New York Daily News

POLL: MAJORITY WANTS TO LEGALIZE POT

OK pot to close budget gap

- BY GLENN BLAIN

ALBANY — New Yorkers are high on legalizing weed as a cure for the state’s budget woes, a new poll Monday revealed.

Sixty-two percent of New York voters said they supported making marijuana use legal for people 21 and older, with only 28% opposed, according to the poll commission­ed by the Marijuana Policy Project Foundation and the Drug Policy Alliance.

The poll, conducted by Emerson College, also found that legalizing and taxing marijuana was, by far, the most popular way to erase New York’s looming budget deficit, with 60% of voters supporting it.

Between 15% and 27% of voters supported other deficit-reducing options, such as increasing sales or income taxes, increasing tolls or cutting support for public education.

Gov. Cuomo’s budget office has estimated that New York faces a $4.4 billion deficit for the 2018-19 fiscal year, which begins April 1.

“This should be a wakeup call to lawmakers: New Yorkers want their state to take a sensible, humane approach to marijuana policy,” said Landon Dais, political director of the Marijuana Policy Project of New York.

“New York should stop wasting resources punishing otherwise law-abiding residents for using a substance that is safer than alcohol,” Dais said.

Dais’ organizati­on, in a recent report, estimated that legalizati­on of marijuana would generate $183 million in state and local sales tax revenue during the first year and more than $555 million a year by 2025.

Marijuana legalizati­on, Dais added, would also provide addi-

tional revenue through licensing fees and increased economic activity, including the creation of up to 40,000 new jobs.

“This poll signals that New Yorkers favor using revenue from a legal marijuana market to address our budget deficit, and lawmakers would be wise to heed their opinion,” said Kassandra Frederique, New York State director for the Drug Policy Alliance.

Critics, however, contend legalizing marijuana would send an unwanted signal that drug use is acceptable and exacerbate the ongoing crisis of heroin and opioid addictions.

“It starts them on the road to hard-core drugs,” said New York State Conservati­ve Party Chairman Michael Long.

So far, New York has legalized only limited medical uses of marijuana

State Sen. Liz Krueger (DManhattan) has sponsored legislatio­n to legalize recreation­al use of marijuana, but the bill has repeatedly stalled in the GOP-controlled Senate.

Cuomo has said he opposes legalizing recreation­al use of marijuana.

Krueger, however, believes momentum is gradually building, and “it’s only a matter of time” before legal marijuana becomes a reality in New York.

As more and more states have legalized marijuana, lawmakers are learning that it is not something to be feared, Krueger said. It’s especially significan­t, she added, that Massachuse­tts is among the states that has legalized marijuana, with pot sales expected to begin in that state sometime next year.

“When it’s on your border and people can cross over and get it, you start to wonder what does it mean for New York State not to legalize it,” Krueger said.

New Jersey’s incoming Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, has also promised to push legislatio­n legalizing marijuana.

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 ??  ?? If state pols heed these demonstrat­ors and a new poll, New Yorkers may be able to buy pot (inset below) for recreation­al use. But the plan faces resistance from Gov. Cuomo, among others.
If state pols heed these demonstrat­ors and a new poll, New Yorkers may be able to buy pot (inset below) for recreation­al use. But the plan faces resistance from Gov. Cuomo, among others.

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