Boston Herald

Taxing way to protect one’s weed

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DENVER — Colorado is considerin­g an unusual strategy to protect its nascent marijuana industry from a potential federal crackdown, even at the expense of hundreds of millions of dollars in tax collection­s.

A bill pending in the legislatur­e would allow pot growers and retailers to reclassify their recreation­al pot as medical pot if a change in federal law or enforcemen­t occurs.

It’s the boldest attempt yet by a U.S. marijuana state to avoid federal interventi­on in its weed market.

The bill would allow Colorado’s 500 or so licensed recreation­al pot growers to instantly reclassify their weed. A switch would cost the state more than $100 million a year because Colorado taxes medical pot much more lightly than recreation­al weed — 2.9 percent versus 17.9 percent.

The measure says licensed growers could immediatel­y become medical licensees “based on a business need due to a change in local, state or federal law or enforcemen­t policy.” The change wouldn’t take recreation­al marijuana off the books, but it wouldn’t entirely safeguard it either.

What it could do is help growers protect their inventory in case federal authoritie­s start seizing recreation­al pot.

The provision is getting a lot of attention in the marijuana industry following recent comments from members of President Trump’s administra­tion.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer has said there’s a “big difference” between medical and recreation­al pot.

The state had about 827,000 marijuana plants growing in the retail system in June, the latest available data. More than half were for the recreation­al market.

If the bill becomes law, Colorado would be the first pot state to take action to protect producers from a federal drug crackdown, marijuana analysts said.

 ?? AP FILE PHTO ?? POT POLICY: Matt Hart holds up a bud of Lemon Skunk, a potent strain of marijuana.
AP FILE PHTO POT POLICY: Matt Hart holds up a bud of Lemon Skunk, a potent strain of marijuana.
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