Arizona Legal Pot Campaign Says $40 Million Could Be Raised For State Schools

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
A campaign to legalize and tax marijuana estimated its plan could be worth $40 million in funding for Arizona schools, the Arizona Republic reported. The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol is currently gathering the necessary signatures to qualify for the 2016 ballot.

The proposed ballot measure would set up a network of licensed cannabis shops where the drug would be sold with a 15 percent sales tax. The campaign estimated that tax money could raise $40 million for education annually, a much needed injection of funding for Arizona schools, backers of the plan said.

"Our schools are in serious need of funding, and taxing marijuana would create a significant new revenue stream," said state Sen. Martin Quezada, a Democrat from Phoenix who backs the proposed ballot measure and is a member of a local school district board, as the Phoenix Business Journal reported. "Marijuana sales are going to keep taking place regardless of whether this initiative passes or fails. But only if it passes will they raise tens of millions of dollars each year for public education in Arizona."

The campaign's chairman, J.P. Holyoak, called the $40 million figure "very conservative" at a news conference, the Republic reported.

Under the proposed legislation, adults age 21 or older could possess up to 1 ounce of marijuana and grow as many as six plants in their homes without a license. The state's distribution system would look like Colorado's, where licensed businesses produce and sell the drug, with taxes going toward education and public health.

Legislation to legalize marijuana has already passed in four states -- Washington, Colorado, Oregon and Alaska -- as well as Washington, D.C. The Arizona campaign needs 150,000 signatures to qualify for the November 2016 ballot. Organizers said they have collected 60,000 signatures.

The Arizona Chamber of Commerce, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey and the head of Arizona's Republican Party oppose legalization. Robert Graham, the state GOP's chairman, called the campaign's news conference "pathetic" and said the benefits of legalizing marijuana were "as fake as the check they showed at their press conference," the Republic reported.

A June poll found that 53 percent of Arizonans support legalizing marijuana while 39 percent were opposed, which was a slight uptick in support from a similar poll the year before, the Arizona Daily Star reported.

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Full Article: Marijuana Legalization 2015: Arizona Legal Pot Campaign Says $40 Million Could Be Raised For State Schools
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Sadly it will take a citizen vote to get it into law. Once it is voter approved the lackeys in the state house will move slower than molasses in winter to make it a reality with the written rules of law and the implementation date. The locations and available petitions to be signed are only in the Phoenix area and few in Tucson. If they would get them sent out to the entire state the numbers of signatures would be over the minimum needed long before the date they are looking at.
Secondly, the current wording to what they are trying to pass severely limits what can be done with cannabis and how much you can grow and so on. There is another group in the state right now trying to get a more balanced usage law onto the books and they are working petitions as well. I think both need to be read side by side before putting your John Henry on one or the other.....
 
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