California: Elected Official Says It Is Time To Regulate Medical Marijuana

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
As a lifelong conservative, I'm no fan of government regulation. Even so, I'm convinced it's time for California to aggressively regulate the medical marijuana industry.

I've spoken with concerned citizens, local government officials, rural law enforcement officers, federal officials, anti-drug crusaders and medical marijuana industry insiders.

I visited the Emerald Triangle with fellow Board of Equalization member Fiona Ma. Our April tour showed how we can work with the industry to generate greater voluntary compliance with California law.

The current cash-based system is dangerous. Crime, corruption and tax evasion are far too common. Murder and armed robbery rates in California's rural counties have skyrocketed as the cannabis industry has grown. The FBI and U.S. attorney are investigating and prosecuting local law enforcement officials at staggering rates for taking cash bribes.

These problems stem in part from ongoing conflict between state and federal laws. Nearly 19 years ago California voters approved Proposition 215, making medical marijuana legal under state law, even while it remained illegal under federal law.

Cannabis has become readily available to the seriously ill — and anyone who has an hour to visit a "doctor" to get a recommendation and a "215 card." Freeway billboards advertise local dispensaries, while apps provide for doorstep delivery. During this time, federal raids and prosecutions have waxed and waned depending on the political climate in Washington, D.C.

There's no state regulation, just a patchwork of local rules. True, the California Department of Public Health runs a voluntary identification card program for patients and caregivers, but it has no jurisdiction over retail dispensaries or the production industry.

A better structure would be what Californians voted for in 1996. Proposition 215 sought to "encourage the federal and state governments to implement a plan to provide for the safe and affordable distribution of marijuana to all patients in medical need of marijuana."

State rules would help law enforcement distinguish the good actors from the bad, leading to improved public safety. Rules would help stem the tide of rural murders, armed robberies and public corruption, allowing for a more effective use of limited law enforcement dollars. Local governments would be able to better respond to complaints related to cannabis grown and sold in their communities.

One irony of the status quo is that tax evasion deprives governments of the funds it needs to enforce laws already on the books.

As an elected tax official, it's my job to ensure the collection of taxes owed the state. Cash-based businesses are very difficult for the Board of Equalization to audit, especially when we can't get records of their wholesale transactions. It's also a safety risk to have dispensaries pay their taxes by carrying duffel bags into state offices with hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash.

A new Board of Equalization effort, the Cannabis Compliance Pilot Project, aims to determine the scope of noncompliance and develop strategies to address compliance barriers. A report is due in November.

We won't solve this problem on our own.

The good news is state lawmakers appear ready to do their part. A recent bipartisan vote for Assembly Bill 266 is a sign that lawmakers see the need for a regulatory structure.

The federal government must also act. Under current federal law, it's nearly impossible for those in the medical marijuana industry to have bank accounts.

Many conservatives fear that regulating the medical marijuana industry will pave the way for full legalization of recreational marijuana — I disagree. One can oppose recreational marijuana, as I do, while recognizing the reality of the current situation. To improve public safety and tax compliance, we need greater state structure and oversight.

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News Moderator: Jacob Redmond 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Time to regulate medical marijuana | The Sacramento Bee
Author: George Runner
Contact: Contact The Sacramento Bee or Sacbee.com | Sacramento, CA The Sacramento Bee
Photo Credit: Berkeley Patient's Group
Website: Breaking News, Sports, Weather & More | The Sacramento Bee & Sacbee.com The Sacramento Bee
 
Whatever happened to the law that prohibits the taxation of medicine. This is so much bullish!t. I nominate George Runner as dog poo collector. Vote this guy OUT citizens.

GEORGE RUNNER FOR DOG POO COLLECTOR
 
No matter how you slice it, current measures to limit and control the use of marijuana in this state are just attempts to proscribe and diminish the use of the drug. At the head of this movement to place rigid controls on the sale and use of marijuana is Gavin Newsome, former mayor of San Francisco and a man of unfettered political ambition in the state of California. He will do anything for political advancement in his posture as a forward thinking liberal. Enough gameplaying with this issue. Legalize it and be done with the nonsense of legislating it to the point where the drug's use and availablity is significantly diminished. The article in question goes on and on with the traditional crap about the potential dangers of a benign medication that has been impugned and maligned for the last 75 years by the tobacco, alcohol and pharmaceutical industries. Reasonable regulation is acceptable and called for, but thus far the majority of limiting legislation has only one goal in mind. Make it hard to get and hard to use, and protect the economic fiefdom of purportedly 'legitimate' recreational substances. This conservative authored article uses terms such as "rural murders, armed robberies and public corruption" to make its brief and it is simply more of the same libelous nonsense that has been used for years to discredit and prohibit the use of marijuana.
 
WHAT AN ASSHOLE !! More Government control.."encourage" Federal and state Governments to Implement a plan?
"Oh Ya" governments have the BEST PLANS!!
"Tax evasion" deprives Governments of funds needed to implement MORE LAWS. no shit.
but so does spending like drunken sailors. How about this? leave shit alone, it works. AND BALANCE YOUR SPENDING AND STOP BENDING US OVER FOR MONEY, You elected piece of scummy trash, and shame on everyone who voted for this troll.
I need to calm down now and medicate myself with some homegrown, tax exempt medication
 
This "Elected Official" is Bull Shit. His sources are,
"Concerned citizens, local government officials, rural law enforcement officers, federal officials, anti-drug crusaders and medical marijuana industry insiders".
He Should let the people of this state make some decisions. He is a wanna be drug Czar.
 
Not one person, he mentioned, is from the other side of the argument! It is filled with reefer madness crap! A good elected official would talk to all of the people, including conservative retired physicians, like me! We can be honest, not living in fear that our lives be ruined and driven from medical practice!
 
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