Pubdate: Thu, 23 Jun 2011
Source: Sacramento News & Review (CA)
Copyright: 2011 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://newsreview.com/sacto/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/540
Author: Ted Cox

ARE CANNABIS TAXES TOO HIGH?

As Sacramento Dispensaries Ready to Pay Up, Cities Across the Country
Hop on the Pot-Tax Train

Next month, medical cannabis dispensaries within Sacramento city
limits will begin paying a 4 percent tax on their gross receipts.

With the new tax, Sacramento joins the growing number of cities across
the country collecting money from medical-cannabis sales. Sacramento
city manager spokeswoman Amy Williams says the tax will bring in an
estimated $1 million in revenue anually. The money will go to the
city's general fund.

Voters last November approved Measure C, the Sacramento "Marijuana
Business Tax," by an overwhelming 71 percent.

Measure C was originally intended to allow the city council to tax
recreational marijuana sales anywhere from 5 to 10 percent should
Proposition 19 pass.

But Measure C also included a provision that allowed the city to tax
medical-cannabis dispensary gross receipts should Proposition 19 be
defeated.

In California, voters in Albany, Berkeley, La Puente, Long Beach,
Morro Bay, Rancho Cordova, Richmond, San Jose and Stockton all
approved various taxes on dispensaries or medical-cannabis sales. The
taxes ranged from 2.5 to 10 percent.

With the stuttering economy killing tax revenues across the country,
local governments have searched for ways to save vital services like
police and fire protection. As sales in the medical-cannabis industry
take off, city officials are seeing green.

Sonny Kumar, executive director of El Camino Wellness Center,
expressed differing feelings about the new tax.

"The reason the El Camino supports the tax is because we want to be
able to contribute to the community," Kumar said. "And we accept that
one of the ways to do that is to pay taxes."

But he says the 4 percent tax was higher than what he and other
dispensary owners were hoping.

Nearby Oakland has voted to increase its special tax on dispensaries,
now tacking on another $50 for every $1,000 of sales, which is in
addition to the city's sales tax. The city also planned to license
four industrial-sized pot farms and collect millions of dollars in
yearly fees. Thousands of investors lined up to grab one of the
permits; the city's plans fell apart after receiving a threatening
letter from federal prosecutors.

In San Jose, about a third of the estimated 115 dispensaries refuse to
pay the 7 percent tax mandated by Measure U. They argue that the
wording of Measure U defines those exchanges as sales, which is
illegal under federal and state law. At a special meeting in the city
council chamber, one owner said his attorney advised him that paying
the tax is a form of self-incrimination.

The city of San Jose collected nearly $300,000 from cannabis
dispensaries in the first month of the new tax.

In Colorado, where medical cannabis has been legal since 2000, the
state's Department of Revenue recently opened up its Medical Marijuana
Enforcement Division, which regulates dispensaries and collects state
sales tax.

In Arizona, legislators this year approved a law taxing medical
cannabis at the same 6.6 percent rate as other goods sold in the
state, plus an extra 2 to 3 percent for local taxes.

Medical-cannabis proponents are split on the matter of taxation. On
one hand, taxing medical cannabis is seen as big step toward
legitimizing marijuana.

But Kris Hermes of Americans for Safe Access, a medical-cannabis
advocacy group, said his organization opposes any taxes on the drug
"mostly because they place an unfair burden on patients."

Hermes argues that obtaining medical cannabis requires a
recommendation from a licensed physician, making it similar to other
prescription medications, which are not taxed.

Apparently, most Sacramento residents disagree.

"The city believes that this is a legitimate business to tax, which is
why we needed to update our business operation tax," said the city's
Williams. "So we went to the voters, and the voters of Sacramento
overwhelmingly agreed with us that this was legitimate business to
tax." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.