The Oklahoman

Pot industry logs highest sales ever

- By Dale Denwalt Staff writer ddenwalt@oklahoman.com

Roll aside, toilet paper.

Oklahomans rushed to purchase another product in record volume last month, as medical marijuana dispensari­es logged enough sales to spike tax collection­s by more than 25%.

According to the Oklahoma Tax Commission, di s pen - saries remitted almost $ 9.8 million in state taxes during April. That includes traditiona­l sales taxes and the 7% medical marijuana levy.

T h e t a l l y s m a s h e s t h e

previous record of $ 7.8 million set in March, and is the highest month-tomonth increase since last summer.

An analysis of tax collection­s shows Oklahomans spent about $61.4 million on medical marijuana last month, or nearly $217 per licensed patient.

April tax collection­s began just a week after Gov. Kevin Stitt issued his “Safer at Home” directive that shuttered many nonessenti­al businesses and sent Oklahomans home from work. Stitt included marijuana dispensari­es as an essential industry, however, allowing them to remain open.

“With the stay- home order in place, and medical marijuana dispensari­es being categorize­d as essential health services, Oklahoma patients were afforded the ability to take their medicine on a more regular basis and sample a broader range of available medicines,” said Bud Scott, executive director of the Oklahoma Cannabis Industry Associatio­n.

The Tax Commission data doesn't include sales volume, so the higher tax collection­s could be influenced by higher retail prices.

However, Scott said many dispensari­es offered deals in April to boost sales.

Despite the record sales, some businesses continue to struggle as the industry matures amid intense competitio­n. Some business owners felt it unfair they were excluded from financial assistance issued to other businesses during this pandemic, as the industry is still federally illegal and therefore not eligible for federal assistance programs.

With just four months of 2020 in the books, Oklahoma's medical marijuana industry is on track to eclipse 2019 sales. Tax collection­s are already more than half of the total collected last year.

 ?? [SARAH PHIPPS/ THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? Cannabis is displayed for sale at the Okie Kush Club in Oklahoma City. Data from the Oklahoma Tax Commission showed Oklahomans bought more medical marijuana in April than any other time in the state’s short history with the industry.
[SARAH PHIPPS/ THE OKLAHOMAN] Cannabis is displayed for sale at the Okie Kush Club in Oklahoma City. Data from the Oklahoma Tax Commission showed Oklahomans bought more medical marijuana in April than any other time in the state’s short history with the industry.
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