Summary:
OCTA, the
Oregon Cannabis Tax Act 2010 | Will Tax and
Regulate Cannabis (Marijuana) in Oregon.
Currently, the black market
controls cannabis growth, sale
and distribution, meaning
anyone of any age can buy or
sell it. Regulations puts
Oregonians in control.
According to in-school survey
data from 2007, 37.4% of
eighth-graders, 69% of
tenth-graders, and 83.9% of
twelfth-graders report that
cannabis is "easy to get." The
regulation of the sale and
distribution of cannabis will
dramatically reduce those numbers.
According to the Oregon
Healthy Teen Survey of 2007,
cannabis use among Oregon
teens has dropped 1/3 since
the enactment of the Oregon
Medical Marijuana Act of 1998,
showing that regulations works.
Reform
Oregonians value personal
freedom AND direct democracy.
Hence, Oregon was the first
state to consider, and
subsequently pass, a Death
with Dignity law. now, Oregon
will be the first state to
consider updating cannabis use
laws to reflect the times.
Oregon spends $61.5 million on
enforcing out-of-date cannabis
laws, diverting policy energy
away from violent and often
repeat offenders.
Surveys conducted by the RAND
Corps Public Safety and
Justice in 2002, the American
Journal of Psychiatry in 2006
and the National Research
Council Committee for Data and
Research for Policy on Illegal
Drug in 2008 all conclude that
cannabis is NOT a gateway
drug: Of the 114,275,000
nationally reported cannabis
users, only 2,685,000 (2%)
went on to use cocaine and
only 153000 (0.1%) went on to
use heroin.
Revenue:
Oregon's General Fund will
receive between $30 million
and $300 million annually,
paying for education, health
care, public safety and other
publicly funded programs.
Industrial hemp has the power
to revolutionize Oregon's
ecology and economy through
re-opening paper mills to
produce hemp paper, creating
clean fuel sources with hemp
biodiesel and providing
additional food sources with
ground hemp protein. A 2000
report by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture states that
Americans purchased 35,000
pounds of Canadian hemp in
1999, and that number has
certainly grown with hemp's
popularity during the past
eleven years.
Oregon has a rich history of
taxing vices: alcohol,
gambling and tobacco. It's
time that Oregon stopped
enforcing out-of-date
prohibition-style laws
regarding cannabis and tap
into the ecological and
economical possibilities of
cannabis and hemp.
OCTA 2010 Frequently Asked
Questions
I don't use cannabis, so why
should I care?
We know prohibition doesn't
work. Public money is being
spent on enforcing laws that
do not reflect the times.
Violent offenders are being
released from prison early to
make room for non-violent,
cannabis-related offenses.
Through enacting the Oregon
Cannabis Tax Act (OCTA), the
state will generate reliable
annual income for education,
health care and public safety
(just to name few benefits)
for all Oregonians.
OCTA is not just about
state-sanctioned cannabis use.
90% of the funds generated
through the sale of cannabis
will go to the general fund,
and the other 10% will go to
drug education and treatment
programs and industrial hemp
promotion. Hemp will
revolutionize our agricultural
industry, job market and
economy, with seemingly
infinite potential to generate
additional revenue as Oregon's
new cash crop.
How much reliable, annual
income can Oregon expect?
According to conservative
estimates, state revenue will
increase by at least $30
million, while other estimates
place the revenue increase
upward of $300 million*. In
addition, Oregon will save
over $61.5 million** Oregon
will save by no longer
enforcing out-of-date cannabis
laws.
If cannabis use is a matter of
personal freedom, why allow
government regulation?
An estimated 300,000 cannabis
users reside in Oregon, in
addition to the 23,000
registered medical marijuana
cardholders***. In other
words, 1/10 of Oregonians use
cannabis that currently is
controlled by the black
market. OCTA will take the
control out of the hands of
the drug lords and into the
hands of the people.
In addition, OCTA brings about
government regulation
regarding the sale and
distribution of cannabis, not
the growth and consumption.
The law extends personal
freedoms by giving people the
choice to grow their own
cannabis, as well as choosing
who and where they purchase it.
What about children?
OCTA stipulates that cannabis
is only availabe to adults 21
years of age and older in
state-sanctioned retail
outlets. This will reduce the
availability on cannabis of
the streets and, therefore, to
minors. A percentage of the
revenue generated by OCTA goes
to drug education programs in
high schools, promoting
responsible usage among legal
adults.
* Estimates based upon revenue
generated in California since
the enactment of its
Compassionate Use Act of 1996.
** Estimates based upon annual
state law enforcement
expenditures.
*** Numbers taken from the 2000
United States Census.
The text on this Bill can be found in the Links section here:
I-73-text
Status:
Folks are going thru Circulator training and Collecting signatures - the website sez they've collected about 5,000 so far - at campaign headquarters (5220
NE Sandy) and will be out
collecting pledges every
weekend starting then. If you
can't make the training email
Kyndall at
(kyndall@democracyresources.com)
and she will send you all the
materials you need to get OCTA
underway. We are in a unique
position in Oregon to create
laws that will end adult
prohibition on marijuana and hemp.
So Be There and help end adult
prohibition on marijuana and
hemp.
Contact info: office for OCTA is at
5220 NE Sandy Blvd,
Portland, OR,
above Stanley Printing
www.cannabistaxact.org/content/oregon-cannabis-tax-act-full-text,
If you wanna get involved.
You can also
Visit - http://www.crrh.org/ - for more info.
Testifying
Each speaker called to testify will have two minutes to address the
committee. The order of testimony may be managed to ensure that all
points of view on these measures are presented.
Staff respectfully requests that you submit 25 collated copies of written
materials at the time of your testimony and, if possible, an electronic
copy of materials provided to staff 24 hours prior to the meeting.
Persons making presentations including the use of video, DVD, PowerPoint or
overhead projection equipment are asked to contact committee staff and
provide an electronic copy 24 hours prior to the meeting.
Whether you want to testify or not, it would be good to come to Salem for any hearings. It
would be especially good to try to schedule a meeting with your Senator -or- Representative
before the meeting, possible.
As with coming to court, if you decide to attend hearings, please dress appropriately and be
polite and respectful.
click here -
http://www.leg.state.or.us/capinfo/
- for Capitol Info, such as directions, phone numbers and maps.
If you cannot attend, Please write and testify.
You can find wording of the measures here:
http://www.leg.state.or.us/bills_laws/
you can listen to the hearings online here
http://www.leg.state.or.us/listn/
Details:
The Oregon Cannabis Tax Act, would set aside two percent of the profits from the sale of cannabis in cannabis-only stores for two state commissions that promote industrial hemp biodiesel, fiber, protein and oil.
It will also legalize the sale, possession and personal private cultivation of marijuana. People who want to cultivate and sell marijuana, or process commercial psychoactive cannabis, would be required to obtain a license from the state. Adults could grow their own marijuana and the sale of all cannabis strains' seeds and starter plants would be legalized with no license, fee nor registration. The profits from the sale of cannabis to adults will add hundreds of millions into the state general fund as well as drug treatment and education.
This simple plant, cannabis, can be put to use as medicine, recreation, fiber, fuel, delicious and nutritious food, among many other things. It would fill so many needs and put Oregon on a path toward sustainability. Our forward-thinking attitude toward hemp and cannabis would create jobs, revitalize our farming communities, boost tourism, and create millions of dollars in revenue for the state. If you don't know much about cannabis, we urge you to take the time to learn about the plant.
In order to be successful, this mission will require key assistance from volunteers across Oregon. Please tell ten friends about OCTA 2010 and get involved! We will soon begin circulating the petition across Oregon. We will need 83,000 valid signatures by July, 2, 2010 to qualify for the November ballot.
The certified ballot title is as follows:
Permits personal marijuana, hemp cultivation/use without license; commission to regulate commercial marijuana cultivation/sale
Result of "Yes" Vote: "Yes" vote permits state-licensed marijuana (cannabis) cultivation/sale to adults through state stores; permits unlicensed adult personal cultivation/use; prohibits restrictions on hemp (defined).
Result of a "No" Vote: "No" vote retains existing civil and criminal laws prohibiting cultivation, possession and delivery of marijuana; retains current statues that permit regulated use of medical marijuana.
Summary: Currently, marijuana cultivation, possession and delivery are prohibited; regulated medical marijuana use permitted. Measure replaces state, local marijuana laws except medical marijuana and driving under the influence laws; distinguishes "hemp" from "marijuana"; prohibits regulation of hemp. Creates agency to license marijuana cultivation by qualified persons and to purchase entire crop. Agency sells marijuana at cost to pharmacies, medical research facilities, and to qualified adults for profit through state stores. Ninety percent of net proceeds goes to state general fund, remainder to drug education, treatment, hemp promotion. Bans sales to, possession by minors. Bans public consumption except where signs permit, minors barred. Agency to regulate use, set prices, other duties; Attorney General to defend against federal challenges/prosecution. Provides penalties. Effective January 1, 2011; other provisions.
A copy of the Bill may be found here:
I-73-text.pdf
LTL (Letters-To-yer-Legislator, Editor, Org Director, Biz Owner)
you can send identical emails to every oregon senator (which will show
as individual emails from you, to that senator) by sending To:
orsen@oreg.net
you can send identical emails to every oregon representative (which will
show as individual emails from you, to that representative) by sending
To: orhouse@oreg.net
NOTEs -
MAP's media resource center:
http://www.mapinc.org/resource/
If you go to about the middle of the page you will find the "Style
Guide" with links to:
• MAP Letters to the Editor Archive
• Tips for Getting Letters to the Editor Published, by Platinum Letter
Writer, Robert Sharpe
• Letters to the Editor & Opinion Pieces, American College of Emergency
Physicians
• MAP Three Tips for Letter Writers
• Powerful Paragraphs, ClearWriter's ClearTips
• How to Write Letters to the Editor, Schaffer Library of Drug Policy
• Grammar Bytes!, Grammar Instruction with Attitude
• How to Communicate with Journalists, Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting
• Letter Writer's Style Guide, by Chris Donald
• Writing Effective Letters to the Editor, 20/20 Vision
respectfully, we suggest two main rules-of-thumb for letter writing
to improve the liklihood of being published.
1. Write short declarative sentences as if you were speaking to a
child, a small animal or a judge.
2. Limit yourself to 150 words.
Best of luck.
Here is .
Examples -
Example #1
Will be posted here.
|
NOTEs on Action Items,
Protest and Demo,
Examples & Notes
Will be posted as we learn about them.
Communicate!
Questions? Comments?
Need some info?
Got some info? NetWork!
E-Mail us or
visit the Bulletin Board for
further comments on this Bill -or- to post your own.
Link Summary:
For reference, tools, etc.
-
I-73. source for Text of the Bill. Also, you can use this > link < if that doesn't work.
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Petition sheets, to gather signatures. Also, you can use this > link < if that doesn't work.
-
A Statement from Paul Stanford
on why the cannabis tax act
will be upheld in a court of law. For more,
Visit - http://www.crrh.org/octa/upheld.html
-
Index to Bills, and other items. Your Legislation Station.
-
ToolShed. Tips, Tools and Tricks.
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