Medical Marijuana Patient to Los Angeles Voters: No More Taxes! No on Measure M!
Tuesday vote threatens to hike taxes by 5 percent, an unfair increase for city patientsLos Angeles, CA -- A vote taking place in Los Angeles
Tuesday threatens to increase the cost of an already expensive
treatment for many medical marijuana patients in the city. Measure
M, which is one of 10 ballot measures facing the voters of Los
Angeles Tuesday, would increase taxes on medical marijuana by 5
percent, above and beyond the nearly 10 percent patients already pay
in sales tax. Patient advocates have come out in opposition to the
measure, asking the city to find other sources of revenue and to
remove the tax burden from sick patients.
"We understand that the city is under a lot of economic stress,"
said Don Duncan, the California Director at Americans for Safe
Access, the country's largest medical marijuana group, which is
strongly opposing Measure M. "But, it doesn't make sense to charge
our most vulnerable people more money for their treatment,"
continued Duncan. "Many patients have already been excluded due to
the high price of medical marijuana, let's not exclude even more."
Patient advocates dispute the two main arguments being used by
Measure M proponents for the need to impose the tax. One argument is
that the city needs money to implement regulations in order to
license distribution centers. However, patient advocates argue that
cost-recovery provisions already exist in the ordinance. Most of the
costs are expected to already be paid by the applicants and any
additional costs, advocates say, can be recouped with license fees
which do not have to be linked to the amount of medical marijuana
sold.
Another argument made by Measure M proponents is that medical
marijuana distributors don't currently pay business license fees and
that they should just pay their fair share. What is not being
mentioned by Measure M proponents is that typical city business
license fees range from one-tenth of one percent to half of one
percent, at least ten times less than the five percent being voted
on Tuesday. "Medical marijuana providers are willing to pay their
fair share, but it must be fair and it must come with the
responsibility of protecting, not attacking the city's collectives,"
said Duncan. The city has come under fire, publicly and legally, for
imposing an ordinance that has ignored due process rights. After
recently losing in Superior Court, the city is attempting to fix
their regulations, but according to patient advocates,
insufficiently so.
Although medical marijuana patients are in the "opposition camp"
with Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck and District Attorney
Steve Cooley, it is for entirely different reasons. Staunch medical
marijuana opponent Steve Cooley has raided numerous city collectives
and has campaigned on the notion that "sales" are illegal under
state law, but patient advocates argue that sales are indeed legal
and practiced all over the state and, simply, that patients should
not be singled out to bear the brunt of the city's tax burden.
Patient advocates have also long held the opinion that since
marijuana is a quasi-prescribed medication which you cannot get
over-the-counter, it should not be taxed at all.
Further information:
Measure M: http://clkrep.lacity.org/onlinedocs/2011/11-1100-s10_misc_11-19-10.pdf