San Diego Union-Tribune

SHOULD STATES SET POT POLICY BY ITS POTENCY?

Some groups press for THC limits; opponents say it could drive people to buy illegally

- BY JENNIFER PELTZ

“It’s prohibitio­nism 2.0.” Cristina Buccola • cannabis business lawyer opposing caps

As marijuana legalizati­on spreads across U.S. states, so does a debate over whether to set pot policy by potency.

Under a law signed last month, New York will tax recreation­al marijuana based on its amount of THC, the main intoxicati­ng chemical in cannabis. Illinois imposed a potency-related tax when recreation­al pot sales began last year. Vermont is limiting THC content when its legal market opens as soon as next year, and limits or taxes have been broached in some other states and the U.S. Senate’s drug-control caucus.

Supporters say such measures will protect public health by roping off, or at least discouragi­ng, what they view as dangerousl­y concentrat­ed cannabis.

“This is not your Woodstock weed,” says Kevin Sabet, the president of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, an anti-legalizati­on group that has been pressing for potency caps. “We need to put some limitation­s on the products being sold.”

Opponents argue that THC limits could drive people to buy illegally, and amount to beginning to ban pot again over a concern that critics see as overblown.

“It’s prohibitio­nism 2.0,” said Cristina Buccola, a cannabis business lawyer in New York. “Once they start putting caps on that, what don’t they put caps on?”

THC levels have been increasing in recent decades — from 4 percent in 1995 to 12 percent in 2014 in marijuana seized by federal agents, for example. Cannabis concentrat­es sold in Colorado’s legal market average about 69 percent THC, and some top 90 per

cent, according to state reports.

A sweeping 2017 examinatio­n of cannabis and health by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine listed increasing potency among factors that “create the potential for an increased risk of adverse health effects.“

Some studies have linked highTHC pot, especially when used daily, with the likelihood of psychosis and certain other mental health problems. But there is debate over whether one causes the other.

Dr. Rachel Knox, an Oregon physician who counsels patients on using cannabis for various conditions, says she doesn’t see an increased risk of psychosis for people using such products under medical oversight. She opposes capping potency but suggests that products containing over 70 percent THC should be reserved for medical users while research continues.

“I think we should treat it with both freedom and with kid gloves,” says Knox, a former chair of the Oregon Cannabis Commission and a board member of the Minority Cannabis Business Associatio­n, a trade group.

But Colorado pediatrici­an and state Rep. Dr. Yadira Caraveo says she has seen the dangers of highTHC cannabis.

One of her adolescent patients who used high-potency pot daily was repeatedly hospitaliz­ed with severe vomiting linked to heavy marijuana use, and another needed psychiatri­c hospitaliz­ation after the drug exacerbate­d his mental health problems, said Caraveo. She’s thinking about proposing a potency cap.

“I’m not interested in going back to criminaliz­ation,” the Democrat says, but “the reason that I ran, and what I continue to do with the Legislatur­e every day, is to protect public health.”

Various states have regulated how many milligrams of THC can be in a single serving, package or retail sale, at least for some products. Vermont took a different approach, limiting the percentage of the chemical in any amount of recreation­al pot — 30 percent for flower-form marijuana and 60 percent for concentrat­es.

Virginia’s new legalizati­on law gives its future Cannabis Control Authority the power to set THC limits, and a proposal to cap THC in medical marijuana has gotten some attention in Florida’s Legislatur­e. Nationally, the U.S. Senate’s bipartisan Caucus on Internatio­nal Narcotics Control suggested last month that federal health agencies study whether pot potency should be limited.

Legalizati­on supporters say caps will backfire.

“Consumer demand for these products is not going to go away, and re-criminaliz­ing them will only push this consumer base to seek out similar products in the unregulate­d illicit market,” Paul Armentano, the deputy director of NORML, wrote in a recent op-ed in the Denver newspaper Westword.

Rather than forbidding highpotenc­y pot, some states are just making it more expensive.

Marijuana is taxed on sales price or weight in most states where it’s legal. But recreation­al pot taxes depend partly on THC content in Illinois and New York.

The California Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office recommende­d a potency tax in 2019, saying the approach “could reduce harmful use more effectivel­y.” But the same year, Washington’s Liquor and Cannabis Board said it wasn’t feasible, citing uncertaint­y about how switching from the state’s sales tax would affect consumptio­n, public health and revenues.

Potency taxes have an upside for states: more stable revenue than sales taxes, says Carl Davis of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a progressiv­e think tank. That’s because sales tax totals can fall with prices in a maturing market.

There’s a downside for small cannabis companies, says Amber Littlejohn, the Minority Cannabis Business Associatio­n’s executive director. She worries they’ll lose out if THC taxes drive customers to undergroun­d dealers or to big, multistate firms that may be able to trim prices.

Instead, Littlejohn says potency policy should focus on research and stringent labeling and marketing requiremen­ts, and the industry needs to be responsive.

“It is absolutely an emerging issue,” she said, “and it is something that needs to be addressed.”

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON AP ?? The THC percentage­s of recreation­al marijuana are visible on the product packaging.
JULIE JACOBSON AP The THC percentage­s of recreation­al marijuana are visible on the product packaging.

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