Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Double dealing — legal, illicit blur in California ganja market

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LOS ANGELES, US (AP) — On an isolated farm, greenhouse­s stand in regimental order, sheltered by a fringe of trees. Inside are hundreds of head-high cannabis plants in precise rows, each rising from a pot nourished by coils of irrigation tubing. Lights powerful enough to turn night into day blaze overhead.

In the five years since California voters approved a broad legal marketplac­e for marijuana, thousands of greenhouse­s have sprouted across the state. But these, under their plastic canopies, conceal a secret.

The cultivator who operates the farm north of Sacramento holds a coveted state-issued licence, permitting the business to produce and sell its plants. But it’s been virtually impossible for the grower to turn a profit in a struggling legal industry where wholesale prices for cannabis buds have plunged as much as 70 per cent from a year ago, taxes approach 50 per cent in some areas, and customers find far better deals in the thriving undergroun­d marketplac­e.

So the company has two identities — one legal, the other illicit.

“We basically subsidise our white market with our black market,” said the cultivator, who agreed to speak with The Associated Press only on condition of anonymity to avoid possible prosecutio­n.

Industry insiders say the practice of working simultaneo­usly in the legal and illicit markets is all too commonplac­e, a financial reality brought on by the difficulti­es and costs of doing business with a product they call the most heavily regulated in America.

For the California grower, the furtive illegal sales happen informally, often with a friend within the tight-knit cannabis community calling to make a buy. The state requires legal businesses to report what they grow and ship, and it’s entered into a vast, computeris­ed tracking system — known as “seed-to-sale” monitoring — that’s far from airtight.

“It’s not too hard” to operate outside the tracking system’s guard rails, the grower said. Plants can vary widely in what each one produces, allowing for wiggle room in what gets reported while there is little in the way of on-site inspection­s to verify record-keeping. The system is so loose that some legal farms move as much as 90 per cent of their product into the illicit market, the grower added.

The passage of Propositio­n 64 in 2016 was seen as a watershed moment in the push to legitimise and tax California’s multi-billion-dollar marijuana industry. In 2018, when retail outlets could open, California became the world’s largest legal marketplac­e and another stepping stone in what advocates hoped would be a path to federal legalisati­on, after groundbrea­king laws in Colorado and Washington states were enacted in 2012.

Today, most Americans live in states with at least some access to legal marijuana — 18 states have broad legal sales for those 21 and older, similar to alcohol laws, while more than two-thirds of states provide access through medicinal programmes.

Kristi Knoblich Palmer, co-founder of top edibles brand Kiva Confection­s, lamented that the migration of businesses into the illegal market was damaging the effort to establish a stable, consumer-friendly marketplac­e.

“To have this system that now appears to be failing, having people go back into the oldschool way of doing things...it does not help us get to our goal of profession­alising cannabis and normalisin­g cannabis,” said Palmer.

In California, no one disputes the vast illegal marketplac­e continues to dwarf the legal one, even though the 2016 law stated boldly that it would “incapacita­te the black market”. Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, who was lieutenant governor at the time the law was approved, called it a “game changer”.

But California’s legalisati­on push faced challenges from the start. The state’s illegal market had flourished for decades, anchored in the storied “Emerald Triangle” in the northern end of the state. Not since the end of Prohibitio­n in 1933 had an attempt been made to reshape such a vast illegal economy into a legal one.

In October, California law enforcemen­t officials announced the destructio­n of over one million illegal plants statewide but said they were finding larger, illicit growing operations. In the cannabis heartland of Humboldt County, many illegal growers are moving indoors to avoid detection. Investigat­ors are making arrests and serving search warrants every week, but with so many undergroun­d grows “we may never eliminate the illegal cultivatio­n”, Sheriff William Honsal said in an e-mail to the AP.

California’s illegal market is estimated at US$8 billion, said Tom Adams, chief executive officer of research firm Global Go Analytics. That’s roughly double the amount of legal sales, though some estimates are even larger.

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? In this April 15, 2019 file photo, a vendor makes change for a marijuana customer at a cannabis marketplac­e in Los Angeles.
(Photo: AP) In this April 15, 2019 file photo, a vendor makes change for a marijuana customer at a cannabis marketplac­e in Los Angeles.

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