Trois mois après la légalisation de la marijuana, voici à quoi ressemble le Colorado

Actualités

Trois mois après la légalisation de la marijuana, voici à quoi ressemble le Colorado

28 mai 2014

Ceci est une mise à jour sur la mise en application des réglementations relatives à la marijuana récréative au Colorado.

Pour en savoir plus, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous (en anglais).

Abonnez-vous à l'Alerte mensuelle de l'IDPC pour recevoir des informations relatives à la politique des drogues.

Colorado's pot sales are booming. The state's Department of Revenue reports that marijuana retailers sold nearly $19 million in recreational weed in March, up from $14 million in February. The first three months of legal weed have netted about $7.3 million in taxes, not including medical marijuana sales taxes and licenses, which bring the number to $12.6 million.

Over the same time period, crime in Denver has slightly declined, making opponents who said it would result in more trafficking seem kind of silly. It's created a modest number of jobs ranging from 'budtending' and marijuana journalism to farm labor and ownership. And the state has even created a banking system that complies with the U.S. treasury system's guidelines, clearing up the last regulatory questions.

The Colorado legislature has already formed a plan to spend $33 million of the marijuana taxes on school nurses and public education on marijuana.

Click here to read the full article.

Keep up-to-date with drug policy developments by subscribing to the IDPC Monthly Alert.