuing education credits. The activity was approved for AMA PRA Category 1 Credits.[1][10]

Notable faculty

Opposition

Opposition to the university has been shown by the Drug Enforcement Administration, which claims the school "sends the wrong message in the country's fight against drugs and promotes criminal activity."[10] Opinion has since changed. More doctors including U.S. surgeon general Vivek Murthy said that marijuana can be helpful, Retired DEA Administrative Law Judge Francis L. Young stated "The evidence in this record [9-6-88 ruling] clearly shows that marijuana has been accepted as capable of relieving the distress of great numbers of very ill people, and doing so with safety under medical supervision. It would be unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious for DEA to continue to stand between those sufferers and the benefits of this substance in light of the evidence in this record."

The ongoing legal risk to the university has also recently shifted in light of new federal guidance released by the Cole memo on August 29, 2013, which de-emphasized federal prosecutions of cannabis businesses in states which had legalized the drug for medical or other adult use.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.