Pubdate: Mon, 21 Jun 2010
Source: Pueblo Chieftain (CO)
Copyright: 2010 The Pueblo Chieftain
Contact:  http://www.chieftain.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1613
Author: Peter Roper

VOTERS MAY GET SAY ON POT TAX

Pueblo voters may get to voice their opinions on  medical marijuana in
November, including whether to  levy a 4.3 percent sales tax on the
drug and its  related paraphernalia.

That would be on top of the current city sales tax of  3.5 percent.
And on top of the state's 2.9 percent  sales tax. And Pueblo County's
1 percent tax. Those  taxes already total 7.4 percent if you're adding
them  up.

"So we're talking about a total sales tax of nearly 12  percent on
medical marijuana?" asked Tom Sexton, the  owner of MediMar
Ministries, a medical marijuana center  that is trying to get licensed
in Pueblo. "It seems the  city's attitude is to make it as difficult
as possible  for people who have a legal right to use medical
marijuana to obtain any. And the only thing that will  accomplish is
keep the business underground."

In two weeks, City Council will consider a proposed  ballot measure
that would impose the 4.3 percent tax on  medical pot and other
products sold with it. That rate  of tax was picked by city staff
because the city  already charges a 4.3 percent surtax on every hotel
and  motel room in the city -- called a lodging tax.

"No one knows what it would actually cost the city to  license and
regulate medical marijuana centers, so we  are proposing a similar
amount to the lodging tax as a  starting point," City Attorney Tom
Florczak said last  week.

Council hasn't really discussed the sales-tax issue  yet, although
there is broad sentiment among the seven  members that if the city is
going to license and  regulate those businesses, the medical pot
centers  should pay additional sales tax. Part of the reason is  that
council expects the businesses to require more  attention from police.

Council President Larry Atencio, who favors licensing  and regulating
the businesses said all indications are  the marijuana centers have
plenty of patients or  customers.

"Voters have said people have a right to use medical  marijuana for
certain health conditions," Atencio said.  "That's fine, but I'm also
willing to tax the heck out  of them. I'm all in favor of sin taxes,
so a 4.3  percent tax sounds fine to me."

Councilwoman Judy Weaver doesn't want any medical  marijuana centers
in Pueblo. She wants council to  support a resolution that would put
that fundamental  question on the November ballot. Thus far, a
majority  of council appears to be favoring licensing, regulating  and
taxing the medical pot industry instead.

But if centers are established in the city, Weaver  wants to tax them,
too.

"I'd hope we'd do the research on what other cities are  charging and
what their experience is," she said,  noting that voters in the
Western Slope town of Fruita  approved a 5 percent tax on medical pot
sales.

Sexton has been trying to get formal city approval to  operate his
center since the summer of 2009. He  obtained a sales tax license and
then council passed an  emergency moratorium last autumn on licensing
marijuana  centers. That ban has been extended twice and now runs
through July 27 of this year. And the Legislature just  finished
approving a new state law that will not start  providing state
licenses until July 2011.

Sexton said that state and local governments are  setting up hurdles
for medical marijuana providers  faster than operators can address
them.

"What I'm hearing is that the state is going to be  charging something
like $30,000 for a state license,"  Sexton said with some resignation.
"And now the city  wants to tack on more sales tax. They must want to
force all medical marijuana providers to operate  underground. What
about the people who need this for  their medical conditions? Why are
they being punished  with these higher taxes?"

Council intends to have a public hearing on the  proposed ballot
question at its next regular meeting on  June 28. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D