By Phillip Smith
Two congressmen from two states where
marijuana is already legal under state law today filed two separate
bills to legalize marijuana at the federal level. Rep. Jared Polis
(D-CO) introduced a bill that would allow states to legalize marijuana
without fear of federal intervention, while Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR)
introduced a bill that would tax marijuana at the federal level, in
addition to any state taxes. The bills were not yet available on
congressional web sites as of this afternoon.
Polis’s Regulate
Marijuana Like Alcohol Act (HR 1013) removes marijuana from the schedule
set by the Controlled Substances Act; transitions marijuana oversight
from the jurisdiction of the Drug Enforcement Agency to the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; and regulates marijuana like
alcohol by inserting language into the section of the US code governing
“intoxicating liquors.”
“Over the past year, Colorado has demonstrated that regulating marijuana like alcohol takes money away from criminals and cartels, grows our economy, and keeps marijuana out of the hands of children,” said Polis.
“While President Obama and the Justice Department have allowed the will
of voters in states like Colorado and 22 other jurisdictions to move
forward, small business owners, medical marijuana patients, and others
who follow state laws still live with the fear that a new administration
– or this one—could reverse course and turn them into criminals.
It is
time for us to replace the failed prohibition with a regulatory system
that works and let states and municipalities decide for themselves
if they want, or don’t want, to have legal marijuana within their
borders.”
Blumenauer’s Marijuana Tax Revenue Act (HR 1014)would,
after federal legalization, impose a federal excise tax on the sale of
marijuana for non-medical purposes as well as apply an occupational tax
for marijuana businesses. The bill would establish civil and criminal
penalties for those who fail to comply, like those in place for the
tobacco industry.
The bill also requires the IRS to produce
periodic studies of the marijuana industry and to issue recommendations
to Congress. It phases in an excise tax on the sale by a producer
(generally the grower) to the next stage of production (generally the
processor creating the useable product). This tax is initially set at
10% and rises over time to 25% as the legal market displaces the black market. Medical marijuana is exempt from this tax.
“It’s time for the federal government to chart a new path forward for marijuana.” said Blumenauer.
“Together these bills create a federal framework to legalize, regulate
and tax marijuana, much like we treat alcohol and tobacco. The federal
prohibition of marijuana has been a failure, wasting tax dollars and
ruining countless lives. As more states move to legalize marijuana as
Oregon, Colorado, Washington and Alaska have done, it’s imperative the
federal government become a full partner in building a workable and safe
framework.”
The federal bills come as marijuana is increasingly
accepted in the US. Now, nearly two-thirds of Americans live in a state
or jurisdiction that allows for some form of legal marijuana use. Four
states—Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington—and the District of
Columbia have legalized adult use, while 23 others allow for medical
marijuana. Eleven more states have passed laws allowing for the use of
low-THC cannabis products to treat specified medical conditions.
By
now, nearly half (46%) of all people 18 and over have tried marijuana
at least once, and in the past few years, public opinion polls have
consistently found support for legalization at or above 50%. But while
states and localities have taken the lead in finding ways to accommodate
legal marijuana, the federal government continues to not allow
criminalize marijuana, but to classify it as among the most dangerous
illegal drugs.
The Obama administration has taken a relatively
laissez-faire approach to medical marijuana and legal marijuana in the
states, but that is a matter of policy, not law. And as long as federal
marijuana prohibition remains on the books, policy can change with a new
administration, or even if this one decides to take a different tack.
The congressional bills were met with approval by drug reform movement groups.
“As
more state marijuana legalization laws come on board it’s increasingly
important for federal policy to catch up,” said Tom Angell, chairman of Marijuana Majority.
“The Obama administration’s enforcement approach over the past few
years has created some room for Colorado and Washington to implement
their laws and show the world that legalization works. And we even saw
the Republican-controlled Congress vote last year to stop the DEA from
spending money to interfere with state medical marijuana laws.
Now it’s
time to fully and officially end the federal criminalization of
marijuana so that states can move ahead with full certainty that the DEA
won’t be able to step in whenever the drug warriors that run the agency
feel like it.”
“Cops have better things to worry about than the
recreational habits of responsible, nonviolent adults,” said Major Neill
Franklin (Ret.), a former Maryland narcotics officer and now executive
director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP),
a group of criminal justice professionals opposed to the drug war.
“And
dispensary owners have better things to worry about than whether the
federal government is going to arrest them and/or seize their assets for
acting in accordance with state law.”
“These bills would regulate
and tax marijuana, taking cultivation and sales out of the underground
market and allowing it to be controlled by legitimate businesses under
the close watch of authorities. Marijuana would be grown in licensed
facilities instead of national forests and basements in the suburbs.
It
would be sold in stores that create good jobs and generate tax revenue,
instead of on the street where it benefits cartels and criminals,” said
Dan Riffle, director of federal policy for the Marijuana Policy Project.
“Congress
has been ignoring our broken and outdated marijuana laws for decades,”
Riffle continued. “Their failure to let go of prohibition is causing
serious problems for state governments and interfering in the lives of
countless Americans.
It’s time for our federal representatives to come
to grips with the fact that marijuana is safer than alcohol and most
people think it should be treated that way. Members who consider it
unthinkable to return to alcohol prohibition need to ask themselves why
they are clinging to the prohibition of a less harmful substance.”
The bills are there. Now it’s time to see whether Congress will act on them.
No comments:
Post a Comment