Is Kratom Legal in Lakewood, Colorado?
Yes, Kratom is legal in Lakewood, Colorado.
You can use kratom wherever you’d like in the city and you can buy it at many local establishments. While kratom is available locally, it is often more affordable on sites like Enhanciosa – which offers free shipping that often arrives to Lakewood in just two days.
Lakewood’s economy is diverse while the largest employers are government. Companies based in Lakewood include Einstein Bros. Bagels, 1stBank, and The Integer Group.
As of 2013, 67.3% of the population over the age of 16 was in the labor force. 0.1% was in the armed forces, and 67.3% was in the civilian labor force with 61.1% employed and 6.2% unemployed. The occupational composition of the employed civilian labor force was: 38.6% in management, business, science, and arts; 25.9% in sales and office occupations; 16.9% in service occupations; 9.9% in production, transportation, and material moving; 8.7% in natural resources, construction, and maintenance. The three industries employing the largest percentages of the working civilian labor force were: educational services, health care, and social assistance (18.4%); professional, scientific, and management, and administrative and waste management services (13.8%); retail trade (11.9%).
The cost of living in Lakewood is above average; compared to a U.S. average of 100, the cost of living index for the community is 107.4. As of 2013, the median home value in the city was $238,500, the median selected monthly owner cost was $1,546 for housing units with a mortgage and $442 for those without, and the median gross rent was $940.
Top employers
According to the City’s 2017 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the top employers in the city are:
Employer # of Employees
1 Denver Federal Center 8,000
2 Jefferson County Public Schools 4,010
3 Terumo BCT 2,320
4 St. Anthony Hospital 2,200
5 First Bank 1,261
6 State of Colorado 1,084
7 HomeAdvisor 1,070
8 City of Lakewood 900
9 The Integer Group 435
10 Colorado Christian University 431
Government
The Lakewood Civic Center (2009)
Lakewood maintains a council/manager form of government. Citizens elect a City Council consisting of the mayor, who is elected at-large, and 10 City Council members, two from each of the city’s five geographical wards. The mayor and the council members assert the policies for the operation of the city government.
As of 2018, the Mayor is Adam Paul. The Council members representing the first ward are Ramey Johnson and Charley Able, Jacob LaBure and Sharon Vincent represent the second ward, Pete Roybal and Micheal Bieda represent the third ward, David Skilling and Barb Franks represent the fourth ward, and the fifth ward is represented by Karen Harrison and Dana Gutwein.
The City of Lakewood falls into Colorado House District 26 and House District 23. Lakewood is represented in the state House by Rep. Chris Kennedy and Rep. Brittany Pettersen.
Education
Lakewood also houses Lakewood High School, Green Mountain High School, Bear Creek High School, Brady Exploration High School, Alameda International High School, and International Baccalaureate schools in Jefferson County. Lakewood is also home to Colorado Christian University and Colorado School of Trades. I The town is serviced by the Jefferson County Public Library.
Points of interest
Landmarks and historical points of interest include:
The old Villa Italia Mall has been replaced by Belmar, a new town center with a mix of retail, residential, cultural, and public space. The Laboratory of Art and Ideas at Belmar was located in Belmar until May 2009, and that location is now occupied by the Colorado Campus of The Ohio Center for Broadcasting, a private trade school for the radio and television industry. Belmar has a designated Arts District that houses a number of artist studios and several gallery spaces, a nonprofit fine art photography school called Working with Artists.
Casa Bonita, a local Mexican restaurant in Lakewood, where a South Park episode took place.
Lakewood Cultural Center features a theater, gallery space, and art classrooms.
Lakewood Heritage Center is a museum with several historic buildings and is located near Kountze Lake, which formerly housed the Belmar Mansion.
Reed Art & Imaging at 8000 West Colfax Avenue is housed in what was originally the Lakewood movie theater dating from the early 1950s.
William Fredrick Hayden Park in the foothills of Green Mountain; the Colorado National Guard used the north side for artillery practice. The Department of Defense Military Munitions Response Program has financed investigations to identify unexploded ordnance there since 2012.
Lakewood has a shopping mall called Colorado Mills which is near I-70 and West Colfax Avenue.
Notable people
Main article: List of people from Lakewood, Colorado
Notable individuals who were born in or have lived in Lakewood include geospatial software pioneer Sol Katz, guitarist Chris Broderick, professional wrestler Steve “Dr. Death” Williams, and Colorado heiress and philanthropist May Bonfils Stanton, portions of whose 750-acre (300 ha) estate, Belmar, were used in the creation of the Belmar residential neighborhood and the Lakewood downtown district.
The urban/suburban development of the community known as Lakewood was begun in 1889 by Charles Welch and W.A.H. Loveland, who platted a 13-block area along Colfax Avenue west of Denver in eastern Jefferson County. Loveland, the former president of the Colorado Central Railroad, retired to the new community of Lakewood after many years of living in Golden.
