Weekly Opinion Editorial
SQ#820 IS WHITE
ELEPHANT!
by Steve Fair
On Tuesday March 7th, Oklahoma voters will go to the polls
and vote on State Question #820. If
approved, it would create a state law legalizing recreational use of marijuana
for persons 21 or older. It would add a
15% excise tax incremental recreational use sales tax to the other taxes
already on legal pot. The last day to
request an absentee ballot for the election is Monday February 20th. In person early voting will be available on
Thursday March 2nd and Friday March 3rd from 8am-6pm.
Proponents of SQ 820 assert
passage will safely regulate and tax weed in the Sooner state, generate
millions of dollars for state government to spend on schools, health care and
public safety and expunge criminal records of people who they say, ‘made one
small mistake.’ They also claim it would
generate an estimated $821 million of tax revenue over a five-year period.
Those opposed to SQ #820 point to state data that shows a 4,000%
increase in children overdosing on cannabis since medical marijuana became
legal in Oklahoma in 2018. “People
want to say that this(SQ820) is good tax revenue for the state, but if we were
to do this, no amount of money is worth putting our kids at risk,”
Cleveland County District Attorney Greg Mashburn maintains. Three observations about SQ#820:
First, marijuana can often be a gateway drug. The National Institute of Drug Abuse found adults
who reported using weed were more than likely to abuse other harder drugs. In other words, those who used marijuana
often went to other harder drugs. That is supported by data from the Centers of
Disease Control(CDC).
The CDC says there are multiple short and long-term effects of marijuana
on the brain. They suggest frequent use
of pot can cause disorientation, anxiety, paranoia, and depression. The
CDC says temporary psychosis and schizophrenia are also more likely to be
developed by those who use cannabis.
Second, sin taxes don’t overset their cost to communities. Taxes on alcohol, tobacco, gambling, and
medical marijuana may generate revenue for state government, but their
expansion has been devastating to communities and families. From increased crime to addictions, the
financial impact has been of negative net effect to the state.
Third, medical marijuana should be regulated like other
medications. Few dispute that weed has medicinal
benefits for certain medical conditions, but clearly Oklahoma’s current ‘medical
marijuana’ law needs to be addressed.
When 10% of Oklahomans(376,000) have a medical marijuana card, clearly much of
the use is not ‘medical’ in nature.
Oklahoma, by far, has the highest share in the country of percent of population
according to the Marijuana Policy Project.
Most Oklahomans are unaware there is an election on Tuesday March 7th. Because of that, voter turnout will likely be
low. There is no doubt proponents of SQ#820
will show up. Opponents of the proposal must
vote to stop expansion of drug use in the state.
There are two primary reasons Oklahomans should vote no on State Question #820. The first is the expungement component of SQ#820. Who is eligible for expungement is ambiguous/obscure/unclear. The second reason is because recreational use of marijuana is bad public policy. The challenges legal pot creates dramatically offset the tax benefits. Increased addiction and crime is not something to promote in Oklahoma. SQ#820 is a white elephant investment.
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