The Ukiah Daily Journal

Legislator addresses pot tax reforms

Bill aims to reduce excise tax that increased this year

- By SoniaWarai­ch swaraich@times- standard.com

Tax reforms intended to encourage consumers to buy cannabis from licensed businesses are in the works in Sacramento, and local members of the industry say, if passed, the reforms would have a positive impact.

“This is specifical­ly important to small and independen­t businesses that make up the majority of the cannabis companies in Humboldt County,” Terra Carver, executive director of the Humboldt County Grower’s Alliance, wrote in a text message to the Times- Standard.

Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta (DOakland) introduced Assembly Bill 1948, which would “suspend the state’s cultivatio­n tax and reduce the excise tax from 15% to 11% for a period of 3 years,” in an effort to stymie the cannabis black market by reducing the price disparity between it and the legal market, according to a release from Bonta’s office.

“The illicit market continues to undercut businesses that are complying with state regulation­s and doing things the right way,” Bonta said in a statement.

“AB 1948 will temporaril­y reduce the tax burden on these licensed operators to keep customers at licensed businesses and help ensure the regulated market survives and thrives. Other states have shown this actually to increase overall tax revenue.”

Tax reform is this year’s highest priority in Sacramento for the grower’s alliance, Carver wrote.

“We are looking to streamline tax collection while reducing the overwhelmi­ng tax burden this industry faces,” Carver wrote.

Jeff Poel, the owner of Eureka cannabis dispensary EcoCann, said the whole idea of the white market is to make it affordable for people. The excise tax is imposed only on products like alcohol and tobacco, not on other items like food and clothes, he said.

“So excise tax equals sin tax,” Poel said. “You have to balance the amount of the sin tax versus the black market. The black market will exist as long as there’s a tax.”

Everyone agrees the excise tax is too high, Poel said, and they know that because the black market is flourishin­g.

“Originally when the legislatio­n first happened, it took a nosedive,” Poel said. “But now the black market has had a major rebound because the excise tax is too much.”

Thousands of illegal dispensari­es are still operating in Los Angeles and the Bay Area, Poel said, and the legal market can’t compete with that.

“Only 170 of the estimated 1,700 cannabis dispensari­es operating in Los Angeles are properly licensed putting lawabiding businesses at a disadvanta­ge,” Assemblyme­mber Reginald Byron Jones- Sawyer, Sr. (DSouth Los Angeles) said in a statement.

However, instead of reducing the excise tax, Poel said the state instead increased it this year. That’s because the state made inaccurate projection­s about the amount of tax that would be able to fund the industry’s regulation through the Bureau of Cannabis Control and its sister agencies, he said.

Since the agencies didn’t receive enough funding, Poel said they had the option of reducing the size of the agency or increasing taxes and they opted to do the latter.

“I’m in favor of taxation,” Poel said. “I’m in favor of excise taxes, I’m in favor of regulation, but you have to do the math and do what the math tells you to do. … Politicall­y that can be challengin­g.”

Taxation is only part of the picture though, Poel said, and the rest is enforcemen­t.

“There’s too little enforcemen­t for a variety of reasons,” Poel said.

Enforcemen­t on a state level is tough, said Sean DeVries, a cannabis businessma­n and District 2 supervisor candidate, but Humboldt County is in a different position that needs to take a more careful approach to enforcemen­t.

Cannabis has been an economic engine in the county for the past 30, 40 years, DeVries said, which hasn’t been the case for the rest of the state.

“All progress is good progress,” DeVries said. “I think this is good. It’s a great effort and they’re acknowledg­ing it’s a problem. It’s certainly not solving all the problems all at once, but wouldn’t that be incredible if that were to happen.”

The proposed reforms would give more wiggle room for unlicensed cannabis operations to pay the costs to come into compliance, Devries said, and “reducing barriers to entry is a good thing.”

At the moment, DeVries said Mendocino and Humboldt counties only have a 10% conversion rate for turning unlicensed farms to licensed ones.

“We can do better than that,” DeVries said.

 ?? SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? Andrew Stavrenos moves cannabis plants from the veg house at Santa Cruz Canna Farms to the flower house where the plants will bud.
SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE Andrew Stavrenos moves cannabis plants from the veg house at Santa Cruz Canna Farms to the flower house where the plants will bud.

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