URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v16/n237/a06.html
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Votes: 0
Pubdate: Tue, 12 Apr 2016
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2016 The Seattle Times Company
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Website: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Kip Hill, The Spokesman-Review
POT SALES TOP WINE, BREAD, MILK IN SPOKANE COUNTY
Hit $5 Million in March
But Beer Sales Still Come Out on Top
Legal marijuana sales in Spokane County topped retail sales of wine
and kitchen staples such as bread and milk last year.
That's according to sales numbers from the Washington Liquor and
Cannabis Board and a survey of household expenses by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Not all marijuana sold in Spokane County is consumed by county
residents. State law allows the 17 state-licensed pot shops in the
area to sell to anyone older than 21, regardless of where they live.
But with monthly sales topping $5 million for the first time in
March, retailers in the county are selling marijuana at an
ever-quickening pace - on track to top receipts at area bookstores,
museums and live-music venues, according to figures released by the
Washington Department of Revenue.
Spokane County marijuana retailers reported a little more than $43
million in sales last year, according to the state Liquor and
Cannabis Board. That's an average $225.64 per household.
By comparison, retail beer sales were $232.70 per Spokane County
household last year, according to the Consumer Expenditure Survey
administered by the Census Bureau. The average household spent
$154.85 on wine, $155.37 on milk and $109.71 on bread in 2015.
The calculated marijuana average ignores the "80/20 rule" - 20
percent of people are responsible for 80 percent of an effect, said
Brian Smith, Liquor and Cannabis Board spokesman. An independent
study by the Rand Corp. in 2013 found the rule applied to
Washington's nascent marijuana market - that roughly one-fifth of the
population accounted for the vast majority of marijuana sales.
The Liquor and Cannabis Board tracks marijuana sales of $2.8 million
a day statewide, Smith said. "That seems pretty robust," he said.
Grant Forsyth, chief economist at Avista and an adviser on industry
trends to local governments, said it's difficult with available data
to compare spending on marijuana with other household items. The
federal government administers the Consumer Expenses Survey and also
classifies marijuana as a controlled substance, hindering efforts to
study the purchase of pot with the same rigor as other household expenditures.
"We don't have a lot of consumption data, so it's hard to see how the
market is going to evolve," Forsyth said.
Smith said comparing total marijuana revenues to receipts reported by
the Department of Revenue might provide a clearer comparison of
marijuana's economic effect on the region.
For the third quarter of 2015 - July through September - marijuana
sales in Spokane County reached $12.4 million. That's slightly less
than bookstore revenue of $12.6 million and is below the $15.8
million from arts, entertainment and recreation, including live-music
venues and museums, during that period - the most recent for which
the comparative data are available.
Marijuana sales rose further in the county in the first quarter of
2016 to $14.5 million. That includes a slight decline in sales in
January over December. Total revenues are likely to continue to
increase, as medical-marijuana dispensaries will come under Liquor
and Cannabis Board control in July.
Because state laws were rewritten last year to enable tax-revenue
sharing with local governments based on sales, more revenue means
more money for cities and counties.
Spokane County can expect to receive $442,917 from the state in
excise taxes on marijuana this year, according to the most recent
Liquor and Cannabis Board estimates. The city of Spokane will be
allotted $123,011; Spokane Valley, with its moratorium on new
businesses, will be capped at $75,824.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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