6 Marijuana Legalization Lessons
Three recently approved plans show what politicians have learned (or failed to learn) since Colorado became the first state to allow recreational use.

Legislators in New York and New Mexico voted last week to legalize recreational marijuana, as their counterparts in New Jersey had done the previous month. The three plans, which bring the number of states that have approved legalization to 17, reflect some of the lessons that policy makers have learned—and in some cases ignored—since Colorado became the first state to take that step in 2012.
1. Expungement
Unlike the first few states to legalize marijuana, New Jersey, New York, and New Mexico are simultaneously trying to alleviate the damage done by prohibition. All three states are creating expungement programs to remove the taint of criminality from people who were convicted of marijuana-related conduct that is no longer illegal.
2. Stoned Driving
New Jersey, New York, and New Mexico, unlike several other states with legal pot, wisely eschewed defining marijuana-impaired driving based on THC blood levels, which are not a reliable measure of intoxication. All three states will continue to require additional evidence of impairment, such as erratic driving and performance on sobriety tests.
3. Cannabis Cafés
After the first few states legalized marijuana, dispensary customers—especially tourists—frequently had trouble finding a place where they could legally consume the pot they could now legally buy. New Jersey, New York, and New Mexico address that problem by allowing marijuana use in specially licensed consumption areas.
4. Home Delivery
When states allow local governments to ban dispensaries, even buying marijuana can be difficult. Home delivery, which New Jersey, New York, and New Mexico all will allow, frees cannabis consumers from the dictates of weed-unfriendly jurisdictions.
5. Home Cultivation
Most states where marijuana is legal let recreational consumers grow cannabis at home to use and share with friends, which is analogous to allowing home brewing by beer drinkers. New Mexico will permit home cultivation as of June, so consumers won't have to continue relying on the black market until state-licensed pot shops are up and running, which is supposed to happen by April 1, 2022.
New York, by contrast, is delaying permission for home cultivation until up to 18 months after the first recreational dispensary opens, which could mean consumers won't be allowed to grow marijuana until late 2023 or early 2024. New Jersey, meanwhile, is prohibiting homegrown marijuana altogether.
6. Taxes
New York's long delay in allowing home cultivation presumably is aimed at helping newly licensed suppliers establish themselves and displace the black market. But when it comes to taxes, New York legislators do not seem very keen on helping the industry—or consumers.
New York plans to tax marijuana based on THC content, but with different rates for different products: higher for concentrates than for flower, and higher still for edibles. A consumer who eats a square of chocolate containing 10 milligrams of THC will be taxed six times as heavily as a consumer who smokes the same dose, which does not make much sense if the aim is to reduce cannabis-related health hazards.
The THC levy may amount to a tax as high as 30 percent, depending on costs, THC content, and product type. That's on top of a 13 percent marijuana sales tax, which is in addition to general state and local sales taxes that run as high as 8.9 percent.
New Jersey plans to impose an excise tax ranging from less than 3 percent to more than 30 percent, depending on the average retail price per ounce; lower prices trigger higher rates. The state also will allow local governments to collect multiple taxes from growers, manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers, with the rate capped at 2 percent for each transaction.
New Mexico's marijuana sales tax is simple and modest by comparison: 12 percent initially, rising gradually to 18 percent by July 2030. States such as Alaska, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, and Michigan tax marijuana even more lightly.
These states seem to recognize that heavy taxes make it harder for licensed retailers to compete with black-market dealers. It's a lesson that some politicians will have to learn all over again.
© Copyright 2020 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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pretty much
I disagree. More like, pretty lame.
You need to smoke a bowl and relax.
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Three recently approved plans show what politicians have learned (or failed to learn) since Colorado became the first state to allow recreational use.............MORE DETAIL.
Hypothetically, could you smoke dope in the Colorado portion of the Four Corners Monument?
https://navajonationparks.org/tribal-parks/four-corners-monument/
I remember warning a friend that she should be careful lighting up when we were in a national park in Colorado. At home nobody was going to bother her; it was not illegal under state law and the odds of seeing a federal agent who cared were slim. In a national park you have federal law enforcement officials whose job is to go after low level crime like smoking pot.
Mr. Sullum, Massachusetts' taxes are greater than you seem to believe.
The total tax is 21%
There is:
the state sale's tax = 6.25%;
the state marijuana excise tax =10.75%; and,
the municipal excise tax =3%.
There are other faults in MA law, e.g., zoning, excessive regulation.
@baystaterepeal #NotBindingInConscience
My bad TWENTY (20%) PERCENT
That’s what happens when you wake and bake.
Another benefit of expungement is people with experience with illegal marijuana will be allowed to apply their skills in the legal trade.
Video Alert: Worn Out
What about the fact that possession is still a federal crime? In theory, the feds could swoop in and arrest lots of people. At the moment, they don't intend to do that. But the fact that they could is worrisome. Given the right (or wrong) political trigger, governments often turn could into would.
Another lesson from here in Colorado: "Marijuana users are much more rude than they ever said they'd be."
As in, the secondhand smoke is in all sorts of inconvenient and/or inappropriate places, including the private property of nonsmokers, and requests for decency tend to get mocked.
The experience has moved me from neutral on the subject to opposed.
you have to be a dullard, intellectually lightweight Reason writer to believe legalizations has not increased car accidents and thus deaths...
But if marijuana substitutes for alcohol, then alcohol's decreasing use could reduce car accidents and deaths.
so by that same logic, you can make it illegal again to lower those under its influence while driving and reduce car accidents and deaths even more......thanks for playing, addicted peasant
"you have to be a dullard, intellectually lightweight Reason writer to believe legalizations has not increased car accidents and thus deaths…"
Citations needed. Also, English lessons.
uh, nearly ever daily Reason article concerning pop culture tyoe issues like this one is the citations, try again...you need logic lessons
I've not killed anyone in my 1.5 million miles of driving. So, maybe we just ban everything. Unless of course you just want people to die.
https://youtu.be/eXWhbUUE4ko
non sequitur, try again
If you're taxing THC, it makes sense to charge different rates for edibles vs. smokables. Most of the THC in a joint goes up in smoke, not into the bloodstream. A typical joint (1/2 gram at 16% potency) has 80 mg of THC. The standard dose for edibles in California is 10 mg, and many users find 5 mg gets them plenty high.
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