Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jul 2010 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2010 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Scott Mobley REDDING COUNCIL REJECTS MARIJUANA TAX Redding will not join a small but growing group of California cities looking to shore up faltering budgets by taxing marijuana. A City Council majority this evening strongly rejected the idea of taxing Redding's 19 medicinal cannabis clubs. Council members seemed more willing to consider a tax on recreational marijuana, should voters on Nov. 2 approve Prop. 19. That ballot measure would allow possession of up to an ounce of cannabis for any purpose. But with Prop. 19's passage far from certain, council members said it's too soon to consider a tax -- or to discuss whether the city would even allow non-medical marijuana retailers to operate. Council members did not take a formal vote on whether or not to go forward with a marijuana tax. The council had planned to discuss a possible tax on cannabis clubs in August, when it's due to review the city's regulations on the nonprofit collectives. But Vice Mayor Missy McArthur wanted to bring the tax idea up in time to put a companion measure on the November ballot, as Sacramento, Long Beach, Berkeley and other cities have done. Money from the tax would go to the police department, she said. "I am not normally a tax person, but if it's something negative for your health we all pay for it," McArthur said. That statement drew sharp rebukes from several medicinal cannabis patients and growers who spoke. Many criticized the idea of taxing medicinal cannabis when other medications are not taxed. "Other pharmaceuticals make our noses bleed and our rectums bleed and cause loss of hearing," said James Eagle." I don't see the council taxing pharmacies because they are dispensing something that abuses bodies." Jess Brewer, who owns the Trusted Friends collective, said his business already pays state sales tax on its product even though it's a nonprofit. Still, he said, he'd favor a tax if it directly benefitted the community. But the city should relent on some of its regulations in exchange, he said. Council members Dick Dickerson and Mary Stegall strongly opposed the idea of taxing medical marijuana. "There are people who abuse it (medical marijuana) and people who don't, and that is the people (this tax) would impact," Dickerson said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake