Pubdate: Fri, 29 Apr 2016
Source: Truro Daily News (CN NS)
Copyright: 2016 The Daily News
Contact:  http://www.trurodaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1159
Author: Russell Wangersky
Page: 6

SMOKE 'EM - AND TAX 'EM - IF YOU'VE GOT 'EM

In Newfoundland and Labrador, the latest budget brought huge debt, a 
two per cent increase in the HST and shutdowns of everything from 
seniors' dental programs to more than half the province's public libraries.

In Prince Edward Island, the HST's up one per cent, while Nova Scotia 
has gone through public sector wages to eke out the barest slender 
slip of a balanced budget. New Brunswick? It also raised HST by two 
points to 15 per cent and is talking about public sector job cuts.

All in all, governments seem to be fixated on cutting their way to 
success, a model businesses already know is more about mitigating and 
delaying decline than it is about making a company stronger.

Nowhere in the Atlantic region does anyone seem to have anything more 
than the usual chant of "we need to diversify" without ever having 
seen or heard of a diversification model that actually worked. And 
all it really shows is that no one is willing to look ahead to much 
more than the next provincial election. Here's a date: April 2017. 
That's when the federal government has announced it will introduce 
legislation to legalize recreational marijuana, something that's 
already been done in states like Colorado and Washington.

You could, of course, simply operate like those states: regulate 
private sellers and reap tax on sales. Or you could do much more.

Right now, provincial governments should be moving full speed

To reap the best financial return, provincial governments should be 
involved from the seed on up, right to licenced sales. They should 
plan to grow, process, ship, package and sell cannabis - and in the 
process, maintain the same types of regulatory oversight used for 
cigarettes and alcohol. Newfoundland's liquor corporation is expected 
to bring in $183 million this year, merely on the basis of a tax levy 
on other people's products; cigarette taxes in Nova Scotia are 
expected to bring in $227 million - once again, by merely adding a 
tax to someone else's profitable product.

Plan it, be vertically integrated and have it firmly under provincial 
control, both to have the revenues benefit people in the Atlantic 
region and to have the same kind of sales oversight that the 
provinces already have over alcohol and tobacco. You can of course, 
simply say, "Governments shouldn't be in a business like that."

Sure. And that's why our governments aren't in the lottery business, 
aren't benefiting from addictive VLTs, and aren't depending on 
smokers and drinkers for huge sums of revenue. We've already 
established what we are; we're only quibbling over the unseemly 
nature of particular individual vices.

Legal or not legal, marijuana sales are already happening, and 
millions upon millions of dollars are being spent. Having the 
government move into this particular business also has the huge 
benefit of not cutting off established, legal businesses at the knees.

I've said myself that there are still concerns to be dealt with about 
legalizing weed, right down to establishing a simple test to see if 
drivers are impaired by drugs. But once it's legal, it's a revenue 
opportunity that all four Atlantic governments should be well into seizing.

If it's going to happen anyway, let's all get ahead of the weed curve.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom