The Modesto Bee has reported that Stanislaus County sheriff's deputies are cracking down on illegal pot shops, which are eating away at the legal marijuana businesses, all recently established following the passage of Proposition 64. 
Wait a second!
I thought that legalizing recreational marijuana would do away with the black market? Certainly that's what the proponents of Prop 64 believed, and one of the reasons why the initiative passed by a significant margin in 2016.

What went wrong? What was in the iniative, and thus the reasons why I opposed the initiative, even though I believe that people should not be locked up, placed in jail for using a drug that simply makes you … stupid.

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I voted NO on Prop 64 precisely because there were so many poison-pill provisions in the legislation, including language which would undercut one of the goals of the bill–shut down the black market and bringing marijuana sales into the open. The initiative imposed a massive sales tax on recreational marijuana products. The initiative also included stiff penalties for marijuana related crimes, including the loss of one's Second Amendment Rights for a non-violent misdemeanor. These two problems, along with a host of other issues (the fact that marijuana use, sale, and distribution remains illegal at the federal level; the impossibility of banking because marijuana sales violate federal law, etc.) made Prop 64 a bad proposition.

But the biggest problem was that stiff added sales tax of 15%. Lo and behold, because the costs of legal marijuana are so high, much higher than the drugs pushed on the street, the black market survives and even thrives in the state of California. Why bother buying legal pot, which is excessively expensive, when you can buy it cheaper from the seedy drug dealer?
I favor decriminalization for possession and use of marijuana, since locking people up does not get them sober nor does it set them free from the addition. One reason why? It's even easier to get drugs in prison than on the street? However, Prop 64 was the wrong approach for many reasons to phase out onerous legal consequences for drug use or possession. The proof is the fact that the black market has not be closed down or forced out of business by the legal compte
Proponents expected a collect greater tax revenue with the passage of Prop 64. What happened instead is that the black market has only gotten bigger, while the marijuana revenue failed to meet projections. No end to the black market, lower-than-expected tax revenue, and now police officers throughout the state of California must divert their already strained resources to crack down on these illegal pot shops.

