TBD

TBD on Ning

California would become the first state in the nation to legalize marijuana for recreational use under a bill introduced Monday by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano of San Francisco.

The proposal would regulate marijuana like alcohol, with people over 21 years old allowed to grow, buy, sell and possess cannabis - all of which is barred by federal law.

Ammiano, a Democrat in his third month as a state lawmaker, said taxes and other fees associated with regulation could put more than a billion dollars a year into state coffers at a time when revenues continue to decline.

He said he thinks the federal government could soften its stance on marijuana under the Obama administration.

"We could in fact have the political will to do something, and certainly in the meantime this is a public policy call and I think it's worth the discussion," Ammiano said. "I think the outcome would be very healthy for California and California's economy."


A spokeswoman for the Drug Enforcement Agency in Washington, D.C., declined to comment on the proposal. A White House spokesman referred to a statement on a question-and-answer section of an Obama transition team blog that says the president "is not in favor of the legalization of marijuana."

While Californians have shown some tolerance for marijuana, such as use for medical conditions with voters' passage of Proposition 215 in 1996, the proposal will face tough opposition in Sacramento.

A lobbyist for key police associations in the state called it "a bad idea whose time has not come."

"The last thing our society needs is yet more legal intoxicants," said John Lovell, who represents the California Peace Officers' Association, California Police Chiefs Association and California Narcotic Officers' Association. "We've got enough social problems now when people aren't in charge of all five of their senses."

But Ammiano's proposal has the support of San Francisco Sheriff Michael Hennessey, who said the idea "should be the subject of legislative and public debate."


It also has the backing of Betty Yee, who chairs the state Board of Equalization, which collects taxes in California. An analysis by the agency concluded the state would collect $1.3 billion a year from tax revenues and a $50-an-ounce levy on retail sales if marijuana were legal.

The analysis also concluded that legalizing marijuana would drop its street value by 50 percent and increase consumption of the substance by 40 percent.

A spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, which advocates for reform in marijuana laws and is backing Ammiano's proposal, said any expected increase in consumption is a "false notion."

"They are making an intuitive assumption that a lot of people make that really does not have that much evidence behind it," said Bruce Mirken, the group's spokesman, who predicted it could take up to two years before the idea wins legislative approval.

"Don't tell me that doing something like (this) proposal is going to introduce another drug into society. That's a load of bull."

Tags: california, legal, marijuana

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Replies to This Discussion

I'm in Missouri; my primary doctor, my rheumatologist, considers me seriously ill with chronic diseases that are incurable. I want medicinal marijuana. Now.
I'd like to see not only medical use but recreational use legalized. It doesn't make people violent and stupid like alcohol. And think of all the jobs it would create and the income on taxes for our government. I'd bet we'd be out of the hole financially speaking. Not to mention the re-use of hemp which our founding fathers used and the natives of this land before them.
I would say maybe California needs to get on the band wagon and force Washington to recognize the 10th amendment..
they are one of the few that have NOT drafted legislation dictating to the fed's that its the State's rights to regulate all things not specifically mentioned in the constitution. and last I read it. it made no mention of marijuana. Other states are worried about their guns and California wants to go to pot. thats fine with me. But as far as I know. The fed's have no say in it what so ever. If California wants to smoke pot or Alaska and the other 30 states drafting 10th amendment declarations want to keep their guns. It seems there is some common ground for the 10th amendment. We all want the feds to butt out of our states rights....
Yeah, I'd like to keep the feds out of my decision to smoke pot or not but, unlike guns, pot doesn't kill.
Guns don't kill either
people do
Still, I'd rather have someone come at me with a bag of weed...
Sounds good to me too.
Peace
Tell it like it is Boothby I'll welcome anyone any time of the day who's coming at me with a bag of weed.
That's the Charlton Heston NRA babble coming out. I knew you would use that psycho talk motto.
Makes sense to me. Think of the tax money that could be collected. Tax it like alcohol or cigarettes. Maybe we could start to join the 20th century like so many other countries.
THUMBS UP DUDE!!!!!!!!

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