Chuck Schumer Learned Nothing From the Failure of Pot Legalization in California
The Senate majority leader’s marijuana bill would pile on more taxes and regulations, despite years of complaints about the barriers they create.

During the next year, California officials said last week, the state expects to seize "more than $1 billion worth of illegal cannabis products." That announcement came a few weeks after the U.S. Justice Department bragged about guilty pleas by 11 unlicensed California marijuana merchants who had been nabbed with help from state and local law enforcement agencies.
The continuing war on weed in California, which supposedly legalized marijuana in 2016, reflects the striking failure to replace black-market dealers with state-licensed vendors, a plan that has been doomed by high taxes, local bans, and overregulation. Judging from the marijuana legalization bill he introduced last week, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D‒N.Y.) has learned nothing from that experience.
Six years after California voters approved recreational marijuana, unauthorized suppliers still account for somewhere between two-thirds and three-quarters of sales. A recent report from Reason Foundation, which publishes this website, highlights one major reason why licensed businesses have had so much trouble competing with illegal suppliers: Taxes are too high.
Geoff Lawrence, Reason Foundation's managing director of drug policy, found that California's effective tax rate ranged from $42 to $92 per ounce, depending on the jurisdiction, compared to an estimated wholesale production cost of $35 per ounce. The corresponding rates in Colorado and Oregon, both of which have been more successful at displacing the black market, are about $33 and $21, respectively.
Despite modest tax relief approved this year, legal marijuana remains overpriced in California. It is also inconvenient to buy in much of the state, Lawrence notes, thanks to local sales bans that have created "massive cannabis deserts" where "consumers have no access to a legal retailer within a reasonable distance of their home."
Legal sellers also must contend with burdensome licensing requirements and regulations. Dale Gieringer, California director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, says those rules help explain why legal marijuana prices are much higher than he anticipated.
"It turned out that I had vastly underestimated the cost of the regulations imposed by the new law," Gieringer writes in an introduction to the Reason Foundation report. "In addition to state and local licensing fees, there were elaborate rules on cultivation, retailing, transportation, manufacture, testing, facility siting, ownership, security, storage, on-site consumption, wholesale distribution, seed-to-sale tracking, waste disposal, labeling, packaging, environmental compliance, water usage, etc. ad nauseam."
Despite years of complaints about these barriers, Schumer decided that the cannabis industry needs more taxes and regulations. His 296-page Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act, which is co-sponsored by Sens. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.) and Cory Booker (D–N.J.), includes 52 pages dealing with taxation and 71 pages prescribing new regulations for marijuana businesses.
Schumer's bill calls for a federal excise tax starting at 10 percent and rising to 25 percent by the fifth year, which would be in addition to frequently hefty state and local taxes. Implicitly acknowledging the counterproductive impact of those levies, the bill would cut the rates in half for businesses with proceeds below specified levels.
Schumer wants to charge the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) with registering marijuana businesses, setting product standards, establishing labeling requirements, policing "adulterated" and "misbranded" products, regulating advertising and promotion, and imposing "restrictions on sale and distribution." In addition to mandating specific rules, such as a nationwide minimum purchase age of 21 and a ban on adding flavors to cannabis vaping products, the bill would authorize the FDA to impose any restrictions it deems "appropriate for the protection of the public health."
Given the FDA's dubious sense of what protecting public health means in other areas, such as regulation of tobacco and nicotine vaping products, that is a pretty scary clause. As in those contexts, whatever arbitrary rules the agency comes up with are bound to restrict consumer choice and help perpetuate the black market.
"By failing to act," Wyden says, "the federal government is empowering the illicit cannabis market." That's exactly what this bill's taxes and regulations would do.
© Copyright 2022 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Chuck Shumer probably learned plenty from California's pot laws. He doesn't care.
The package he is putting out is not to legalize pot. He knows exactly what he's doing. Why pretend otherwise?
The whole point is to load it with poison pills the Republicans cannot swallow so that the Ds can be "pro legalization" and all the hippies will vote for them as fighting the horrible Rs.
Despite years of complaints about these barriers, Schumer decided that the cannabis industry needs more taxes and regulations. His 296-page Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act, which is co-sponsored by Sens. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.) and Cory Booker (D–N.J.), includes 52 pages dealing with taxation and 71 pages prescribing new regulations for marijuana businesses.
Schumer's bill calls for a federal excise tax starting at 10 percent and rising to 25 percent by the fifth year, which would be in addition to frequently hefty state and local taxes. Implicitly acknowledging the counterproductive impact of those levies, the bill would cut the rates in half for businesses with proceeds below specified levels.
If I were a Republican Senator I'd vote for this and vote hardddduh.
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that is the point of most legislation that gets pushed, these days. they are incapable of even trying to put forward an idea that everyone can agree on. it MUST be stuffed with as many contentious other issues as possible. if the lunatic fringes even think they are thinking of working with the other "team" to get something done, they get pushed out in the next primary.
getting things done isn't what any of them want.... it is all theater to show they are fighting the other side. hyperpartisanship at it's finest.
All politicians really care about is that sense of power from telling everybody else what to do. They remind me of an astrologer I knew who was plenty smart, but too lazy to sit through four years of college to be an engineer; but astrology has formulas and tables and calculations and jargon, so it was good enough.