Until 1969, the area known as Lakewood had no municipal government, relying instead on several water districts, several fire districts, and the government of Jefferson County. Lakewood was a community with policing provided by the Jefferson County Sheriff, several volunteer staffed fire districts, and some neighborhoods without street lights and sidewalks. However, the community had already existed for about 80 years.
The City of Lakewood was incorporated in 1969 as Jefferson City. Soon after, an election was held and the city’s name was changed to Lakewood. This was due to an overwhelming dislike of “Jefferson City” and the perceived notion it would be confused with existing communities in Colorado and Missouri. At the time of incorporation the city population was already over 90,000.
Lakewood never had a traditional downtown area. West Colfax Avenue served the metropolitan area as U.S. Route 40 and the main route joining Denver with the Rocky Mountains. As such, Colfax from Harlan west to Kipling and beyond had mostly commercial establishment. In addition to the Jewish Consumptive Relief Society (JCRS) for TB patients, the small frame Methodist Church, and telephone exchange, there emerged by the 1950s grocery and drug stores, gas stations, restaurants & taverns, several motels, branch banks, a movie theater, roller rink, bowling alley, and used car lots. Several multi-business “shopping centers” developed followed by much larger centers at JCRS and Westland. The Villa Italia Mall on West Alameda Avenue, twenty blocks south of Colfax, reflected the southward expansion of Lakewood settlement and housed a larger concentration of retail space. As the mall went into decline, the Lakewood City Council developed a plan to demolish the Villa Italia Mall and replace it with a new development called Belmar.
In 2011, Lakewood was named an All-America City for the first time.
This post is created for individuals that might be traveling to Lakewood, and not certain of the legal status of kratom (mitragyna speciosa) within it’s city limits. As mentioned before, the legal status of kratom in Colorado is well documented here. It’s important to verify that kratom is, in fact, legal when you are traveling. Lest you wind up somewhere like Alabama, and wind up on the wrong side of the law. To avoid a situation like that, we keep up to date with the ongoing legal changes from local and regional to state, national as well as international legislation regarding the plant, kratom, and all it’s by products.
Lakewood is located at 39°42′17″N 105°04′53″W at an elevation of 5,518 feet (1,682 m). Located at the junction of U.S. Route 6 and Colorado State Highway 121 in central Colorado, the city lies immediately west of Denver and 62 miles (100 km) north-northwest of Colorado Springs.
Lakewood lies in the Colorado Piedmont on the western edge of the Great Plains just east of the Front Range of the Southern Rocky Mountains. Green Mountain, a mesa 6,854 feet (2,089 m) tall, is located in the far west-central part of the city.
The city is located in the watershed of the South Platte River, and several small tributaries of the river flow generally east through it. From north to south, these include Lakewood Gulch, Weir Gulch, Sanderson Gulch, and Bear Creek. Two tributaries of Lakewood Gulch, Dry Gulch and McIntyre Gulch, flow east through the northern part of the city. Turkey Creek, a tributary of Bear Creek, flows northeast through the far southwestern part of the city. In addition, Lena Gulch, a tributary of Clear Creek to the north, flows east then north through the extreme northwestern part of the city.
There are several small lakes and reservoirs in Lakewood. The Soda Lakes lie in the extreme southwestern part of the city. East of them lies Bear Creek Lake, a reservoir fed by Bear Creek and Turkey Creek. Clustered near each other in central Lakewood are Main Reservoir, East Reservoir, Smith Reservoir, Kendrick Lake, and Cottonwood Lake. Northeast of them lies Kountze Lake. In the northwestern part of the city, Lena Gulch both feeds and drains Maple Grove Reservoir. In the extreme southern part of the city lies Bowles Reservoir No. 1 and, just outside the city limits to the reservoir’s northeast, Marston Lake.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 44.06 square miles (114.1 km2) of which 42.88 square miles (111.1 km2) is land and 1.18 square miles (3.1 km2) (2.7%) is water.
As a suburb of Denver, Lakewood is part of both the greater Denver metropolitan area and the Front Range Urban Corridor. It borders other communities on all sides including: Wheat Ridge to the north, Edgewater to the northeast, Denver to the east and southeast, Dakota Ridge to the south, Morrison to the southwest, and Golden, West Pleasant View, East Pleasant View, and Applewood to the northwest.
It doesn’t matter what suburb or neighborhood that you are from – if you live in the Lakewood area, then it is legal to buy, possess and sell kratom without any fear of repercussion. We recommend buying from kratom in a place that is well lit, and well trafficked so as to not put oneself in a position that might be compromising. There are a variety of well established head shop and smoke shops in the Lakewood area that will be able to facilitate that need. Additionally, there are several online e-commerce kratom vendors based in Lakewood that can also accommodate one, perhaps more conveniently so as they deliver to you.