Santa Fe New Mexican

Pot tax revenue doesn’t materializ­e for California youth

- By Michael R. Blood

LOS ANGELES — When California voters legalized marijuana, they were promised that part of the tax revenue from pot sales and cultivatio­n would be devoted to programs to teach youth how to avoid substance abuse.

But more than a year after the start of sales, there’s no money for those programs, and questions are looming about how they might operate in the future.

The absence of funding is “really sad and disappoint­ing,” said Robert Harris, a policy adviser and lobbyist for the California Society of Addiction Medicine.

Equally troubling, he added, is the lack of clear guidelines for how that funding would be divvied up and how programs would be run and evaluated.

A report last week from the state Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office suggested that the Legislatur­e might have to address gaps in the law, even pointing out that the term “youth” isn’t defined.

More needs to be done “so we don’t roll it out and throw it away,” Harris said.

Propositio­n 64, which voters approved in November 2016, legalized pot sales for adults 21 and over and included a section requiring a slice of the tax revenue go toward youth education to prevent “substance use disorders” and “harm from substance use.”

The absence of dollars so far can be explained by two factors: The effect of rigid rules that came with Propositio­n 64 and the slow start to sales that have brought in far less tax money than initially expected.

The law establishe­d a long list of requiremen­ts for how to spend cannabis tax money — basically, who gets it, in what order and how much.

Under those rules, most of the $150 million in tax money that has come in so far has been devoted to startup costs and operations for state regulation.

A second tier of funding, about $25 million of the total, is slated for university research, the California Highway Patrol and local grants that could include such things such as mental health treatment and legal services.

Funding for youth-education programs would be included in a third tier of spending, and so far there hasn’t been enough tax money to provide that share, officials say.

It’s possible that by the end of the state’s fiscal year in June, enough pot sales will take place to pump money into those programs. And by the following year, state analysts expect sales to increase and funding for those programs to soar to $160 million.

Meanwhile, the state analyst’s report outlined a series of gaps in the law that it said left broad questions about how those programs would work.

Among them: The law is silent on an oversight process to ensure money is being spent properly and delivering results.

“Numerous issues still need resolution,” the report said.

At a state legislativ­e hearing Wednesday, Clint Kellum of the state Finance Department warned that it remains difficult to predict with confidence how much tax money will come in from pot sales and cultivatio­n.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? A customer takes a sniff from a selection of marijuana strains in October at a cannabis festival in Adelanto, Calif.
AP FILE PHOTO A customer takes a sniff from a selection of marijuana strains in October at a cannabis festival in Adelanto, Calif.

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