Pubdate: Fri, 05 Dec 2014 Source: Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (AK) Copyright: 2014 Fairbanks Publishing Company, Inc. Contact: http://newsminer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/764 Author: Casey Grove SEN. LESIL MCGUIRE RELEASES ALASKA MARIJUANA LAW ANALYSIS ANCHORAGE - As legislators soon will turn to the regulation of legal marijuana in Alaska and determining what their role should be in it, one resource will be a legislative analysis requested by the incoming chair of the state Senate Judiciary Committee and released publicly this week. Anchorage Sen. Lesil McGuire said Thursday she asked for the study, prepared by the Legislature's research services analysts, following voters' approval of Ballot Measure 2 in this year's general election. The 36-page report McGuire's office released this week answers some basic questions about implementing marijuana legalization by comparing efforts in Washington and Colorado to what might happen in Alaska, in terms of costs to the state and tax revenue it might generate, and lays out in what areas of the law legislators have influence. "My goal was to get people a base level of information, and that can begin the dialogue," McGuire said. The initiative passed by 6 percent and legalizes marijuana possession for adults 21 and older in late February. It also provides a basic structure for the legal sale of pot, not expected to occur until 2016. Meantime, the initiative directs the Legislature to either create a marijuana control board, something McGuire said she supports, or leave pot regulation to the state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. And it opens the possibility for communities to further regulate the sale of marijuana. An Anchorage Municipal Assembly member and mayoral candidate, Amy Demboski, has proposed barring marijuana establishments in the city. State Rep. Bob Lynn has written a bill to prohibit marijuana sales near schools and recreation centers, among other restrictions. A joint meeting of the Fairbanks North Star Borough and the cities of Fairbanks and North Pole convened recently to hear public concerns. Other statewide and localization action is sure to come. "In my opinion, this is the most important issue the Legislature will tackle this session," McGuire said. Striking a balance between the initiative's intent and the wishes of both the voters who supported it and those who opposed it could prove difficult, McGuire said. Some lawmakers would probably see their job as carrying out direct democracy for the voters, and others, who are fundamentally opposed to marijuana legalization, will weigh in with their beliefs on the matter, she said. "My hope is that in the Judiciary Committee, we don't go back to a debate over Ballot Measure 2 as a whole," McGuire said. McGuire said she supports forming a separate marijuana control board, because the current Alcoholic Beverage Control Board has plenty of work. "The revenue part of it is going to be a big part of the discussion," McGuire said. In a rough estimate of price and number of potential pot sales, research by the Colorado Marijuana Policy Group included in the legislative research report says Alaska could see as much as $55 million in retail sales the first year, with $7 million in tax revenue, and sales of $107 million generating taxes of $23 million by 2020. The report also notes, like with alcohol use, limits on marijuana use will need to be set for impaired drivers, and there will be costs to public safety to address, like paying for law enforcement officers' extra training on how to determine if a person is too stoned to drive. Developing a regulatory and tax framework will likely be the most expensive part of implementing the law at first, according to the report, which says long-term costs will be due more to public health and education spending. With information from Washington and Colorado, which preceded Alaska in legalizing marijuana, as well as other sources, the report estimates Alaska's total costs in implementing legalization to be between $3.7 million and $7 million the first year. Public safety concerns, as well as how to reinvest tax revenue in enforcement and education efforts, are among the several distinct aspects of marijuana legalization people seem to have, McGuire said. Those are things the Legislature will seek to address, she said. "I want the public to have a full, robust discussion, but not about the measure itself," McGuire said. "The measure has passed. The point now is what are the reasonable places, where there have been community concerns that should be addressed." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom