Taxes from pot sales top $70 million

SEATTLE — Washington launched its second-in-the-nation legal marijuana market with just a handful of stores selling high-priced pot to long lines of customers. A year later, the state has about 160 shops open, tax revenues have soared past expectations and sales top $1.4 million per day.

And who knows — the industry might even start making some money.

Washington pot farmers, processors and retailers have complained all year that heavy state and federal tax burdens, along with competition from an unregulated medical marijuana market, have made it difficult for them to do business.

But at least some relief is here: This month, two new laws take effect, one to regulate and tax medical marijuana, and one to cut Washington’s three-level excise tax on pot to a single, 37-percent tax.

Despite some industry gripes and those tweaks to Washington’s legal pot law, which voters passed in 2012 to legalize marijuana for adults over 21, officials and legalization backers say the state’s slow and deliberate effort to regulate marijuana has been a success. A year after stores opened on July 8, 2014, here’s a look at the state of legal weed here.

The taxes

Washington’s racked up more than $250 million in marijuana sales in the past year — roughly $62 million of which constitute marijuana excise taxes. That’s beyond the state’s original forecast of $36 million. And when state and local sales and other taxes are included, the total payday for the state and local governments tops $70 million.

That’s real money, if only a drop in Washington’s $38 billion two-year budget. Colorado’s recreational sales began Jan. 1, 2014, and brought in taxes of $44 million in the first year.

The tax revenue could continue to keep climbing.

And as other states watch Washington and Colorado, the only other state with legal marijuana sales, bring in more money, they’re ever more seriously considering following suit, as Oregon and Alaska have already.

“Nobody’s counting on the revenue from cannabis sales to save us, but it has an impact,” David Zuckerman, a Vermont state senator and legalization advocate, said during a recent visit to Seattle. “The more important thing is that the sky didn’t fall in Colorado. The tidal wave hasn’t hit Seattle. They’re showing us that this can be done.”

… and the taxes

The flip side has been the burden of the taxes on pot businesses, with marijuana taxed 25 percent each time it moves from the growers to the processers to the retailers. That’s been especially tough on retailers, who must pay federal income tax on the marijuana tax they turn over to the state.

James Lathrop, who owns Seattle’s first legal marijuana shop, Cannabis City, says through the end of 2014, his estimated federal tax liability was $510,000, on top of the $778,000 he owed the state on $3.1 million in sales.

It hasn’t been much easier on the growers.

“Looking back now, it’s amazing we could be so successful and unsuccessful at the same time,” says Jeremy Moberg, a long-time black-market grower who went legal and now runs CannaSol Farms. “We’re the No. 9 grower in the state, and my bank account just seems to stagnate.”

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