The Oklahoman

NJ mayor seeks pot privilege for city

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. —It maybe just a pipe dream, but Atlantic City's mayor is ready to delve into high finance.

Now that New Jersey voters have approved recreation­al marijuana, Mayor Marty Small wants his city to be the only place in the state where it can be sold for three to five years.

Small says the city should get first dibs on tax money that recreation­al marijuana would generate because it currently gets nothing from state-imposed parking, luxury, hotel and sports betting taxes.

“This is the perfe ct opportunit­y to rectify that,” Small told The Associated Press Wednesday .“We are constantly looking for new revenue streams to offset the impact of property taxes.”

Voters across the state passed a referendum earlier this month to legalize recreation­al marijuana use statewide. The state Legislatur­e would need to act before Small's proposal could be enacted — and the likelihood of that happening appears small.

Assembly man Joe Danielsen, a Democrat from Somerset who vocally supported recreation­al marijuana, bluntly rejected Small's proposal.

“That's never going to happen,” he said. “The guiding principle is that the many should benefit, not just the few. I'd like to know why Atlantic City has an exclusive on gambling. Is that fair?”

Small countered, “Is it fair that Atlantic City gets nothing from all these state taxes? Last month, New Jersey took in $748 million worth of sports bets and we didn't get one red cent from that. We are the golden goose that finances a lot of the state's programs, and it's time we got something.”

Danielsen said Small may have a valid point about not receiving a share of state taxes.

“But as my mother used to say, two wrongs don't make a right,” he said.

The mayor said that in addition to tax revenue from recreation­al marijuana sales, the city would experience increased tourism spending from people who would travel to the city to partake of it. He did not have financial projection­s that might result from such an exclusive franchise, largely because a tax rate for recreation­al sales remains uncertain.

The ballot question voters approved subjects marijuana to the state sales tax of 6.625%, but it' s unclear whether additional taxes would be applied.

Atlantic City already has enacted a 2% tax on medical marijuana.

The ballot question approved by voters enabled New Jersey to join the District of Columbia and 11 other states in legalizing cannabis.

Under the amendment, only those 21 and older could legally buy and use the drug.

It's unclear when cannabis will be available because legislatio­n must first be passed in order to set up the new marijuana market.

But it' s expected to move relatively quickly because the Democratle­d Legislatur­e and Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy supported legalizati­on.

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