Massachusetts
Member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2012
- Messages
- 667
Four House lawmakers have introduced legislation that seeks to legalize and regulate the "production, distribution, and sale" of marijuana to adults. As introduced, House Bill 1371 seeks to regulate the commercial production and distribution of marijuana for adults over 21 years of age. This measure would impose licensing requirements and excise taxes on the commercial, for-profit retail sale of cannabis. The measure has been referred to the Joint Committee on the Judiciary and is scheduled for a hearing on Tuesday, March 6th at 1pm in Room A-2 of the Boston Statehouse.
Adults who possess or grow marijuana for personal use, or who share cannabis with other adults, would not be subject to taxation under the law.
House Bill 1371 can be read here
If approved this measure would:
1) Raise tens of millions of dollars in annual tax revenue for the state of Massachusetts;
2) Restrict access to marijuana to those under age 21;
3) Improve public safety by redirecting law enforcement efforts to focus on more serious crimes; and
4) Institute reasonable regulation consistent with the state and federal constitution.
In 2008, 65 percent of voters in Massachusetts endorsed Question 2 reclassifying possession of an ounce or less of cannabis as a fine-only civil offense under state law.
In 2010, Massachusetts marijuana activists conducted two polls of actual voters on election day, November 2, 2010. In the first of the polls, just under fifty-six percent of the 133,924 voters who expressed an opinion supported "legislation that would allow the state to regulate the taxation, cultivation, and sale of marijuana to adults." In the second, over sixty-six percent of the 67,322 voters who expressed an opinion supported �legislation that would allow the state to regulate and tax marijuana in the same manner as alcohol."
House Bill 1371 is a fiscally conservative, common sense proposal that seeks to bring control to Massachusetts' untaxed, unregulated marijuana market.