Cannitrol – Cannabis Control Agent

Marijuana news from around the world

Why cannabis sponsors the cleanup of more Colorado highway miles than any other industry

Cannabis companies are the leading sponsors of Colorado highways, accounting for cleanup on two-thirds of the roads maintained by Clean Colorado — a program the industry has leveraged as a loophole in the state’s strict limits on marijuana advertising.

Currently, 51 cannabis dispensaries, cultivators, manufacturers and edible producers sponsor roadways throughout the state, according to data from the Adopt a Highway Maintenance Corporation.

Though they represent less than half of all organizations that participate in the Clean Colorado program, those cannabis firms’ reach spans about 198 miles, or 66% of the roads actively sponsored.

The business category with the next highest level of participation is general services — ad agencies, pest control, plumbing, real estate — which represents 13% of miles sponsored. Other sponsoring industries include retail (8%), restaurants (4%), and casinos and hotels (3%).

Drivers in the Denver area likely have noticed. Clean Colorado signs with the names and logos of local dispensaries and grows dot most major highways here, and often are strategically placed near exits where passersby can find the businesses. That’s no accident.

Colorado’s rules governing how and where cannabis companies can advertise are famously strict. In an effort to prevent marketing messages from reaching minors, state regulators prohibit canna-businesses from advertising on TV, radio and in print unless they can prove the audience is predominantly 21 and older.

Digital and social media platforms are even more restrictive — and not just in Colorado, which bans cannabis-related pop-up ads. Post something that violates often-ambiguous advertising protocols, and Facebook and Instagram will shut down a company’s account.

That’s one reason Sponsor a Highway, a cousin to the better-known Adopt a Highway program, is a magnet for marijuana. The Colorado Department of Transportation says the signs are not intended to be an advertising medium, but they have become a clever workaround for an industry with few other consumer-facing options.

“The rules governing highways signs are in a different section than rules governing the cannabis industry,” said Nico Pento, government affairs director for Boulder-based Terrapin Care Station, which operates six dispensaries in the metro area. “The highway signs were a loophole that was overlooked.”

Outsourcing highway cleanup

The first Adopt a Highway sign was erected in east Texas in the 1980s after a grassroots effort to rally volunteers to clean litter along roadways. As the need for litter-removal increased, the program expanded to offer businesses an opportunity to pay for bigger and more frequent cleanups, said Patricia Nelson, president of Adopt a Highway Maintenance Corporation, which manages sponsorships in 22 states, including Colorado.

Though they are close in name, Colorado’s Adopt a Highway and Sponsor a Highway programs are slightly different. The first enlists groups of volunteers to pick up litter twice a year, Nelson said. As of November, 1,080 volunteer groups had adopted upward of 1,700 miles in the state, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation.

Organizations in the Sponsor a Highway program, by contrast, pay a fee that covers the cost of a cleanup crew in exchange for a sign with their name and logo on the side of the road. Prices vary by roadway and how frequently they are used. The busier the highway, the more it needs to be cleaned — and the more people are potentially exposed to a brand.

The state doesn’t make a profit from or spend money on the Sponsor a Highway program, but rather saves money by outsourcing cleanup services on the sponsored stretches of roadway.

Officials with Adopt a Highway Maintenance Corporation declined to say how much money they take in each year through Colorado highway sponsorships.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

A Clean Colorado highway sign sponsored by The Green Solution, a marijuana dispensary business, is seen along eastbound Sixth Avenue at Simms Street, on Feb. 6, 2020.

Because Clean Colorado signs don’t look like traditional advertisements, they might be one of the most effective ways to reach drivers, said Harsha Gangadharbatla, associate professor of advertising, public relations and media design at University of Colorado Boulder.

“They’re a different kind of signage on the side of the road, they tend to stick out a little bit more than billboards, so consumers do pay a little bit more attention to anything that’s novel or different from the formats they’re used to,” Gangadharbatla said.

The message they send is also different from the average sales pitch.

“It presents marijuana stores in a positive light,” Gangadharbatla said. “The money made from marijuana is put to something good, like keeping up roads and transportation that everyone uses.”

“It’s pretty incredible”

Terrapin Care Station sponsored its first highway in 2017, and communications director Peter Marcus isn’t shy about why.

“From a marketing standpoint, it was really only one of the avenues available,” Marcus said. Terrapin Care Station sponsors six miles on Interstate 70, Interstate 25 and U.S. 36; each mile costs $400 to $455 per month.

LivWell Enlightened Health, which operates 17 dispensaries in Colorado and Oregon, is one of the top sponsors of Colorado roads, paying for cleanup on 19 miles. Mike Lord, the company’s director of business development, said the program spreads brand awareness throughout the state while simultaneously making a positive impact.

“Obviously, you’ve noticed how many of those signs are sponsored by cannabis businesses, so it’s pretty incredible how many stretches of mile of highway are being cleaned right now,” Lord said.