Pubdate: Sun, 21 Oct 2012
Source: Columbian, The (WA)
Column: Strictly Business
Copyright: 2012 The Columbian Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.columbian.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/92
Author: Gordon Oliver
Note: Gordon Oliver is The Columbian's business editor.

LOCAL EFFECTS OF LEGALIZING MARIJUANA

If Washington voters approve Initiative 502 to legalize recreational 
marijuana sales -- an increasingly likely outcome -- they'll at least 
be generating new business for lawyers who will try to resolve huge 
conflicts between state and federal drug laws.

But if and when that smoke settles, the initiative could also create 
new business opportunities for farmers, property owners, and 
retailers. And transport of marijuana from legalized Washington to 
Oregon (if Oregon's own legalization measure fails) would open 
another box of legal issues regarding enforcement of drug transport laws.

The initiative would legalize one ounce of marijuana for people 21 
and older and create a seed-to-store state-regulated monopoly. No one 
knows the level of potential demand for recreational marijuana, which 
is already heavily used but little discussed in most social circles.

Faced with making their best guess, state officials predict the 
marijuana retailers will draw 363,000 customers and produce sales of 
85 metric tons of pot in 2013. That would add up to $560 million in 
new tax revenue for the state annually, by the state's estimates. 
State officials chose a familiar number for their estimate of 
potential retail outlets: 328. That's how many liquor stores operated 
in the state before liquor sales were privatized last summer.

If the initiative becomes law , the Liquor Control Board would begin 
issuing grower, processor, and retailer licenses in December 2013. 
But predicting the federal response to Washington's legalization 
measure, before or after the start of retail sales, is just a guessing game.

The worse-case scenario is hardly reassuring to property owners who 
might consider renting to marijuana retailers.

Alison Holcomb, campaign director for the pro-initiative New Approach 
Washington, notes that federal law allows for seizure of property if 
the property owner knowingly engages in marijuana sales. She hopes 
the federal government would back off in response to a voter-approved measure.

Deborah Ewing, a managing broker with Eric Fuller & Associates in 
Vancouver, points to other practical considerations from a property 
owner's vantage point. On the spectrum of public acceptance, many 
owners would likely consider such businesses to fall in a gray area: 
not the most favorable of retail shops, perhaps with enough stigma to 
make it difficult to attract other tenants for new or renewed leases. 
The shops would, in other words, likely land in second or third-tier 
shopping malls.

The initiative raises plenty of other legal and workplace issues. 
Some critics say the legalized marijuana use could threaten federal 
funding tied to requirements for a drug-free workplace, for instance. 
And some groups that favor legalization say the measure doesn't go 
far enough, leaving the same legal penalties for posession of more 
than an ounce.

But big social change raises big questions, and Americans' 
frustration with drug laws has been building for decades. Not 
everyone thinks that marijuana legalization is a step in the right 
direction in our struggle with drug abuse and related social 
problems. It will be up to the state's voters to decide whether 
they're ready to challenge the status quo and take on the power of 
the federal government.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom