Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jul 2010 Source: Long Beach Press-Telegram (CA) Copyright: 2010 Los Angeles Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.presstelegram.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/244 TAXING MARIJUANA Long Beach City Council members voted 8 to 1 this week to consider taxing medical marijuana sold in legal outlets. But city officials haven't figured out how much revenue the tax would bring in. The tax would be in addition to a $14,742 permit fee charged to outlet owners. Currently Long Beach has about 85 outlets. That number would be reduced to 30 outlets that are expected to survive a lottery. The proposed tax, which would be on an outlet's gross receipts, surely would be passed on to consumers, who can buy marijuana for medicinal purposes only. The proposal is similar to one in Oakland, which assesses a 1.8 percent levy that is estimated to bring in about $1 million from four dispensaries this year, according to the LA Times. The Long Beach tax, if approved, would be 5 percent, plus an undetermined footage fee for cultivation sites, a city official said Wednesday. Medication is not taxed, while alcohol in moderation, which some studies claim helps ward off heart and other diseases, is taxed, along with cigarettes, which some people claim calms nerves. We Americans love to tax our sins, but medical marijuana doesn't always fall into that category. Users say it helps them deal with pain and the nausea caused by cancer treatments. Still, it's no secret that getting a doctor's recommendation for whatever ails you - real or unreal - is done easily and often. A proposition that would legalize recreational marijuana for people over 21 is on the November ballot. Sales of recreational marijuana would bring in far more revenue than medical marijuana, as outlets increase their supply of the weed. (Marijuana is California's biggest cash crop.) It wouldn't be a sin to tax recreational users, just as consumers pay a variety of taxes on alcohol and cigarettes. The 9.75 percent sales tax on recreational marijuana would help make a dent in Long Beach's $18.5 million deficit and the state's $19 billion deficit. It's estimated that if marijuana grown in California were taxed, the state could reap billions of dollars. Under Long Beach's proposal, sales of recreational marijuana, if approved by voters in November, would result in a 10 percent tax. If Proposition 19 were passed, the distinction between medical and recreational marijuana would be blurred, and presumably as outlets compete with each other, prices for medicinal users would fall anyway. If Prop. 19 passes, the sin tax makes good sense. The Long Beach tax proposal will be aired at a public hearing Aug. 3. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake