Source: https://newrevenue.org/2015/06/16/early-lessons-for-future-pot-laws-chris-laws/
Timestamp: 2019-04-24 10:10:35+00:00

Document:
1. States Should Avoid Price-Based Taxes Adopted by Colorado and Washington Because of the Potential for a Price Collapse; 2. Recreational Marijuana Taxes Should Start Low and Gradually Increase as the Market Matures; 3. States Should Structure Taxes to Help Businesses Make Deductions on Federal Taxes; 4. States Should Implement Policies to Reduce Competition Between Recreational and Medical Marijuana Markets.
In the states that have legalized marijuana, voters backing marijuana legalization initiatives expressed a desire to replace the black market with a legal structure that taxes and regulates its sale, meaning that the new recreational market must effectively compete on price with the black market while still providing promised revenue to the states. Therefore, the way in which recreational marijuana is taxed will largely determine if these competing goals are met. Economists at the RAND Corporation believe that as production is scaled up, “[t]he pretax retail price of marijuana will substantially decline, likely by more than 80 percent.” As a result, the “price that consumers face will depend heavily on taxes, the structure of the regulatory regime, and how taxes and regulations are enforced.” Therefore voters, lawmakers, and regulators face the challenging prospect of implementing just the right balance of regulation and taxation that allows for legal marijuana to be sold at a competitive price and satisfies the goal of generating revenue.
Complicating matters further, some states must do more than compete with the black market. Many states already have established medical marijuana programs that are popular among recreational users as well as legitimate medical patients, sometimes referred to as the “gray market.” If a medical marijuana market is already established, widely accessible, and dispensary sales are taxed at a substantially lower rate than recreational sales, there may be little incentive for these consumers to migrate from the medical market to the recreational market. While pre-existing medical marijuana markets improve on many of the worst features of the black market, Colorado and Washington are experiencing the undesirable outcome of having a loosely regulated medical market alongside a highly regulated and more expensive recreational market. In addition to the recreational businesses losing a large share of the market to medical businesses, states miss out on much-needed tax revenue if medical marijuana programs are too lax and allow recreational users to avoid taxes.
For jurisdictions that have recently legalized marijuana such as Alaska and Oregon, and also those that are considering a tax and regulate approach to recreational marijuana in the near future, the experience in Colorado and Washington provides early lessons in establishing a new legal market to compete with the existing black and gray markets. While the laws, regulations, and markets with respect to legal marijuana are rapidly changing and the black market, because of its very nature, is difficult to analyze, there are some clear recommendations that can be made. First, states should consider taxing marijuana by weight rather than “ad valorem,” or based on price. Second, states should impose taxes that start out low, when recreational marijuana is likely to be expensive, and gradually increase over time as production costs fall. Third, states should attempt to structure taxes on recreational marijuana in a manner that allows business to make maximum deductions on federal taxes, a problem largely unforeseen by legalization activists. Lastly, states with pre-existing medical marijuana programs must find ways to ensure that only sick individuals benefit from tax-advantages.
Marijuana is a significant source of income for individuals and groups involved in other criminal activities. For example, much of the violence escalating on the Mexican border revolves around the actions of Mexican drug cartels fighting over profits from marijuana sales. In fact, former U.S. Drug Czar John Walters told the Associated Press in 2008 that marijuana is the biggest source of income for these ruthless narcoterrorist organizations. Whether they are large-scale drug cartels or small-town street gangs, the vast supply and demand surrounding marijuana will ensure they have a constant stream of profits to subsidize other illegal activities. Regulating marijuana like alcohol would eliminate this income source and, in turn, eliminate the violence and turf battles associated with the illegal marijuana market.
Since marijuana remains illegal under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), another motive for states to incentivize the optimal price point in the recreational market is that doing so may be necessary to ward off unwanted federal intervention in the states’ marijuana businesses. The Department of Justice issued guidance to federal prosecutors instructing them to prioritize enforcement if black market activities surface as a result.  Specifically the guidance prioritizes “[p]reventing revenue from the sale of marijuana from going to criminal enterprises, gangs, and cartels…[p]reventing violence and the use of firearms in the cultivation and distribution of marijuana,” and “[p]reventing the diversion of marijuana from states where it is legal under state law in some form to other states.” As Kleiman noted, if taxes are set too high, the effect on price could boost black market activities and related violence inside of the state. But if taxes are set too low, the price could incentive diversion of legally grown marijuana to neighboring states. Both of these outcomes could invite increased federal enforcement of the CSA.
With respect to taxes, RAND concluded that “[i]t is unlikely that any plan will get marijuana revenue right at first, and the market is likely to evolve and prove tumultuous beyond anyone’s ability to predict.” In any case, policymakers in states that have not yet legalized marijuana have the advantage of studying the markets in Colorado and Washington to apply lessons learned in those states to their own.
This section summarizes the current issues of marijuana law and policy in Colorado, Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Washington D.C., and California with regard to the taxation of marijuana markets, challenges faced by policymakers, and policy changes being considered and implemented.
With proponents of Proposition AA promising $67 million of additional revenue for the state, with the first $40 million from excise taxes “earmarked for public-school construction,” Colorado voters overwhelmingly passed the 25% tax rate in late 2013, two months before legal marijuana sales began in Colorado on January 1, 2014, setting the overall tax rate at 27.9% after factoring in the state’s 2.9% traditional sales tax. The tax rate on medical marijuana is only subject to the 2.9% sales tax.
Studies of the marijuana market in Colorado show that converting consumers from the black markets and medical marijuana “gray” market to the legal recreational market remains a challenge. The Colorado Department of Revenue estimated in mid-2014 that the total demand, including the recreational, medical, and black market, for marijuana among 21-year-old adults and older to be 130.3 metric tons (approximately 287,262 pounds) in 2014. A follow up report indicates that legal sales – medical and recreational – totaled 148,000 pounds of flowering marijuana in 2014,  meeting just over half of the estimated total demand. The majority of the legal marijuana sold was medical at 109,578 pounds versus 38,660 pounds of recreational.
…that conversions from medical to retail consumption is relatively low. Instead, retail supply of marijuana is growing, while medical marijuana is relatively constant. This may indicate that medical consumers would rather pay the medical registration fees as opposed to the higher tax rates, or that there are currently relatively few retail outlets compared to medical centers. Therefore, the retail demand is derived primarily from out-of-state visitors and from consumers who previously purchased from the Colorado black and gray markets.
Colorado Governor Hickenlooper signed two bills that aim to address the problems that the medical and black markets pose to the recreational markets. Senate Bill 14 enacted on May 18th, 2015 will increase oversight on large medical marijuana cultivators to prevent diversion to the black market and directs the state health agency to reform physician guidelines for medical marijuana recommendations. In an effort to combat black market dealers who are undercutting recreational sales, Hickenlooper signed a bill on June 4, 2015 that would permanently lower the recreational sales tax from 10% to 8% beginning in July 2017.
Initiative 502 levied a 25% excise tax on each transfer in the supply chain, wholesale sales between producers and processors, wholesale sales between processors and retailers, and on retail sales. After state and locals taxes are included, Moody’s Investors Service found that the effective tax rate on marijuana sales equaled 44%. Again the state’s Liquor Control Board is required to “regularly review the tax levels…and make recommendations to the legislature as appropriate regarding adjustments that further the goal of discouraging use while undercutting illegal market prices.” It’s unknown whether these specific mandates, built into the law to consider the effect of policies on the black market will reach the desired outcome without creating a regulatory environment that the industry feels is too burdensome.
In 2015, Washington took steps to level the playing field between the recreational marijuana market and the medical and illegal markets. In a significant move to reform the medical marijuana market and merge it with the recreational system, Governor Inslee signed legislation on April 24th, 2015, that will eliminate large unregulated medical dispensaries, establish voluntary patient registries, and temper unregulated medical marijuana production. The legislation will also subject medical marijuana products to the same stringent testing and labeling requirements that exist for recreational marijuana.
The legislature is also moving towards reforming the way recreational marijuana is taxed. Finding that the “implementation of [Initiative 502] has established a clearly disadvantaged regulated legal market with respect to prices and the ability to compete with the unregulated medical dispensary market and the illicit market,” the Washington State House of Representative passed legislation on April 10th, 2015 to reform the tax treatment of retail marijuana. The legislation “intends to reform the current tax structure for the regulated legal marijuana system to create price parity with the large medical and illicit markets with the specific objective of increasing the market share of the legal and highly regulated marijuana market.” House Bill would replace the three separate 25% excise tax levies on production, processing, and retail with one excise tax of 30% on the retail sale only, which would have the likely effect of lowering input costs for producers and processors, eventually bringing down the overall price. A competing bill passed by the Senate would put in place the same reformed tax structure but set the rate slightly higher at 37%.