Similarly, politicians love to imagine themselves in charge of businesses as shown in Hollywood, shouting orders, "Get me that report or you're fired" nonsense, but they haven't the patience to actually come up through the ranks and learn what goes into running a business.
So they win elections and think that passing a bill, or even just proposing it, solves problems and showcases their ability to voters. They don't give a shit after that, they are already looking for a new problem to solve.
What they fear the most is people solving their own problems, or there being no problems.
“Similarly, politicians love to imagine themselves in charge of businesses as shown in Hollywood, shouting orders, "Get me that report or you're fired" nonsense”
Lol.
Reason still doesn’t understand how The Party operates.
Just following orders.
they do, and it's complicit.
Perhaps this could be called "let's keep Marijuana illegal but use the IRS and FDA as the enforcers instead of the DEA".
Perhaps teachers should encourage elementary school children to experiment with marijuana if they are curious about it. Really lowers inhibitions, amiright?
I identify as a bud.
and they all have AR-15s.
Reasonable should be the operative word that politicians should strive for instead of the word power that Chuck Schumer uses. It would be one thing if the laws also applied to the elitist ruling class, but they exempt themselves.
The elitist ruling class are leaches on society and far worse than any freeloader that is been on welfare their entire life. The elitist ruling class lines their pockets with proceeds from inside deals, graft, payoffs, campaign funds. The freeloader may be abusing the welfare system and therefore society, but the scale is infinitesimal comparison.
Jacob, do you really think that “marijuana reform“ is actually reform? What Schumer has proposed closely mirrors marijuana “reform“ in New Jersey and New York, which is undoubtedly why Booker is cosponsoring the bill.
His “reform“ is nothing more than a cynical attempt to create a state sponsored cartel so that the state can siphon off drug profits that it then forwards to its loyal constituencies as a political reward.
Ask yourself this question: New Jersey‘s law is supposed to “remedy“ the “devastation“ caused by the war on drugs. Over 75% of persons incarcerated for drug offenses in the United States are men. Yet New Jersey‘s marijuana “reform“ gives preference to women. Why would that be the case if it is men who were “devastated” by the war on drugs? And why does the New Jersey “reform” law require every cannabis license holder to have a unionized workforce? Were unions “devastated” by the war on drugs? As far as I can tell, law enforcement unions reaped a bonanza as a result of the war on drugs, and thanks to “equitable sharing,” continue to reap a bonanza.
Finally, when New Jerseyans voted in a referendum to approve marijuana sales, they were told that the retail price of legal cannabis would be “Affected” only by the state sales tax and an optional municipal tax. The legislature then passed a law containing a “social equity excise fee” that increases as the price of legal cannabis drops and that will clearly affect The retail price of cannabis. One guess where the revenues from the “social equity excise fee“ are going to go, and who the recipients tend to vote for.
This is not “reform” but the most cynical form of political opportunism.
NJs laws are so fucking woke it's disgusting. I have a 5% equity stake in a NJ cannabis business only because I live in NJ. Of the other two owners, who both live out of state, one is a woman who own (on paper) 51% of the business so we can get minority status and expedited approvals.
When the state gets involved, your best bet is to go crony and succeed. The state set everything up to work this way, so you may as well embrace the system the way they designed it.
Gozer,
And it’s May 2022 meeting, the cannabis regulatory commission announced that it is going to use their standardized employee ID cards to keep track of the race and sex of all employees of cannabis businesses and will report on it on a monthly basis.
You are absolutely right about the “wokeness.”
The whole system is so nauseating that I find myself looking back nostalgically on the days of prohibition.
Thank god I look good in heels.
Now that’s a mental image I’d like to expunge…
Schumer is an establishment politician and a Democrat. His brain only works to create regulations and taxes, increase government authority and scope, and pander to advantageous special interests. Why would you expect anything else?
A Democrat proposing a law that highly regulates businesses. Who didn't see that coming?
Democrats need both the war on drugs and the war on poverty to continue to enslave people of color in poor, dilapidated economic conditions. That's how they breed voters.
Fucking morons.
“A Democrat proposing a law that highly regulates businesses. Who didn't see that coming?”
Well, they did label their reform movement, “tax and regulate.” At least give them credit for being honest once.
F'n weasel
when i see that guy i just want to smack those glasses right off his face
It really is fascinating how politicians just can't pass simple laws without pages and pages of garbage attached. What is that? Is it just a power thing? It's so tiring.
you write from an angle of surprise you should be years beyond.
It will be different this time. I have been assured by Top Men we have the right Top Men this time.
Useless old man doing useless old man things.
Legalize heroin. Thin the herd by weeding out the weak and the stupid.
If that's what you want keep it illegal and let fentanyl do the job.
Growing your own is so much cheaper. It also screws the state out of their taxes.
Schumer just put out the Democratic position. He has also indicated this is just a starting point and is willing to consider all alternative plans. I'm betting he would support Republican Nancy Mace's plan if it gets down to that.
Mostly, the business is a small side issue to marijuana legalization. It doesn't matter who sells marijuana until we accomplish the main mission - ending ALL punishment of adults for consuming a plant that is FAR less harmful than alcohol.
Stop the insane Amerikan Inquisition NOW.
Got three marijuana stores almost within sight of each other in my town. Go a few miles, got more.