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Tom Dean would allow both of these outrageous taxes on marijuana

Phoenix Mayor proposing hefty tax on marijuana businesses for public safety funding

z_98765.php created October 01, 2018
  Sadly under the Safer Arizona initiative that marijuana criminal defense attorney Tom Dean wrote, both of these outrageous taxes on marijuana proposed by Phoenix Mayor Thelda Williams would be legal.

This is exactly why the RAD initiative says the government can't tax marijuana.

The letter states the occupational license tax in method would cost $50 per square foot for the cultivation and infusion sites and $280 per square foot used for retail or public consumption space.
The Phoenix tax of $50 per square foot would be $5,000 a year on a tiny 10 foot by 10 foot area used to grow marijuana.

On a small 1,000 square foot home used to grow marijuana, the $50 a square foot tax tax would be $50,000 a year.

The Phoenix tax of $280 per square foot would be $28,000 a year on a tiny 10 foot by 10 foot area used to smoke or sell mairjuana.

On a small 1,000 square foot home used to smoke or sell marijuana, the $280 a square foot tax tax would be $280,000 a year.

Another option would be 17 percent of the business gross receives from the previous 12 months or a flat rate tax.
Remember the Boston Tea Party was over a lousy 3/4 percent tax or 3% tax on tea depending on which version of the story is correct.

Phoenix wants to slap a 17% tax on businesses that sell marijuana.

Under the Safer Arizona initiative that me, Alex and Dave wrote neither of the taxes would be legal.

In that version of the Safer Arizona initiative we said the government couldn't put a tax on marijuana that was greater than the sales tax on food.

And we said the government couldn't pass zoning regulations that applied only to marijuana businesses.

Of course I was kicked off of the Safer Arizona board of directors for complaining that Tom Dean was turning the Safer Arizona initiative into a mini-version of the evil Marijuana Policy Project Prop 205 initiative.

The Safer Arizona initiative was based on the RAD marijuana initiative and on the Jack Herer initiative.

Under the RAD marijuana initiative neither of these outrageous taxes would be allowed.

The RAD marijuana initiative follows the article.


Source Also see: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Phoenix Mayor proposing hefty tax on marijuana businesses for public safety funding

By: Courtney Griffin

POSTED: SEP 28 2018 07:53PM MST

VIDEO POSTED: SEP 28 2018 09:46PM MST

UPDATED: SEP 28 2018 09:47PM MST

PHOENIX (KSAZ) -- Should marijuana dispensaries, cultivation sites, retail business locations and public consumption lounges be subjected to a tax to help fund Phoenix Police and Fire Departments?

Phoenix Mayor Thelda Williams announced this idea yesterday to the city manager.

Fox 10's Courtney Griffin spoke with a small business owner and customers who say they support public safety, but also believe there is a better way to go about this.

The idea is to tax medical dispensaries to help fund public safety.

"I have no problem with that. Firemen and police don't have a problem showing up to our house when we need help, do they?" said a customer.

Mayor Williams says the police and fire departments are strained and unable to keep up with the public safety needs due to financial constraints.

"I'm very sympathetic and understand there is a deficit, and we need to cover it, and I'm happy to be a part of the solution. I just don't think the way they are doing it is far. We shouldn't carry the whole burden.

But Lilach Power, owner of Giving Tree Wellness, say sit can't be funded by small business owners, and the cost would be outrageous, forcing them to possibly leave the city or turn around and thrown that additional cost on patients.

"We are going to have to roll it on 178,000 patients in the whole state to cover for this. Some cultivation will just leave the city. Patients will go to other cities because it's going to be cheaper," Power said.

In this letter from the mayor to the city manager, there are several options on how the money would be collected. The letter states the occupational license tax in method would cost $50 per square foot for the cultivation and infusion sites and $280 per square foot used for retail or public consumption space.

Another option would be 17 percent of the business gross receives from the previous 12 months or a flat rate tax.

"On the cultivation side, it can get up to almost a $1 million, $980,000 a year. It depends on the size of your cultivation. There's just no way to compete in the market if this is the kind of taxes you need to pay. They're just going to leave. We won't be able to do it," Power said.

The mayor states that as it stands now aside from some fees to the Arizona Department of Health Services, the dispensaries are only asked to pay sales tax on their retail sales activities at 2.3 percent.

The letter also mentions that if there is an emergency at a cultivation or production site, first responders have an increased risk responding due to lack of information on the current layouts, hazardous chemicals and materials because of restricted regulatory inspections that the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act enforces.

"I'm all for helping the community. I have several friends who are firefighters, you know, police officers. So I need as much help as they get get, however, this is a place where people to come from medicine and let's not exploit that. Let's meet somewhere in the middle," said a patient.

We reached out to the mayor's office, but they declined our request to comment.

Phoenix dispensary owners are gathering for an emergency meeting tomorrow to discuss their options.

As for Mayor Williams' idea, it will be presented to the city council on Tuesday and dispensary owners plan to be at that meeting.


 

The RAD initiative won't allow any of these taxes

  Source

Initiative to re-legalize Marijuana & Hashish in Arizona

100% complete re-legalization of marijuana & hashish 1. The government shall recognize that marijuana abuse is NOT a criminal problem but a medical problem.

2. The government shall NOT tax, regulate, or pass any laws governing the use of marijuana.

3. The government shall NOT assist any other government entities, such as Federal, foreign, world, Native American or state governments in enforcing any laws against marijuana.

4. The government shall NOT pass any guide lines, rules, regulations or laws discriminating against people or entities that use marijuana. Such as laws that limit a marijuana user's guns rights or parental rights.

5. Any person convicted of any marijuana offense in the past shall automatically have their criminal record cleared of those charges and automatically receive a full pardon for those charges.

6. Any person arrested for any marijuana offense in the past who accepted a plea bargain for reduced charges shall automatically have their criminal record cleared of those reduced charges and automatically receive a full pardon for those reduced charges.

7. Any government employee, agent, elected official, judge, law enforcement officer or prosecutor that arrests a person, violates a person's rights, passes a law or issues a ruling, guideline or edict that that interferes with a person's marijuana use shall be personally and civilly liable to each person for each incident for a minimum of $1 million in damages or 10 times the actual amount of damages whichever is greater. There shall be no immunity to a person who claims to be "acting in good faith" or for any other reason.

8 . All government courts shall accept cases involving marijuana use, and decide the case based on the oral, written, or other contracts of the parties involved. Courts may not refuse cases by saying that marijuana is illegal under Federal law, international law, or other laws.

9. Definitions: For this initiative the word "marijuana" refers to any form of marijuana, cannabis, hashish or hemp and includes concentrated forms such as THC, CBD, hash, hash oil, wax, shatter and all other forms. This includes any form of "marijuana use": recreational, religious, medical, commercial, industrial or any other use. This includes all parts of any plant of the genus cannabis, whether growing or not, the seeds of such plant, the resin extracted from any part of a plant of the genus cannabis; and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture or preparation of such plant, its seeds or its resin; and every compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture or preparation of such resin or tetrahydrocannabinol. Shall include, but not be limited to; all paraphernalia for marijuana use, such as pipes, bongs, cigarette papers or dabbing tools.

10. "Marijuana use" shall be defined as; but shall not be limited to: using, smoking, vaping, eating, consuming, drinking, snorting, transdermal delivery, injecting, sale, transfer, growth, cultivating, manufacture, processing, cooking, production, storage, possession, giving legal advice, transportation, or importation of marijuana.

 


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