Oregon’s voters proposed taking a different approach to taxing recreational marijuana from that of Colorado and Washington. They eschewed an “ad valorem” excise tax based on percentage of sale and instead opted for a tax based on weight levied on producers at $35 per ounce for flowers, $10 per ounce for leaves, and $5 for each immature plant. However, despite the statement of a key state senator co-chairing the Joint Committee on Implementing Measure 91 favoring “very low” tax rates at the start of legal marijuana sales due to concerns about black market competition,  the Oregon legislature is poised to replace the voter-approved weight-based tax with a 20% sales tax.
While the legalization of marijuana of marijuana in Oregon is set to take effect on July 1, 2015, recreational sales are not expected to begin until 2016. However, the state’s top Republican state senator proposed allowing recreational sales to begin sales early at medical marijuana dispensaries out of concern “that the state needs to move quicker to provide an alternative to the black market once marijuana becomes legal on July 1.” The Oregon legislature may vote a measure that allows recreational users to buy marijuana at medical retailers beginning in October 2015.
Alaskan lawmakers and policymakers are working to implement Measure 2 passed in November 2014, which mandates the state government to develop and issue regulations for a recreational market during a nine-month period that began on February 24, 2015. The state legislature passed a bill on April 19th that would create a specialized Marijuana Control Board to implement legalization. Similar to the taxation system established by Oregon, Alaska will levy a weight-based $50 per ounce excise tax on the sale or transfer of marijuana from a cultivation facility to a retail store or product manufacturing facility as opposed to the “ad-valorem” taxes levied by Colorado and Washington.
In contrast to the four state jurisdictions that legalized marijuana, the District of Columbia’s Initiative 71 passed on November 4, 2014 did not establish a regulated market for marijuana due to local rules that do not “allow ballot measures to impact the city’s budget.” Initiative 71 legalizes the use and possession of marijuana and allows residents to grow up to six plants in their homes. DC activists and politicians that supported the legalization initiative expected the DC Council to pass a more comprehensive tax and regulate bill that would establish a functioning legal market. But instead, Congress, which has the power to specify how the District of Columbia spends money, effectively blocked the city from spending any funds to establish a tax and regulate system that would have created a legal market to compete with the black market.
Although home growing could help siphon some demand away from the black market, it might not ever win a large market share. Black-market marijuana could be just too cheap and available for the opportunity to grow one’s own to appeal to many customers. Grow-your-own plus sharing (also known as grow and give) offers little opportunity for the government to generate revenue and provides less scope for enforcing product quality and labeling standards; however, regulations are indeed a possibility (see Chapter Six for further discussion). There is also some risk of enabling illegal commercial production, particularly if the limits on home production are set too high. Enterprising entrepreneurs could distribute production across friends’ houses, with each house staying below the threshold limit, and aggregate the production into (illegal) wholesale quantities only when it was time to harvest the marijuana and ship it to market.
While Congress has effectively boosted the black market in Washington, DC by preventing the city from establishing a recreational market alongside of legalization, more people are taking advantage of the city’s small medical marijuana market. In July 2014, the D.C. council redefined the medical conditions qualifying patients for medical marijuana from a restrictive list of serious condition to “any condition for which treatment with medical marijuana would be beneficial, as determined by the patient’s physician.” As a result, the number of people seeking a doctor’s approval to buy medical marijuana from dispensaries has tripled to 2,700 since the legislation was passed. However, there is a shortage of supply for the marijuana patient community that is keeping the price per ounce at around $550 compared to a $350 street price. The supply shortage of medical marijuana is attributable to current regulations limiting suppliers to the three approved dispensaries growing 1,000 plants.
California is discussed in this section because it is often cited as one of the next states most likely to legalize marijuana in 2016 election, and its actions will be highly influential for other states. One of the biggest challenges for policymakers will be confronting the state’s loosely regulated medical marijuana market, which the state’s Blue Ribbon Commission on Marijuana Policy acknowledged as “a quasi-legal recreational market.” In California, the “medical system is among the least restrictive in terms of qualifying medical conditions.” In the event that medical marijuana will be subject to lower taxes than recreational, “people who are not sick should be discouraged from seeking medical access to marijuana for the purpose of avoiding paying taxes.” The report also notes the unique challenge in California because “a very large number of people” are “accustomed to recreational use at medical prices.” A new recreational system may not function unless the state finds a way to attract those who purchase from the medical market.