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It's time to have a thoughtful discussion about decriminalization of controlled substances, one that recognizes the potential unintended consequences of marijuana use, one which allows law enforcement to stop down serious crimes and track down those criminals, but most importantly one which understands how markets work, how free enterprise works, and which recognizes the power of competition as well as government control.
BY ERIN TRACY
MAY 16, 2019 01:18 PM, UPDATED MAY 17,
2019 08:32 AM
 Play Video
Duration 1:55Take a look inside a legal
marijuana business in Modesto
Bob Blink of Lyfted Farms and Michael
O'Leary with Medallion Wellness describe the production and sales of Marijuana
on Monday May 6, 2019 at Lyfted Farms in Modesto, Calif. BY JOAN L LEE
Since the outdoor growing season for
cannabis began last month, the Stanislaus County Sheriff Department’s Special
Investigations Unit has dedicated at least one day each week to eradicating
illegal grows.
Critics say cannabis is legal now and
it’s safe; law enforcement should focus their efforts on dangerous drugs like
methamphetamine and heroin. The multi-jurisdictional SIU investigates those
drug crimes as well, in addition to others like gang crimes and human
trafficking.
But law enforcement and the businessmen
who’ve obtained permits and licenses to grow and sell cannabis in Stanislaus
County say the illegal grows not only undermine the legal operations but
attract violent crime into neighborhoods, produce untested, sometimes unsafe
products and create environmental hazards.
Sgt. Bruce Mitchell, supervisor of the
SIU, said they are focused on large-scale operations, not small grows just over
the 6-plant limit for personal use.
He said the large grows are targets for
robberies and burglaries and both the criminal and the victim are usually
armed, bringing gun violence into neighborhoods.
“We have had a number of incidents where
people will try to break into places like this and grab five or six plants and
there ends up being a shooting,” Mitchell said earlier this month at a
2,200-plant illegal grow in Patterson.
About 2,200 plants were eradicated from
illegal indoor and outdoor marijuana grows at a property in the 2900 block of
Orange Avenue, just outside of Patterson, on May 2. By Erin Tracy
Sheriff Jeff Dirkse said there was a
period of time during changes in the law that illegal grows were not a
priority.
“Beginning this year, we have a renewed
our enforcement activities against illegal grows and removed over 22,000 plants
in March alone,” he said. “If people want to use marijuana recreationally or
medicinally, they have nothing to worry about from us so long as they follow
the appropriate laws, no different than alcohol.”
But he said illegal grows “create a
number of public safety hazards that we are concerned with, including illegal
pesticides, black mold, armed robberies and general increased complaints and
calls for service.”
The Sheriff’s Department estimates there
are 1,500 illegal grows within the county at any given time. Mitchell believes
as many as half of those involve Mexican drug cartels.
He said marijuana appeared to have
motivated a 2017 unsolved double homicide near Riverbank in which two men were
found dead at an illegal grow.
One man was found dead outside a
warehouse behind the house on Claribel Road; a broken wooden bat next to him,
according to court documents. A second deceased man was found tied to a chair
inside the warehouse, where marijuana was being dried and processed. A grow
inside the house had been cleared out.
Legal operations have safety plans
approved and maintained through compliance checks by the Sheriff’s Department.
Those plans vary depending on the
operation but include background checks on owners and their employees, burglar
alarms, exterior and interior cameras, on-site security guards, panic buttons
and plans in place in the event of takeover-style robberies or other crimes.
Michael O’Leary, owner of Medallion
Wellness, a dispensary on north McHenry Avenue, has a surveillance system that
is linked to a 24-hour crime center from which a dispatcher can send a security
guard, sound an alarm and speak directly to the suspect.
In addition to keeping his business free
from crime, he said it’s stopped a break-in at a neighboring business and
interrupted a suspect who was trying to siphon gas from a vehicle in the
parking lot.
His dispensary also has a panic button,
as does the cultivation site from which he purchases product.
Bob Blink, owner of Lyfted Farms,
currently is producing about 2,000 pounds of cannabis a year and continuing to
expand in warehouses on Jerusalem Court.
Blink said he accidentally pushed the
panic button shortly after it was installed and four sheriff’s deputies were at
his business within five minutes.
“Illegal operations are completely
clandestine so (when there’s) some sort of security event, they are on their
own. They can’t pick up the phone and call the local sheriff’s office to come
help them,” said Zach Drivon, an attorney who represents both O’Leary and
Blink.
The businessmen, both Modesto natives,
first started operating nonprofit medicinal cannabis collectives in 2015.
Drivon said they were integral in passing a measure in Stockton that lifted the
ban on medical cannabis dispensaries and cultivation and worked with Stanislaus
County to fund a poll that showed majority support for cannabis businesses
here. They also have been transparent with county officials who asked to tour
their businesses.
So when the county started reviewing 33
applications for cannabis permits last year, O’Leary and Blink were at the
front of the pack. They received the first cultivation and dispensary permits
in the county in February and April, respectively.
Since then the county has issued permits
to three other businesses for cultivation and four more businesses are going
through the approval process now for nurseries, cultivation, distribution and
retail, said Tera Chumley, senior management consultant for Stanislaus County.
The county has a cap of 61 cannabis
permits, only seven of which can be dispensaries.
To grow cannabis, Blink not only is
regulated by the Sheriff’s Department but by the state Water Resources Control
Board and the County Agricultural Commissioner, which ensure the businesses are
not polluting the water or using harmful pesticides.
In the rooms where cannabis is grown,
Blink uses insulated metal paneling, typically utilized in cold food storage,
to prevent mold.
The rooms are cleaned with bleach
between each harvest.
He uses only organic pesticides that are
so mild the plant must be treated weekly. There are other pesticides that will
kill any insect with one treatment per harvest, O’Leary said, but they are
dangerous to humans and become carcinogenic when heated and inhaled, which is
how most people consume cannabis.
Mitchell said he sees those toxic
pesticides being used at illegal grows and marijuana being grown in moldy,
unsanitary conditions that can be harmful to the consumer and the environment.
Samples are tested from every strain of
cannabis in every quarterly harvest at Lyfted Farms. A lab tests for 66 types
of pesticides, as well as microbials (bacteria), toxins from mold and heavy
metals like arsenic and lead. If any were ever detected (none have been), the
batch would be destroyed.
Blink also tags every plant with a
unique number that is entered into the state’s track and trade system.
“It tells me when it was created, when
it was flowered, when it was sprayed, what was sprayed, who had hands on it;
the whole history of the plant from seed to sale,” he said.
 MOD_JBLLyftedFarms2
Processor Brad Nunes trims marijuana
product at Lyfted Farms Monday May 6, 2019 in Modesto, Calif. Joan Barnett Lee
JLEE@MODBEE.COM
But O’Leary said most consumers don’t
consider all the safeguards in place by legitimate businesses and the potential
dangers of cannabis grown illegally.
“In the cannabis market, as long as your
flower looks pretty and smells pretty, you’re going to give it a shot, ” he
said.
As a result, many consumers are still
willing to purchase cannabis on the black market because it costs half of what
you’d pay in a dispensary. The taxes alone are 33 percent, O’Leary said.
“We as legal operators have shelled out
hundreds of thousands of dollars to become compliant and it is hard for us to
even recoup what we put in when there is such a lucrative black market out here
right now,” O’Leary said.
In addition to operating costs and state
taxes, they must pay the county a community benefit fee, which funds
enforcement, and a community benefit contribution, which supports local
charities, community programs and public projects with a focus on youth.
Blink pays $70,000 a year for the fee
and $35,000 for the contribution. That number will increase annually as profits
grow. O’Leary will pay a fee of 8 percent on every sale and a community benefit
contribution of $12,000, which also will increase annually.
Mitchell said the money that is coming
in from the community benefit fee will soon fund two new deputies to join the
SIU to combat illegal operations and conduct compliance checks on the legal
businesses.
“There is more of a focus now because
the county is getting pressure from these businesses … for us to go out and
(eradicate) the illegal grows,” he said
Still, for now their efforts to fight illegal
grows are “barely scratching the surface.” They take one down and another pops
up, Mitchell said.
“Not only is the black market
undermining the price of cannabis for the legal operators but it’s detracting
from the best interest of the community, the health, safety and welfare of the
general public,” Drivon said. “It only makes sense from a policy perspective to
control this market, to control this agricultural commodity.”

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