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Colo. medical pot suppliers will have to pay taxes

By STEVEN K. PAULSON
,
AP
posted: 7 DAYS 23 HOURS AGO
Text SizeAAA
DENVER -Colorado is gearing up to officially tax and regulate medical marijuana dispensaries, a move lawmakers say amounts to legal recognition of a growing industry.
The state Attorney General John Suthers concluded in an opinion issued Monday that medical marijuana is considered personal property that can be taxed and shouldn't be treated like prescription drugs, which are tax exempt.
The move would make Colorado the latest provincial government to tax marijuana for medical use, after voters in California adopted a similar program when the use was legalized in 1996. Cities such as Denver and Oakland, Calif., also plan to levy municipal taxes on local cannabis dispensaries.
Colorado Sen. Chris Romer, D-Denver, said he plans to introduce legislation in January that would require dispensaries to buy licenses, as well as pay the state's 2.9 percent sales tax. He estimates the state could collect up to $15 million a year on the sales, and communities could collect an additional $45 million a year through city and county taxes.
Revenue department spokesman Mark Couch said the state has no official estimate but added that California collected $11.4 million on sales of $142 million in 2006. A bill to tax and regulate all marijuana use in California like alcohol would generate nearly $1.4 billion in revenue, according to an analysis released in July by tax officials.
Couch said the revenue agency recently surveyed about 60 dispensaries and found half of them already had sales tax licenses and were paying taxes because they sold other products, but that not all of those were paying taxes on marijuana sales. With the backing of Suthers' opinion, he said the department will begin collecting taxes on all medical marijuana sales immediately.
"This is not a new tax, it's just an existing tax being applied to a new product," Couch said.
Denver plans to notify dispensaries that it will start collecting municipal sales tax starting in December.
Romer said licensing and collecting taxes are signs that the industry is going mainstream and it's time for regulation. Colorado voters approved medical marijuana in 2000 but rejected a measure to legalize recreational marijuana in 2006.
"This will make medical marijuana a mainstream business. Not recreational marijuana, medical marijuana," he said.
Marijuana support groups welcomed Colorado's decision limited to medical marijuana and called it a validation of their legal rights.
Sean McAllister, chairman of the board of Sensible Colorado, a group that promotes medical marijuana use, said dispensaries were expecting Suthers' opinion.
"This is not a black-market industry, it's a legitimate industry so it should be taxed like everything else," he said.
The group's executive director, Brian Vicente, estimated that 90 percent of the state's dispensaries are already paying state and local taxes though most have not registered as dispensaries.
Many dispensaries, which aren't regulated by the state now, have registered as wellness centers and alternative health clinics, he said.
Vicente said the state could bring in another $12 million by charging for annual licenses and imposing other fees similar to those charged on tobacco sales.
While other industries may look for breaks, Vicente said paying taxes helps give dispensary owners more legitimacy and protection from possible raids.
"I think the state has less incentive to shut these wellness centers down when they receive so much tax revenue from their existence," Vicente said.
Bruce Mirken, spokesman for a marijuana advocacy group, the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, said it's better for government to have control of the process and regulate marijuana use than to have a rogue industry taking advantage of new laws, inviting crackdowns by law enforcement.
"This shows that medical sales are in fact possible," he said.
State Sen. Greg Brophy, R-Wray, said taxing marijuana dispensaries amounts to defacto legislation of marijuana use for recreational users, as well as medical users.
He said the industry needs further regulation to ensure patients get the drugs they need and aren't abusing them, but lawmakers also need to honor the voters' wishes.
"It's going to be hard to do, but we have to get it right," Brophy said.
Associated Press writers Colleen Slevin, Ivan Moreno and Kristen Wyatt also contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-11-18 08:21:41
COMMENTS ( 16 )
Page 1 of 4 1 2 3 4 Next >>
STARLINKMEDEDNET
10:50PM Oct 20 2009 
So Marijuana really is a very effective substance to reduce and treat prostate Cancer. The Madison Wisconsin University Cancer Research study was using a Marinol type processed cannabis and the human PSA cells. Based on time and quantity of the cb1 and cb2 the drastic reduction of metassassis was high enough for the University to strongly recommend using Cannabinoids for prostate cancer treatment and prevention. This report 'blows away' the premise that marijuana has no medicinal use. If this is true, then the Federal Schedule 1 Controlled Substance law can not logically apply to marijuana, and to do otherwise is a declaration governance can make any law and enforce it as long as it is based on false premise. This doesn't make sense? The feds had no legal premise to make anti-Marijuana legislation in violation of the 1776 Constitution.
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STARLINKMEDEDNET
10:33PM Oct 20 2009 
Nau: "High time " indeed. The premise as televised by former President George W Bush, for Schedule I, Controlled Substance status is "MARIJUANA HAS NO MEDICINAL USE" . Yet the scientic verified evidence by the University of Madison, Wisconsin in their Department of Dermatological studies in the Cancer Research report entitled Prostate Cancer Treatment Using Cannabinoid Receptors, published 2005/2006 strongly recommended to the FDA that Prostate Cancer treatment using Cannabinoid Receptors as agonist drastically reduced PSA metassassis. It actually killed the cancer cells. Our US Rule of Law prohibits governance from making law that is based on false premise, nor can it be enforced! Law enforcement is using tax dollars to prevent the taxing of a legal source. Will someone please explain this to me? Please, I am noy kidding!

El Jibaro De Lytle Creek
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Naufrichtig
3:49PM Oct 20 2009 
Our current and past two Presidents all admitted to having used marijuana at one time or another. Since the American public should not be held to a higher level of morality than their Presidents, it is high time (pardon the pun) to legalize marijuana in this country. Our national debt would be reduced to zero in no time at all.
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Todd4no1
1:44PM Oct 20 2009 
I was watching a Bio-fuel being made from Pot oil. Omg I truely think we will never have pot legal in the United States. The uses besides medicinal is outstanding, but everyone, including Dr's are making money off selling opiate's. If you do any research on medicine's, you will see that we take opium folks. The US will let everyone including mom and dad to use opium for pain and discomfort. Why do you think pain killers are so addictive? Pain killers has in the years destroyed my kidney and I am due to have renal failure probably soon. But before my home was invaded by CPS officer's telling me to quit smoking pot for my illness, I was fine. 3 years later after taking prescribed med's I'm dying. WTF people. To get back to the pot oil. How much do you think Bush and all his croney's will lose if we made gas from Pot oil?
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CrowRedEye
11:54AM Oct 20 2009 
Only reason it was made illegal was due to the families that owned the timber, cotton, and oil resources. Hemp was illegal NOT to grow (farmers were required to grow it or pay a fine) at one time in our history. Follow the money, and the names attached to that money. There is a lot of money being made by keeping it illegal. Money which is every bit as dirty as the "drug cartels". Legalize it, tax it, take the criminal element out, it can bail our entire country out of debt.
REPLY RATING
(3 RATINGS)
 
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