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U.S. - 1 year of legal pot & California doesn't have bustling industry it expected

S.J.B.

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U.S. - 1 year of legal pot & California doesn't have bustling industry it expected

One year of legal pot sales and California doesn't have the bustling industry it expected. Here's why
Patrick McGreevy
Los Angeles Times
December 27th, 2018

When Californians voted in 2016 to allow the sale of recreational marijuana, advocates of the move envisioned thousands of pot shops and cannabis farms obtaining state licenses, making the drug easily available to all adults within a short drive.

But as the first year of licensed sales comes to a close, California's legal market hasn't performed as state officials and the cannabis industry had hoped. Retailers and growers say they've been stunted by complex regulations, high taxes and decisions by most cities to ban cannabis shops. At the same time, many residents are going to city halls and courts to fight pot businesses they see as nuisances, and police chiefs are raising concerns about crime triggered by the marijuana trade.

Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom, who played a large role in the legalization of cannabis, will inherit the numerous challenges when he takes office in January as legislators hope to send him a raft of bills next year to provide banking for the pot industry, ease the tax burden on retailers and crack down on sales to minors.

"The cannabis industry is being choked by California's penchant for over-regulation," said Dale Gieringer, director of California NORML, a pro-legalization group. "It's impossible to solve all of the problems without a drastic rewrite of the law, which is not in the cards for the foreseeable future."

After voters legalized marijuana two years ago under Proposition 64, state officials estimated in there would be as many as 6,000 cannabis shops licensed in the first few years. But the state Bureau of Cannabis Control has issued just 547 temporary and annual licenses to marijuana retail stores and dispensaries. Some 1,790 stores and dispensaries were paying taxes on medicinal pot sales before licenses were required starting Jan. 1.

Read the full story here.
 
California probably has the most well-established black market for cannabis in the world. In such an environment, regulators really have to consider the factors that will make people switch from the black market to a legal market, especially with a huge "medical" market muddying the waters. It looks like that wasn't done properly.

This quote made me laugh:

"The smell is horrific," he said of the marijuana plants. "It's like rotting flesh. And the traffic is insane."

Now, I know that many people don't like the smell of cannabis, but I've never heard it compared to the smell of rotting flesh. =D
 
The legal market needs to be able to effectively compete against the black market by driving prices down for consumers. The problem is as simple as that. A regulatory frame-work which is too greedy or prohibitive is completely counter-productive.

Luckily I feel that the farther we get into the post-prohibition era, many of these issues will resolve themselves as more states experiment with what works & what doesn't.
 
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