If eliminating the black market is one of the primary policy goals of the growing legalization movement, there are several lessons that can be learned from the experience in Colorado and Washington about methods to tax recreational marijuana as well as addressing a potentially competing medical marijuana market.
States Should Avoid Price-Based Taxes Adopted by Colorado and Washington Because of the Potential for a Price Collapse.
Arguably, implementing a price-based tax for recreational marijuana was a major mistake by Colorado and Washington. In considering how to tax the production and sale of marijuana, states should now choose a weight-based tax over a price-based tax because of the likely price fluctuations that will take place as the new recreational market is established. While both approaches have advantages and disadvantages, the price-based tax is most problematic for a new industry trying to beat the black market.
Pat Oglesby, a former chief tax counsel of the Senate Finance Committee who advises states on marijuana taxation, explained in his testimony before the Oregon state legislature, “[t]axing by price means taxes are high when they should be low, and low when they should be high.” As the RAND report on marijuana legalization policy options commissioned by Vermont explains, in Colorado and Washington, a priced-based tax caused retail prices for marijuana to be “abnormally high early on” resulting in the “black market and fake medical market” retaining “market share.” After the initial phase of where it is likely that the recreational market will experience low supply and high demand accompanied by high prices for the consumer product, states should take into consideration “the likelihood that a maturing industry will achieve innovations and economies of scale” and this could cause an “after-tax price collapse.” In Washington, a version of this scenario may be playing out as shortages of marijuana have turned into an oversupply and recreational prices had dropped significantly. In addition, very low prices combined with a tax-based on price “can lead to taxes that are too low,” which may erode revenue and invite federal scrutiny if cheap marijuana is diverted across state lines. A weight-based tax will provide a stable revenue stream that does not fluctuate with price, but may have the unintended consequence of encouraging high potency. Voters in the two most recent states to legalize marijuana, Oregon and Alaska, have both elected to tax marijuana by weight, although Oregon’s legislature may replace the weight-based tax with a retail price base.
Another tax base being considered is THC potency, but as the Vermont RAND study points out, implementation would be significantly more complex than a price or weight-based approach and no state has tried to implement a potency tax base.
Recreational Marijuana Taxes Should Start Low and Gradually Increase as the Market Matures.
Another big mistake made by Colorado and Washington was levying very high taxes on marijuana businesses at the start of legalization rather than starting taxes low and gradually raising them once marijuana prices drop and the industry matures. The advantage to the approach of starting taxes low is that it would avoid the problem of initial high prices for recreational marijuana, allowing the new industry to compete with the black and gray markets, and then provide some price stability when production costs drop. The Vermont RAND study describes five options for legislatures to dynamically adjust taxes: 1) indexing the taxes to rise with inflation, 2) legislatively scheduled future tax-rate increases, 3) staggering the implementation of different types of taxes, 4) delegating rate-setting to the state executive branch, and 5) allowing state executive branch officials to adjust rates set by legislators.
A marijuana legalization bill introduced in Massachusetts in March 2015 recognized the problem of early high taxes and proposes slowly increasing an excise tax from $10 an ounce in the first year that would rise to $50 per ounce by the fourth year of legalization.
States Should Structure Taxes to Help Businesses Make Deductions on Federal Taxes.
This high federal tax rate may be stunting the recreational market in its ability to compete with the black market. According to Taylor West, the deputy director of the National Cannabis Industry Association, Section 280E “results in her clients paying more than 70 percent of their profits in taxes to the federal government.” Other analysts say their clients pay up to “90 percent of their revenue in federal taxes.” While solving marijuana businesses’ Section 280E problem would require unlikely federal legislation that either reschedules marijuana on the Controlled Substances List or modifies Section 280E of the tax code to carve out marijuana businesses, states should craft marijuana laws that assists the nascent industry with its heavy federal tax burden.
Going further, the Tax Foundation, a D.C.-based tax policy think tank, points out that “[c]reative legislators could even redefine license fees as custodial sales taxes, by requiring retailers to collect the license fees from consumers instead of charging them directly to retailers,” thereby escaping the Section 280E problem.
Another creative potential fix to the 280E problem, discussed in detail by tax expert Pat Oglesby, would be for states to levy excise taxes on the production of marijuana rather than its sale.” Currently the excise taxes in Colorado, Washington, Oregon, and Alaska are levied on the sale of marijuana, but because of Section 280E, those businesses cannot deduct state excise taxes levied on wholesale sales to retailers under §164 as a normal and ordinary business expense. But if states tax the production of marijuana, rather than its sale, it might allow for businesses, especially producers, to deduct the tax on their federal return as a cost of goods sold. Normally businesses that “make or buy goods to sell” are allowed to deduct the cost of goods sold, including some capitalized expenses such as taxes, from gross receipts. Despite the 280E prohibition on claiming federal tax deductions, the United States Tax Court has held that costs of the goods sold are deductible even for businesses trafficking in drugs that are illegal under the CSA.
In designing tax regimes that assist marijuana businesses in the face of Section 280E, state policymakers will need to be cognizant of a IRS general counsel memorandum issued in January 2015 interpreting Section 280E as prohibiting marijuana businesses from using UNICAP accounting standards outlined in IRC §263A. Instead, the IRS memo states that businesses must use “applicable inventory-costing regulations under §471 as they existed in 1982 when §280E was enacted.” Because of the confusing and rapidly changing stances on how the IRS will treat marijuana businesses that are operating legally in the states, an excise tax on production that allows marijuana businesses to deduct cost of goods sold may be an unattractive solution; at least until the IRS or courts provide further clarity on how the IRS will enforce accounting standards. The last thing state legislators will want to do is unintentionally put marijuana businesses in a more uncertain position before the IRS. The smart choice for legislators may be to shift all marijuana taxes to the buyer, as Washington may do in the future, to reduce the Section 280E burden.
States Should Implement Policies to Reduce Competition Between Recreational and Medical Marijuana Markets.
If a state legalizing recreational marijuana already has a pre-existing medical marijuana market in operation, policymakers should seek to harmonize the medical market with the new recreational market. As discussed above, one of the major impediments to the recreational marijuana markets gaining larger market share more quickly in Colorado and Washington is that many users had previously gained access to the medical markets, enjoying extremely low tax rates and prices as a result. After voters passed Amendment 61 in Colorado, the “number of patients on Colorado’s medical marijuana registry went up, not down… meaning more marijuana users there can avoid paying the higher taxes that recreational pot carries.” While many medical marijuana patients have a legitimate need for access, arguably at lower price than recreational users, states with loosely regulated medical markets will want to tighten access so that it is not an avenue for recreational users to avoid paying taxes.
The question of how to treat simultaneous recreational and medical marijuana markets for tax purposes is especially relevant in California, which will face significant challenges because of the very large medical marijuana industry that has been operating since 1996. Assuming that voters will want to reconcile a possible recreational market with the pre-existing medical market, “[o]ne major policy question is whether [recreational] taxes would apply at the same level to patients who use marijuana for medical purposes.” While taxing all marijuana at the same rate would simplify the regulatory model and increase the amount of revenue to the state, it would also raise the cost of the drug for patients with a legitimate medical need. One solution is to unify the systems but make marijuana tax exempt for patients with a doctor’s recommendation. However for this to work, it will need to be more difficult for recreational users in California to receive a medical recommendation.
Washington began to overhaul its medical marijuana market in April 2015. The significant provisions put an end to the large “collective garden” dispensaries, which provided unregulated medical marijuana to “thousands of people” and will allow patients to “buy medical-grade products at legal recreational marijuana stores that obtain and endorsement to sell medical marijuana. Alternatively, patients “will be able to participate in cooperative of up to four patients.” In addition patients that voluntarily register with the state will be exempt from sales tax but not the excise tax.
Oregon, where it is “estimated that as much as 75 percent of the medical marijuana in the state winds up going to the black market,” is taking action to increase regulations on the medical marijuana industry before its recreational system comes online. On May 27, 2015, the Oregon Senate passed a bill that “requires medical marijuana cardholders, growers, processors and dispensaries” to “be registered with the state,” puts “new limits on personal, caregiver, and collective cultivation”, and implements a tracking system for plants to prevent black market diversion.
Alaska’s legislators will likely have an easier time reconciling the state’s medical marijuana program with the new recreational market than Colorado, Washington, and Oregon. Although medical marijuana has been legal in Alaska since 1998, but use is of the program is very limited because Alaska’s law does not allow dispensaries and does not provide a legal mechanism for patients to obtain the drug.
In Washington D.C., the medical marijuana program is relatively small but growing. If Congress continues to prevent the city from implementing a tax and regulate system, one solution local officials may consider is opening the medical marijuana program to a wider group of people to give recreational users a way to purchase marijuana legally, some activists have suggested. While this route to circumvent Congress’s spending freeze seems unlikely at the present time, it could prove attractive to D.C. policymakers if the standoff with Congress is protracted for many years. The downside to this approach is that it could invite the same challenge of reigning in medical marijuana markets with high numbers of recreational users experienced by states with very liberal medical marijuana laws.
State experimentation with marijuana legalization has been largely successful despite mistakes made in Colorado and Washington. While it is still early in the process, as more states decide to implement their own recreational marijuana markets, studying the experience of the states that pioneered marijuana legalization, especially in the area of taxation, will result in smoother transitions from the black and gray markets to one that is open and regulated, providing safe and labeled products to consumers while generating revenue for state governments, and satisfying central political goals expressed by voters.
Activists are pushing recreational legalization ballot initiatives in at least five states including California, Nevada, Maine, Arizona, and Massachusetts, each of which could benefit from identifying ways to incorporate legal fixes for problems experienced in Colorado and Washington from the outset of implementation rather than chasing solutions later.
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 Laurel Andrews, Mixed Results for Alaska Marijuana Legislation as Lawmakers Wind Down, Alaska Dispatch News, Apr. 19, 2015, http://www.adn.com/article/20150419/mixed-results-alaska-marijuana-legislation-lawmakers-wind-down.
 Marijuana Policy Group, supra note 36.
 Rebecca Nelson, Here’s What Stands in the Way of Marijuana Legalization in Washington, D.C., National Journal, Sept. 25, 2014, http://www.nationaljournal.com/congress/here-s-what-stands-in-the-way-of-marijuana-legalization-in-washington-d-c-20140925.
 Aaron C. Davis, D.C. Council Backs Down on Marijuana Hearing After Attorney General Warning, Wash. Post, Feb. 9, 2015, http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/dc-politics/dc-council-warned-not-to-move-forward-on-marijuana-legalization/2015/02/09/2c1593aa-b067-11e4-827f-93f454140e2b_story.html.
 Caulkins et al., supra note 14, at 58.
 John Woodrow Cox, How D.C. Pot Legalization has Become the ‘Dealer-Protection Act of 2015,’ Wash. Post, May 17, 2015, http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/how-dc-pot-legalization-has-become-the-dealer-protection-act-of-2015/2015/05/17/5cbcd730-f28d-11e4-b2f3-af5479e6bbdd_story.html.
 Steve Hendrix, A D.C. Doctor Makes Medical Marijuana a Specialty, Wash. Post, Apr. 4, 2015, http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-dc-doctor-makes-medical-marijuana-a-specialty/2015/04/04/56dd433e-c6a7-11e4-aa1a-86135599fb0f_story.html.
 Medical Marijuana Expansion Amendment Act of 2014, D.C Laws 20 -189 (Act 20-474) (West 2014).
 A D.C. Doctor Makes Medical Marijuana a Specialty, supra note 83.
 Alison Vekshin, Marijuana Legalizaton Across U.S. May Hinge on 2016 California Vote, Bloomberg, Apr. 13, 2015, http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-04-13/pot-legalization-across-u-s-may-hinge-on-2016-california-vote.
 Blue Ribbon Comm. on Marijuana Policy, Progress Report 5, available at https://www.safeandsmartpolicy.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Blue-Ribbon-Commission-report-March-20-2015-FINAL.pdf.
 Testimony of Pat Ogelsby, Or. State Leg. J. Comm. On Implementing Measure 91, 78th Leg. Assemb., 2 (Feb 16, 2015), available at https://olis.leg.state.or.us/liz/2015R1/Downloads/CommitteeMeetingDocument/46431.
 Brad Tuttle, Legal Pot Prices Keep Getting Cheaper, Time, Apr. 22, 2015, http://time.com/money/3830017/legal-pot-cheap-prices/.
 Caulkins et al., supra note 14, at 80-84.
 Caulkins et al., supra note 14, at 88.
 Caulkins et al., supra note 14, at 89 – 92.
