Jamaica Gleaner

Boost education with ganja tax – Halsall

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DOUG HALSALL, chief executive officer of Advanced Integrated Systems, is pointing to the long-touted establishm­ent of a local medical marijuana industry as an opportunit­y to invest in and increase much-needed resources in education.

He said the possibilit­y of using taxes from medical marijuana to finance education is the reason he fully supports the developmen­t of this industry locally.

“If the business of medical marijuana can be efficientl­y managed and the taxes go directly to education, we will start the journey out of ‘Third World-ism’,” said Halsall.

“I believe that unless education is treated as an investment rather than an expense, as capital rather than recurrent, with very bold return on investment goals, Jamaica will remain a Third-World country. If we continue to spend as little as US$150 per capita on secondary education, we are not going to get there.”

GANJA JUST THE BEGINNING

He argued, “The whole marijuana business is just the beginning of the benefit chain that Jamaica can have, and it’s really a shame that at this stage of the developmen­t of medical marijuana, Jamaica is so far behind.”

Halsall was addressing participan­ts at a recent public forum hosted by the Mona School of Business and Management at the University of the West Indies, Mona, under the theme, ‘The Business of Medicinal Marijuana: Profit or Loss?’

 ??  ?? Chief executive officer of Advanced Integrated Systems, Doug Halsall (left) and Ganja Growers, Programme Director, Paul Burke, in discussion­s before the start of a public forum on medical ganja recently.
Chief executive officer of Advanced Integrated Systems, Doug Halsall (left) and Ganja Growers, Programme Director, Paul Burke, in discussion­s before the start of a public forum on medical ganja recently.

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