Pubdate: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 Source: Cortez Journal, The (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Cortez Journal Contact: http://www.cortezjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3602 Author: Joe Hanel MEDICAL MARIJUANA INDUSTRY BUDS DENVER - Forget about yuppie coffee shops. Colorado's new growth industry is marijuana, with a workforce of at least 1,800 people. Hundreds of medical marijuana shops have opened their doors since 2009, yet it has been difficult to figure out how lucrative the business truly is. Advocates frequently tout the economic boost from the medical marijuana industry, but no study exists to show how much money legal marijuana brings into the state economy. "If I had the time, I'd do that study myself," said Rob Corry, a lawyer who specializes in marijuana law. Until this month, no one even knew how many medical marijuana dispensaries existed in Colorado. But a new state law required marijuana businesses to apply for state licenses. As of the second week of August, 809 dispensaries had applied for licenses, said Matt Cook, director of the Colorado Department of Revenue's new marijuana enforcement program. An additional 309 businesses had applied for an "infused product" license to allow them to make brownies or other products that contain marijuana. And 1,219 applications for marijuana-cultivation operations have arrived at the department of revenue, Cook said. The department has to do 1,861 background checks for people involved with the medical marijuana industry, Cook added. Before the license law took effect, medical marijuana advocates like Brian Vicente of Sensible Colorado estimated the number of shops to be around 500. But Attorney General John Suthers said the Drug Enforcement Administration told him there might be 1,000 or more dispensaries. The department has been trying to collect the 2.9 percent state sales tax all along, said spokesman Mark Couch. "There's a fair degree of compliance work that still needs to be done," he said. Between July 2009 and February 2010, the state collected $631,000 in taxes from dispensaries. That money includes all products, like T-shirts and hemp shoes, and not just marijuana. But it works out to more than $21 million in sales during those eight months, even with half the known dispensaries paying no tax at all. The state's figures probably are not complete, though. The city of Denver has the most dispensaries of any municipality and also appears to have the most comprehensive records. Between March and July, Denver has accepted 304 marijuana dispensary applications and granted 70 licenses. Sales tax revenue from December 2009 through April was slightly more than $1 million. Based on the 3.62 percent city tax rate, that means stores in Denver alone sold $28 million in goods from December to April (for all products, not just marijuana). But the projected annual sales taxes will make up less than 1 percent of the city's sales tax revenue, said city spokeswoman Sue Cobb. Harvard economics Professor Jeffrey Miron estimated in a paper published in February that the Colorado state government would gain $35 million to $47 million from a full legalization and taxation of marijuana (not just medical marijuana). He based his analysis on the state's population and drug use rates. In comparison, in 2009 the state government collected slightly less than $36 million in sales and excise taxes for alcohol. Medical marijuana can be more expensive than many alcoholic drinks. Colorado dispensaries advertise marijuana for $25 to $50 for an eighth of an ounce. Doctors, lawyers and lobbyists have benefited, too. And marijuana-themed magazines, like Kush, carry ads for hydroponic gardening stores. Vicente estimates that more than 10,000 people statewide are employed in the marijuana business, either at the dispensaries and cultivation operations or in related businesses. His law office, with a staff of four, works on nothing but marijuana cases. Doctors were initially reluctant to get involved, but now several write recommendations for medical marijuana. Some doctors can charge $200 for a 10-minute consultation with potential medical marijuana patients, Corry said. "Do the math. A doctor can do pretty well with that," he said. Lobbyists raked in the money, too. Secretary of State records show dispensaries spent at least $50,000 since December to hire lobbyists on House Bill 1284, one of the two medical marijuana bills the Legislature considered this year. The total doesn't count lobbyists from the Colorado Municipal League, individual cities and law enforcement groups that spent time lobbying for or against the bill, or simply keeping tabs on it. Dispensaries sprang up over the last year thanks to recognition from the Legislature, policy changes by the state Board of Health and a decision by the Obama administration not to prosecute them under federal drug laws - as long as they follow state medical marijuana laws. Aside from the legal changes, dispensaries have a big market because Coloradans use more drugs, including marijuana, than people in most other states. In 2007, Colorado had the sixth-highest rate of marijuana consumption, with 8.24 percent of residents over age 12 using the drug in the past month, according to a survey by the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. More than one in five Coloradans between the ages of 18 and 25 reported using pot in the month the survey was taken. Rhode Island residents reported the highest rates of marijuana use, followed by Washington, D.C., Virginia, Montana, Maine and Colorado. Nearly 100,000 Coloradans can now buy marijuana legally, as long as they follow the medical marijuana law. The constitutional amendment that voters approved in 2000 set up a state registry of medical marijuana patients. For years, only about 2,000 people were on the registry, said Ned Calonge, chief medical officer of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. But 2009 brought a "perfect storm" of legal developments that made the industry blossom. Late last year, about 800 people a day were applying for the registry, and the numbers have tapered off only slightly, Calonge said. The department estimates 94,000 people have applied to the registry in the last year, including a backlog of about 70,000 applications, said CDPHE spokesman Mark Salley. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake