Wash. lawmaker pushes amendments to legal pot law

SEATTLE (AP) — A key lawmaker is proposing changes to Washington's new law legalizing marijuana, saying the state can squeeze a lot more money out of people who want to participate in the recreational pot marketplace.
Rep. Christopher Hurst, an Enumclaw Democrat who leads the House committee that oversees cannabis, said Tuesday the state will be leaving "money on the table" unless it increases the fees required to obtain a license to grow, process or sell marijuana.
Initiative 502, passed by voters last fall, legalized the possession and private use of cannabis by adults 21 and over, and called for the state to set up a marijuana distribution system. Voters in Colorado passed a similar measure.
Hurst introduced a bill Tuesday that would amend the law by creating a new "certificate" to be issued by the Liquor Control Board, which is setting rules for the industry, as a precursor to obtaining a license. It would require the board to set the price of the certificate at no less than fair market value. It's unclear what fair market value would be, he said, but he estimated it could range from $1,000 in a rural town like Forks to $250,000 in downtown Bellevue — perhaps $50 million or more in additional state revenue this year.
The state is facing a "billion-dollar mandate" to improve education spending, Hurst said in a news release, and "it would be foolish to leave money on the table in the face of a daunting number like that."
As passed, I-502 requires a $250 application fee and $1,000 annual license renewal. Hurst's bill would allow the board to charge a reduced price for the annual renewals, in line with the $250 annual renewal fee for liquor licenses.
The bill also would allow marijuana businesses to be located closer to parks, daycares and schools — 500 feet instead of 1,000. Hurst said the 1,000-foot rule is too strict because it could preclude pot shops from opening in urban areas, thus forcing people to travel farther to buy pot. That could cut sales and state tax revenue while fostering a black market.
Amending a voter-approved initiative in the first two years after passage requires a two-thirds majority in the Legislature. Hurst said he didn't think the measure should be controversial, but Alison Holcomb, the author of I-502 and the drug policy director at the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, said she had concerns.
"It might be a bit premature because we haven't had a chance to see how this fledgling marijuana industry might unfold," she said.
Jacking up the cost of participating in the legal market is especially troubling, she said. At public forums on the new law around the state, small-time marijuana growers and would-be sellers have urged the Liquor Control Board to make it possible for them to get involved.
"One of the goals of I-502 is to bring the illicit market under regulatory oversight," Holcomb said. "There are hundreds of people who are growing illicitly and who want to participate in the regulated market. If we make it prohibitively expensive for them to do so, they're going to continue to grow illicitly."
Hurst told reporters in a news conference that such economic barriers will keep fly-by-night operators and criminals out of the market. There's no place for the small-time growers Holcomb referenced to get licenses because they've been breaking the law, likely will continue to break the law, and probably don't have the money to provide the security and stability the Liquor Control Board is looking for, he said.
Instead, he suggested they could go to work for more reputable license-holders.
By contrast, a number of medical marijuana dispensaries have positioned themselves well for a recreational pot license by voluntarily paying state business and sales taxes, Hurst said.
"They were doing the best they could to comply with a very, very complex law," he said. "But if you've been growing illegal marijuana for the last year or 10 years or 30 years and not paying taxes and violating all these laws, why would we give any of those people a certificate? ... Why reward bad behavior with a gold mine?"
Holcomb also argued that increasing the cost of doing business risked inviting big commercial interests to the market — a point echoed in a letter the ACLU and several local public health and substance abuse prevention organizations sent to the Liquor Control Board on Tuesday.
"Our experience with tobacco and alcohol cautions us that opening the door to large enterprises would run the risk of aggressive marketing and promotion of marijuana use generally, which increases the likelihood of increased marijuana use by all people, especially youth," the letter said.
Hurst said that's not an issue because the law already includes marketing restrictions.
The groups included the Children's Alliance, the Science and Management of Addictions Foundation, the Asian Pacific Islander Coalition Against Tobacco and the University of Washington's Innovative Programs Research Group.
They said placing conservative limits on marijuana production will help make sure pot isn't diverted to minors or out of state, and strict advertising limits will minimize exposure to those under 21.
The groups also urged the board to require that labels on pot products inform people about how to get drug counseling if they need it, including the number for the "marijuana use public health hotline" created by the initiative, and warn about the dangers of driving while stoned.
New marijuana tax revenues are directed to the state general fund and local budgets, as well as substance-abuse prevention, research, education and health care.
Marijuana remains illegal under federal law, and the U.S. Department of Justice has not said whether it will sue in an effort to block the licensing schemes.
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Gene Johnson can be reached at https://twitter.com/GeneAPseattle .
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.
Tax the hell out of it. Dopers will gladly pay whatever it takes to keep the buzz on. Sellers will just pass the cost on to the consumer.
Greed 101 . Washington could change the taxes on Liquor, and keep more businesses and jobs going.
                   They also taxed tobacco so bad, alot of business had to close down. Now this.
                     Who is running Washington State ?
So this bill is actually an "Amnesty for Criminal Organizations act". It would basically allow the strongest and best criminal organizations to use criminal money to establish legitimate businesses growing and selling pot. This seems like a backward model because these guys are criminals and don't like to pay taxes so long-term they likely won't. Â
It makes more sense for the state to establish grow operations around the state in an effort to a) hire all the talent and b) flood the market and overwhelm criminal enterprise with effective competition. Â
My money is still on Washington Liquor Control board to screw this "sure thing"Â up so badly that it fails and it never disrupts the status quo of criminal enterprise that flourishes under prohibition.Â
@Agness P WeatherbyYep. Stupidity 101.
It's funny how some people assume that even black market producers are making insane profits by growing and selling cannabis, but this is just not accurate. There are a lot of expenses involved with producing high grade product, from lights and light bulbs, the electricity to run them twelve hours a day, fertilizers, soil, not to mention the mountain of labor involved. Taxes and fees have to be balanced or else most of it will remain black market, essentially defeating a core tenet of the new law.
"AÂ $250 application fee and $1,000 annual license renewal." ....if this doesn't foster a black market, I don't know what would.
""""""""But if you've been growing illegal marijuana for the last year or 10 years or 30 years and not paying taxes and violating all these laws, why would we give any of those people a certificate? ... Why reward bad behavior with a gold mine?"""""""""
The state is rewarding bad behavior with regards to illegal aliens........whats the difference
Given how the state wants to keep the price way up and tax the hell out of it...... Â IMHO Â the black market for weed will be as strong as ever especially since now the end user won't get in trouble for having small amounts.Â
Ir they're not careful, and they haven't shown any tendency in that direction as yet, government will simply price the state-licensed cannabis out of reach of most users. The underground market will continue to thrive at or below the current price. Washington State will find an albatross around its neck instead of the amazing green cash cow they think they have right now in the milking parlor.
If they are not careful, they will create the same industry with pot as there is with "moonshine". Greed will control people as fast as power. But, what the hey, why should this new legalization of pot bankrupt all those decent, upstanding criminals that have been selling recreational pot for so many years? The law makers need to realize, all the criminal grow rooms are already in full operation. Heavy licensing fees, taxes and requirements will only keep them in full operation. They must find a good starting point to be successful in the transition from a criminal industry to a legal and fruitful one, for both the state and the growers!
@MickRoh Â
There will always be a market for good weed regardless of it source and a desire for some different strain. The ONLY hope that Washington has to establish a market for weed....and to compete with illegal weed....is to produce a variety of exceptionally high quality products and deliver them at a reasonable and competitive cost. The ability to do that is a SURE-THING because they can do that in the open without worrying about police harassment. The fact that they are bureaucrats rather than savvy businessmen is the reason they will likely fail. Â
If it's about education, how much does that two-year preschool/daycare plan cost? Â
When marijuana was first regulated, the feds had no legal authority, so they used the tax system. They imposed high taxes on legal sales, required a distribution license, then refused to issue any licenses to ban it without actually banning it. Later they got the FDA and through regulation they ban things at will now, but even Teddy Roosevelt complained about not being able to do anything Constitutionally about all the opiate addicts at the turn of the century. Of course government finds ways to ignore that.
Leave it to government to make the costs so high that only big business will be able to afford it.
Plus they will just create an underground economy in illegal pot which will be pot that doesn't pay the tax.
Nothing has changed. They just shifted the criminal aspect to one of tax evasion.
@RalphCramden Seriously...you may have hit the nail on the head. This would create an environment where the only competition for the illegal producer is the corporate grower.  That would be so ugly and it would result in a huge backlash because people would hate that corporations had taken over the pot market.  The only way to kill the black market for product is to produce a better product at a lower price so that the consumer sees a greater value in a market product.
@Agness P Weatherby
Personally they just need to drop the whole issue of regulating pot with the exception of DUII and age.
No restrictions, no taxes, no regulations. Nothing.
Government would tax air if they could figure out how to do that. Oh wait, they already have. It's called a carbon tax. Never mind.
Greedy politicians!
Just look at how they ruined liquor sales because of the taxes
First Washingtonians came to Oregon for cheaper Liquor, next... they'll come to Oregon for cheaper weed!
@Orbit Hate to break it to you, but the politicians haven't done anything on liquor taxes in WA. They were all set by the initiative the VOTERS approved. They were all explicitly listed in the text of the initiative and analyzed in the voters pamphlet.
So blame the people who voted for it. (I know that steps on your rhetoric but them's the breaks.)
@ShallowEnder @Orbit Â
Yes, the politicians poisoned the well after the voters demanded the disbandment of the Liquor Control Board. And, guess who's in charge of managing the legal marijuana discussions....the exact same Liquor Control Board that the voters wanted to eliminate because they were ineffective and costly and didn't add any value to the public but took a free ride on in life on public taxes. Those bums are the exact people that are screwing up the legal marijuana initiative.
I like the idea of the "U-Pick-It Marijuana Grow", myself.Â
@xilef regnu  Would make an interesting Christmas tree, though, wouldn't it?