Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Bible Belt’s low taxes draw pot entreprene­urs

- By Sean Murphy

From their keen taste for sun-ripened pot to their first meeting at a pro-marijuana rally in college in the 1990s, everything about Chip and Jessica Baker fits the stereotype of cannabis country in Northern California, where they lived for 20 years.

Jessica, with wavy hair that falls halfway down her back, is a practicing herbalist, acupunctur­ist and aromathera­pist who teaches classes on the health benefits of cannabis. Scruffy-bearded Chip wears a jacket with a prominent “grower” patch and hosts a marijuana podcast called “The Real Dirt.” They started their pot business in rugged Humboldt County when it was the thriving epicenter of marijuana cultivatio­n.

But the couple bid goodbye to the weed-friendly West and moved somewhere that might seem like the last place they would end up — Oklahoma.

They’re part of a green rush into the Bible Belt that no one anticipate­d when Oklahoma voters approved medical marijuana less than two years ago. Since then, a combinatio­n of factors — including a remarkably open-ended law and a red state’s aversion to government regulation — have created such ideal conditions for the cannabis industry that entreprene­urs are pouring in from states where legal weed has been establishe­d for years.

Though 11 states have fully legalized marijuana for recreation­al use, Oklahoma’s medical law is the closest thing to it: Anyone with any ailment, real or imagined, who can get a doctor’s approval can get a license to buy. It’s not hard to do. Already, nearly 6% of the state’s 4 million residents have obtained their prescripti­on cards. And people who want to sell pot can do it as easily as opening a taco stand.

The Bakers have a marijuana farm about 40 miles from Oklahoma

City, along with a dispensary, nursery and gardening shop in a working-class part of town where virtually every vacant shop and building has been snapped up by weed entreprene­urs in the last year.

Unlike other states, Oklahoma did not limit the number of business licenses for dispensari­es, growers or processors.

In less than two years, Oklahoma has more than 2,300 pot stores, or the second most per capita in the U.S. behind only Oregon, which has had recreation­al marijuana sales for five years. Oklahoma has four times more retail outlets than more populous Colorado, which pioneered full legalizati­on.

“Some of these states are regulating cannabis like plutonium,” said Morgan Fox, a spokesman for the National Cannabis Industry Associatio­n, the national trade group for marijuana businesses. “And the financial burdens that are placed on licensed businesses are so onerous, that not only is it very difficult to stay in business, but it’s also very difficult for the legal, state-regulated systems to compete with the illicit market.”

Marijuana taxes approach 50% in some California communitie­s and are a factor in some business closings.

California requires a $1,000 applicatio­n fee, a $5,000 surety bond and an annual license fee ranging from $2,500 to $96,000, depending on a dispensary’s projected revenue, along with a lengthy applicatio­n process. Licenses can cost $300,000 annually.

In Oklahoma, a dispensary license costs $2,500, can be filled out online and is approved within two weeks.

Arkansas, next door to Oklahoma, also has medical marijuana, but like most such states, it allows purchase only for treatment of certain diseases, such as glaucoma or post-traumatic stress disorder.

It also requires a $100,000 surety bond.

 ?? SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jessica Baker takes a cutting of a plant at the Baker’s marijuana nursery at Baker Medica last month in Oklahoma City.
SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jessica Baker takes a cutting of a plant at the Baker’s marijuana nursery at Baker Medica last month in Oklahoma City.

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