Cary Tennis After Hours

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Cary Tennis

Cary Tennis
Location
San Francisco, California, USA
Birthday
September 11
Title
Since You Asked advice columnist
Company
Salon.com
Bio
Cary Tennis writes the Since You Asked advice column for Salon.com. He also leads writing workshops and runs a small publishing company. He lives in the Outer Sunset/Ocean Beach neighborhood of San Francisco with his wife Norma, who is a painter and book designer, and their two standard poodles, Lola and Ricky.

JUNE 12, 2010 10:25PM

Tax pot. Fund drug programs. That makes sense, no?

Rate: 5 Flag

Here's the interesting part of Assemblyman Tom Ammiano's Marijuana Control, Regulation, and Education Act.

Charge dealers $50 per ounce:

Chapter 2. Imposition of Fee
34011. Until a different fee is determined pursuant to Section
34032 there is hereby imposed a fee of fifty dollars ($50) per ounce
(avoirdupois) for the sale of marijuana sold at retail in this state
on or after the date determined by Section 25406 of the Business
and Professions Code.

And use the money for drug programs:

Chapter 4.
Disposition of Proceeds and Adjustment of the Fee
34031. Any amount required to be paid to the state under this
part shall be paid to the board in the form of a remittance payable
to the State Board of Equalization. The board shall transmit the
payments to the Treasurer to be deposited in the Drug Abuse
Prevention Supplemental Funding Account, which is hereby created
in the General Fund. Upon appropriation by the Legislature, the
moneys in the fund shall be expended exclusively for drug
education, awareness, and rehabilitation programs under the
jurisdiction of the State Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs,
or any successor to that agency.

 

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Comments

Type your comment below:
Good idea.
But I have no idea how to stop the downward spiral of a serious flight embarked on to escape reality by using drugs.
Egg in a pan didn't work, but I guess a case can be made that it slowed things down, maybe it kept a few people from dropping from the set of controlled recreational users and into the set of serious addicted / habituated dudes.
Like gambling and all the other 'get a rush' activities that have crossed back and forth over the line of legality, many lives get wasted by the overwhelming social, family and cultural, survival and wartime issues of our world, as we attempt to feel we can measure up in a world where 99.9999999999999% of us are anonymous to all but a special few.What's to be done, what's to be done?
This should have been done 40 years ago. I doubt that spending and funds raised on anti-drug programs is the best use of the money but maybe that's the way it has to be sold for now. We don't spend all the booze and cigarette taxes on anti respective vice programs do we?
It will make pot so expensive in legal outlets that it will still thrive in black markets and that is where the problem is. Oh I know the real problem is that we get crazy on pot and ruin our lives but education about that is all around us. So many people are telling us what NOT to do that we get confused. Some people can drink and enjoy life and some become alcoholics and ruin their life. It will be the same with pot. But getting it out of the back alleys and using the money to help the economy is what saved us after the great depression. They legalized booze. It was one of the things that brought the economy back. It needs to happen now with pot.
@Zanelle - I'm not sure when you last bought an ounce but around here the good stuff costs $300 and up. Once you allow people to grow and trade in the open, a $50 surcharge will only ensure that the price never goes below $60. There's no room in that equation for a black market.

The single most effective period on the war on drugs was in the 80s , in Los Angeles, when a decent sum of money was allocated to education and treatment, focussed on local communities. This worked, and the people running the program very nearly got the government to commit to expanding the program nation-wide. But at the very last minute the politicians decided that the 'war' narrative was a better vote-getter than the 'sympathetic' narrative, so the program was canned and all the money funneled back into guns and police.

I guarantee you that using $50 per ounce to fund education and treatment would have more positive effect in the first decade than a hundred years of prohibition.

Abrawang points out that the taxes on Tobacco and Alcohol don't get used in this way, as some sort of evidence that it's not the best use for the money. Believe me, it most definitely IS the best use of the money. If they spent the alcohol tax money on education and treatment of alcoholics, the world would be a far better place.