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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Oakland voting on pot tax backed

    Oakland voting on pot tax backed

    by advocates Matthai Kuruvila, Chronicle Staff Writer

    Sunday, July 19, 2009

    At Coffeeshop Blue Sky on 17th Street in Oakland, patrons can buy lemon bars filled with 10 doses of cannabis hash with a recommendation from a doctor. Get there fast. The "edibles" here fly off the shelves.

    Walk over to the Patient ID Center, and you can buy commercial machines that can trim the leaves off of cannabis quicker than you could do with scissors.

    And over at Club Z, members of the underground club don't need prescriptions and are sampling the varieties of pot before they buy.

    People may be debating legalizing marijuana in other parts of the state and nation. But here in the nine-block cannabis district of Oakland known as Oaksterdam, it's hard to argue that it's not here already.

    "At this point, dude, seriously, let's just face the fact that everybody is smoking," said Jaime Galindo, who gave a reporter a tour of Club Z. "Bus drivers, cops - your grandma."

    Measure F has no formal campaign opposition.

    Oakland voters may take the city, the longtime epicenter of the cannabis legalization movement, to yet another threshold Tuesday. Measure F, one of four measures on a mail-only ballot due Tuesday, would establish a new 1.8 percent tax for "cannabis businesses" - believed to be the first of its kind in the nation.

    "We're moving toward being accepted like Budweiser beer," said Richard Lee, whom High Times magazine deemed in its February issue as "the mayor of Oaksterdam."

    The tax, which Lee and other advocates sought, is imposed on the gross receipts from nearly every aspect of the cultivation, production or sale of marijuana and its derivatives - all of which happen in Oaksterdam.

    The colonists of early America declared "no taxation without representation," but cannabis advocates want taxation to get representation.

    And Measure F is a harbinger.

    Polls show majorities of the state and nation favor legalization, and cannabis proponents are preparing a statewide legalization and taxation measure for the November 2010 ballot.

    Oakland's measure is expected to generate only $294,000 annually - a meager sum for the city of Oakland's $414 million budget. But the state Board of Equalization estimated last week that the state would take in $1.4 billion if a cannabis legalization bill introduced by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, were to pass.

    There are also other motivations.

    In Oaksterdam, non-cannabis businesses say the cannabis businesses help their bottom line.

    "The traffic that it brings to the neighborhood is great," said Gertha Hays, owner of A Diva's Closet, a women's clothing store.

    Brandon Anderson drove from Martinez to buy a sixteenth of an ounce for $22 and a $10 hash chocolate candy from Coffeeshop Blue Sky. (He passed on the cannabis-laden cookies, brownies, lollipops, pesto, peanut butter and jelly.)Anderson, who has a prescription for anxiety and pain relief, said he'd be happy to pay the tax, he said, because "it's a way to give back to the community and generate money."

    Local and state politicians have hardly held back on their views. Lee showed a letter in his office from Don Perata, the former state senate majority leader, who is now running for mayor of Oakland.

    "Sooner or later," Perata wrote in blue ink on the letter, "we'll get legalization."

    In Insight: Oakland's evolution from pariah to pioneer on medical marijuana. E2

    Pot, by the numbers
    Percent of Californians who support legalization and taxation of marijuana: 56

    Percent of Americans who support legalization of marijuana: 52

    Amount taxation of marijuana might bring in to the state: $1.4 billion

    Amount Measure F would bring in revenues to the city of Oakland: $294,000

    Sources, in order: Field Poll, Zogby Poll, state Board of Equalization, Oakland City Auditor Courtney Ruby

    E-mail Matthai Kuruvila at mkuruvila@sfchronicle.com.

    Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... z0LrTO1YOf

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 18R37G.DTL
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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  2. #2
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
    Join Date
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    Oakland voting on pot tax backed

    Oakland voting on pot tax backed

    by advocates Matthai Kuruvila, Chronicle Staff Writer

    Sunday, July 19, 2009

    At Coffeeshop Blue Sky on 17th Street in Oakland, patrons can buy lemon bars filled with 10 doses of cannabis hash with a recommendation from a doctor. Get there fast. The "edibles" here fly off the shelves.

    Walk over to the Patient ID Center, and you can buy commercial machines that can trim the leaves off of cannabis quicker than you could do with scissors.

    And over at Club Z, members of the underground club don't need prescriptions and are sampling the varieties of pot before they buy.

    People may be debating legalizing marijuana in other parts of the state and nation. But here in the nine-block cannabis district of Oakland known as Oaksterdam, it's hard to argue that it's not here already.

    "At this point, dude, seriously, let's just face the fact that everybody is smoking," said Jaime Galindo, who gave a reporter a tour of Club Z. "Bus drivers, cops - your grandma."

    Measure F has no formal campaign opposition.

    Oakland voters may take the city, the longtime epicenter of the cannabis legalization movement, to yet another threshold Tuesday. Measure F, one of four measures on a mail-only ballot due Tuesday, would establish a new 1.8 percent tax for "cannabis businesses" - believed to be the first of its kind in the nation.

    "We're moving toward being accepted like Budweiser beer," said Richard Lee, whom High Times magazine deemed in its February issue as "the mayor of Oaksterdam."

    The tax, which Lee and other advocates sought, is imposed on the gross receipts from nearly every aspect of the cultivation, production or sale of marijuana and its derivatives - all of which happen in Oaksterdam.

    The colonists of early America declared "no taxation without representation," but cannabis advocates want taxation to get representation.

    And Measure F is a harbinger.

    Polls show majorities of the state and nation favor legalization, and cannabis proponents are preparing a statewide legalization and taxation measure for the November 2010 ballot.

    Oakland's measure is expected to generate only $294,000 annually - a meager sum for the city of Oakland's $414 million budget. But the state Board of Equalization estimated last week that the state would take in $1.4 billion if a cannabis legalization bill introduced by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, were to pass.

    There are also other motivations.

    In Oaksterdam, non-cannabis businesses say the cannabis businesses help their bottom line.

    "The traffic that it brings to the neighborhood is great," said Gertha Hays, owner of A Diva's Closet, a women's clothing store.

    Brandon Anderson drove from Martinez to buy a sixteenth of an ounce for $22 and a $10 hash chocolate candy from Coffeeshop Blue Sky. (He passed on the cannabis-laden cookies, brownies, lollipops, pesto, peanut butter and jelly.)Anderson, who has a prescription for anxiety and pain relief, said he'd be happy to pay the tax, he said, because "it's a way to give back to the community and generate money."

    Local and state politicians have hardly held back on their views. Lee showed a letter in his office from Don Perata, the former state senate majority leader, who is now running for mayor of Oakland.

    "Sooner or later," Perata wrote in blue ink on the letter, "we'll get legalization."

    In Insight: Oakland's evolution from pariah to pioneer on medical marijuana. E2

    Pot, by the numbers
    Percent of Californians who support legalization and taxation of marijuana: 56

    Percent of Americans who support legalization of marijuana: 52

    Amount taxation of marijuana might bring in to the state: $1.4 billion

    Amount Measure F would bring in revenues to the city of Oakland: $294,000

    Sources, in order: Field Poll, Zogby Poll, state Board of Equalization, Oakland City Auditor Courtney Ruby

    E-mail Matthai Kuruvila at mkuruvila@sfchronicle.com.

    Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... z0LrTO1YOf

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 18R37G.DTL
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


    Sign in and post comments here.

    Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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