 H. 1561 Mass. Gen. Ct. 189th (introduced 2005), available at https://malegislature.gov/Bills/189/House/H1561.
 Californians Helping to Alleviate Med. Problems v. Comm. of Internal Revenue, 128 T.C. 14 (2007).
 Edward J. Roche, Federal Income Taxation of Medical Marijuana Businesses, 66 Tax Law 429, 437 (2013).
 James W. Kennedy, One Simple State Tax Code Tweak to Favor Marijuana Taxpayers Over Tax Evaders, Tax Foundation, Apr. 20, 2015, http://taxfoundation.org/blog/one-simple-state-tax-code-tweak-favor-marijuana-taxpayers-over-tax-evaders?mc_cid=a792bd624c&mc_eid=c12785538d.
 Katie Kuntz, Federal Tax Burns Up Recreational Pot Profit, Rocky Mountain PBS I-News, Nov. 5, 2014, http://inewsnetwork.org/2014/11/05/federal-tax-burns-up-recreational-pot-profit/.
 Terrence McCoy, How the IRS and Congress Cripple With an Obscure Decades-Old Law, Wash. Post, Nov. 5, 2014, http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/11/05/how-the-irs-and-congress-cripple-the-marijuana-industry-with-an-obscure-decades-old-law/.
 Marijuana would need to be moved from Schedule I to Schedule III or below in order to escape Section 280E, which encompasses controlled substances listed on Schedule I. See I.R.C. § 280E (2013).
 H.B. 2136 Wa. State Legis. 64th, (2015), available at http://leg.wa.gov/Senate/Committees/WM/Documents/2136%20AMS%20-%20S-3153%201.pdf.
 Email from Todd Arkley, C.P.A., Arkley Accounting Group, to Christopher Law, American University Washington College of Law Student (April 28, 2015) (on file with author).
 One Simple State Tax Code Tweak to Favor Marijuana Taxpayers Over Tax Evaders, supra note 108.
 Pat Oglesby, State Law Fix for 280E Problem?, New Revenue, Dec. 4, 2014, https://newrevenue.org/2014/12/04/wa-fix-for-280e-problem/.
 Colo. Const. art. XVIII, § 16(1)(b)(IV); Alaska Stat. Ann. § 17.38.010(b)(2) (West, Westlaw through 2014 2nd Reg. Sess.); Initiative Measure 502, 2013 Wash. Sess. Laws 29; Control Regulation, and Taxation of Marijuana and Industrial Hemp Act, 2015 Or. Laws Ballot Measure 91 §1 (West).
 State Law Fix for 280E Problem?, supra note 115.
 I.R.S. Tax Guide for Small Business, Pub. 334 (2014), available at http://www.irs.gov/publications/p334/ch06.html.
 Olive v. Comm., 139 T.C. 19, 38 n.19 (2012).
 I.R.S. Gen. Couns. Mem. 201503011 (Jan. 23 2015), available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-wd/201504011.pdf.
 See Blue Ribbon Comm. on Marijuana Policy, supra note 89.
 Washington State Revisits Rules on Use of Marijuana as Medicine, Associated Press, Apr. 25, 2015, http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/26/us/washington-state-tightens-its-law-on-medical-marijuana.html.
 S.B. 15-1014 Colo. Gen. Assemb. 70th (2015), available at http://www.leg.state.co.us/CLICS/CLICS2015A/csl.nsf/fsbillcont3/088E74361A7DCFB887257D900078263B?Open&file=014_ren.pdf.
 David Downs, Oregon Tightens Medical Pot Rules as California Watches, San Francisco Chronicle, May 27, 2015, http://blog.sfgate.com/smellthetruth/2015/05/27/oregon-tightens-medical-pot-rules-as-california-watches/.
 Jeff Richardson, Without Dispensaries, Alaska has Avoided Federal Medical Marijuana Prosecutions, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, May 22, 2011, http://juneauempire.com/state/2011-05-22/without-dispensaries-alaska-has-avoided-federal-medical-marijuana-prosecutions.
 Matt Cohen, Activists Prepare for Marijuana Legalization to Take Effect, DCist, Feb. 23, 2015, http://dcist.com/2015/02/activists_optimistic_marijuana_lega.php.
 Katy Steinmetz, These Five States Could Legalize Marijuana in 2016, Time, Mar. 17. 2015, http://time.com/3748075/marijuana-legalization-2016/.

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