URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v13/n489/a02.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Thu, 03 Oct 2013
Source: Durango Herald, The (CO)
Copyright: 2013 The Durango Herald
Contact: http://durangoherald.com/write_the_editor/
Website: http://durangoherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/866
Author: Joe Hanel
CONTRIBUTORS NOT HIGH ON POT TAX
Difference Is No National Money Like 2012
DENVER - Marijuana businesses pledged to lawmakers this year that
they would be there to support a tax initiative in order to fund
enough inspectors and regulators to keep the pot industry clean.
But until Wednesday night, the industry had contributed just $100 to
the Proposition AA campaign. That compares with the $1.8 million
raised in 2012 to legalize marijuana in Colorado.
The fundraising will change dramatically thanks to a $1,000-a-head
event headlined by Gov. John Hickenlooper on Wednesday evening. At
least 40 people - including many marijuana trade group lobbyists -
appeared to be in attendance.
Still, with two weeks until ballots go out in the mail and just more
than a month to Election Day, the campaign for and against the pot
tax has been a low-dollar affair compared with last year's campaign
to legalize pot.
"The big difference is national money versus local money," said Rick
Ridder, head of the pro-Prop AA campaign.
The Marijuana Policy Project and other out-of-state groups supplied
more than $1 million to the legalization campaign. They're sitting
out of the Prop AA race.
The measure seeks a 10 percent retail sales tax which the
Legislature can raise to 15 percent along with a 15 percent
wholesale excise tax on recreational marijuana. Most or all of the
excise tax would go to school construction, while the sales tax would
be used to fund the state's marijuana enforcement division.
"We're feeling generally very positive. We get good feedback on the
streets," Ridder said.
But at Wednesday's fundraiser, Hickenlooper exhorted the crowd to do
more and raise more money.
"I am always, in any election, nervous as a cat," Hickenlooper said.
Neither side has paid for an opinion poll.
Opponents, too, have next to no money. The anti-Prop AA campaign had
raised just $1,846 as of Monday.
But opponents are making up for it through "street theater" namely,
campaign events that include passing out free joints as police officers watch.
Rob Corry, a leader of the anti-tax campaign, and several dozen pot
activists gathered Wednesday outside Hickenlooper's fundraiser at the
Denver Beer Co. After a tense but respectful discussion with police
officers about what the state's marijuana laws do and don't allow,
Corry turned to the crowd.
"All right! Should we start handing out some free marijuana? That's
what we're here for," Corry said.
High taxes will force pot sales back into the black market, Corry said.
"It would be a horrible setback for what the voters wanted, which is
a functioning market in marijuana. This would make it dysfunctional," he said.
But proponents say that responsible pot businesses need the tax to
make sure the industry is well-regulated.
"I think it's safe to say they're an extreme minority," said Brian
Vicente, a leader of the pro-Prop AA campaign. "They're sort of the
tea party of this movement. They have an extreme view that in some
ways risks bringing down the entire system."
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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