URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v13/n186/a06.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Thu, 02 May 2013
Source: Republican & Herald (PA)
Copyright: 2013 Creators Syndicate
Contact:
Website: http://republicanherald.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1047
Author: Froma Harrop, Creators Syndicate
LEGAL POT MEANS MORE MONEY FOR STATES
The good things that should happen after marijuana is legalized are
happening in Colorado. In November, voters in Colorado - and
Washington state - legalized pot for recreational use. ( Many states
allow medical use of marijuana. ) What are the good things? For
starters, money, money, money for the state coffers. As of last week,
lawmakers in Denver were still tussling over how heavily to tax
marijuana sales. A leading plan centers on excise and sales taxes
totaling 30 percent. The tax can't go so high that it encourages a
black market.
The first $40 million collected from the excise tax would go to
schools. And revenues from a 15 percent sales tax on pot plus the 2.9
percent ordinary state sales tax would be sent to local governments
and cover the cost of enforcing the new marijuana regulations.
Meanwhile, the state would save money it now spends on arresting,
prosecuting and jailing citizens caught smoking the stuff. As one
small example, Washington state no longer trains new police dogs to
sniff out marijuana.
Some lawmakers say they want "safeguards" in place to ensure that
marijuana doesn't end up in the hands of kids, criminals and cartels
- - like it's not happening already.
Speaking of which, turning pot producers and vendors into legitimate
businesses is perhaps the most welcome outcome of marijuana legalization.
As Elliott Klug, head of Pink House Blooms, a $3-million-a-year
marijuana business in Denver, told The Wall Street Journal: "We were
the bad guys. Now we are still the bad guys, but we pay taxes."
What he means is that while the new marijuana operations can operate
in the open, they are not being treated as leniently as other farming
ventures. The state is regulating them with a heavy hand, to the
point of doing background checks on the growers' tattoos.
As more people pile into marijuana merchandizing, prices fall. ( Pot
prices in Denver are already down a third from their levels in 2011. )
Taking the big money out of a formerly illegal but popular product
dismantles the criminal cartels' business model. That means less
violence on the streets, less smuggling at the Mexican border. It
means ordinary citizens can hike in national forests without fear of
tripping upon some gang-run marijuana operation.
Unfortunately, while Colorado and Washington state are doing their
bit to end the insanity, the federal government has not. Under
federal law, marijuana remains an illegal substance.
This means that legitimate pot growers can't borrow money. ( Banks
will not lend to businesses the feds do not consider legal. ) If a
grower develops an especially high-quality plant, the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office will not register it.
Marijuana has been a $1.3 billion-a-year business in this country, a
business largely closed to the law-abiding. And there's a collateral
lost opportunity caused by our crazy prohibition on hemp farming.
Hemp is an industrial product with many uses. Although it lacks the
psychoactive properties of marijuana, hemp is a cousin of marijuana
bearing some family resemblance. That's the only reason American
farmers are banned from growing it.
The U.S. Department of Justice is currently scratching its head over
what to do about Colorado and Washington state. Eventually, the feds
will come around, but how much money must be wasted on prosecution
and how much tax revenues lost before that happens?
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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