10/6/20

Should Pennsylvania Go ‘Full Colorado’ with Marijuana? Part 2

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In Part 1, we began to examine some of the potential impact to Pennsylvania if the state were to go “full Colorado,” unreservedly legalizing recreational marijuana as the state of Colorado has done. We started out with the September 3, 2020 call by Governor Tom Wolf for the legalization of marijuana use for adults in Pennsylvania. Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman, who stood beside him, also voiced his unreserved support of legalization. But as we looked at the hope for legalization in Pennsylvania, we saw the reality of what had already happened in other states that legalized recreational marijuana was dramatically different.

On the Facebook page for the “Pennsylvania Family Council” dated September 25, 2019, is a shot video that presents a quick series of sound bites and facts about going full-on Colorado: “Lt. Gov. Fetterman wants ‘full Colorado’ with marijuana.” He thinks the legalization of recreational marijuana is “the right thing for Pennsylvania.” You can also view the video on YouTube. We’ll look at most, if not all of the information that this short video throws at you. If there was something I failed to cover, it can be found within the links presented in either Part 1 or here in Part 2 of this article.

According to a 2018 state report, “Impacts of Marijuana Legalization in Colorado,” seizures of Colorado-sourced marijuana were most likely to occurs in states bordering or near Colorado: Kansas, Nebraska, and Wyoming. At least 3 made it to Pennsylvania. Seizure used to be almost exclusively marijuana flower, accounting for over 90% of the reported seizures in 2012. By 2017, 58% of seizures were for flower, 26% were for concentrates/hash and 16% were for edibles. See the following table from the report.

Overall crime rates for property remained stable from 2012 to 2017, but violent crime increased 20%. An increase in the number of aggravated assaults was primarily responsible for the increase in the violent crime rate while larceny was responsible for the increase in property crime rates. SAM (Smart Approaches to Marijuana) reported the crime rate in Colorado has increased 11 times faster than the rest of the nation since legalization. “Marijuana arrests of young African-American and Hispanic youth have increased since legalization (Colorado Department of Public Safety [CDPS], 2016).” See the table below.

SAM reported that in Colorado, the number of drivers intoxicated with marijuana and involved in fatal traffic accidents increased 88% from 2013 to 2015. “Driving under the influence of drugs (DUIDs) have also risen in Colorado, with 76% of statewide DUIDs involving marijuana” (Colorado State Patrol [CSP], 2017). Washington State had a doubling of drugged driving fatalities. In Oregon, 50% of all drivers assessed by drug recognition experts (DRE) in 2015 tested positive for THC. See “Driving Under the Influence of Cannabis” for more information on DUIDs.

The proportion of Colorado youth who reported marijuana use in the past 30 days was significantly higher than the national average. This held true from 2008/2009 through 2015/2016. Colorado was in the top 20% of states for youth marijuana use. See the following figure. Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM) reported that since legalization, Washington, Oregon Alaska and Washington, DC have had past-month use of marijuana above the national average among youth aged 12-17. See the chart below.

Reefer Madness or Pot Paradise?” also noted how politics was infiltrated by marijuana legalization. With a new, marijuana-friendly governor in office, Colorado legislators passed six marijuana laws in 2019 that included approving marijuana-delivery services; out-of-state investment and publicly traded cannabis companies; the creation of pot lounges—“marijuana hospitality establishments”—where marijuana could be consumed without violating the state’ indoor clean-air laws. As the industry expands, some of marijuana’s earliest supporters and entrepreneurs have raised concerns about being left out as pot companies in the US and Canada chase billion-dollar projected incomes and hire powerful politicians like John Boehner, the former Speaker of the House.

Luke Niforatos, the Executive Vice President for Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM), said despite claims of states not allowing child-friendly pot products, marijuana shops sell products like “Pot Tarts,” “Kush Pop,” and pot-laced gummy bears. Edible and drinkable products are becoming the direction the marijuana industry is going. “How many people think this is for 21 and up?”

The industry has prospered in selling marijuana-infused “edibles” that come in the form of cookies, candy, ice cream, sodas, and other sweet treats that are particularly appealing to children. These edibles comprise approximately 20 to 50% of the market in legalized states (where data is available), thereby increasing their availability to children and youth who are normally unaware of consumption serving sizes and consequences (Colorado Department of Revenue, 2015; O’Connor, Danelo, Fukano, Johnson, Law, & Shortt, 2016).

So, where does this leave the supposed success of other states implementing marijuana legalization and what Pennsylvania can look forward to?

The concern expressed for the danger to children in PA from candy-like edibles was legitimate. But it does not seem in states where recreational marijuana is legal that the marijuana industry has any interest in attempting to limit or restrict the sale of edibles that could appeal to children. 53.5% of high school students in Colorado feel it would be easy to get marijuana if they wanted, not more difficult, as Sharif Street said would happen after legalization (see Part 1). Financial assistance for restorative justice programs and historically disadvantaged businesses is roughly 1.5% of the projected tax income from marijuana sales; .065% of the total state budget. It seems to be more of a political carrot to gain public approval than real restorative social justice.

As the marijuana industry expands, the economic benefit to legalization seems to be primarily to the cannabis corporations, not the small, locally owned and operated businesses which are concerned about being left out. “Reefer Madness or Pot Paradise” in The New York Times said marijuana is starting to look like the next Silicon Valley. Vehicular accidents and driving under the influence of drugs (DUIDs) increased dramatically in various states that legalized marijuana. Legalization has led to increased black-market activity, not less; especially in rural areas that border states where marijuana is still illegal. Drug trafficking organizations and Mexican cartels have begun growing marijuana illegally in the US.

Marijuana-related emergency room visits have increased drastically since legalization. According to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, the rate of marijuana-related ER visits increased 35% between 2011 and 2015. SAM reported these ER visits included a growing number of Butane Hash Oil (BHO) burn victims. “BHO is a marijuana concentrate that yields a THC potency of 70–99% and is highly lucrative. Production involves forcing raw marijuana and butane into a reaction chamber, which creates a highly combustible liquid that easily explodes when introduced to an ignition source.” See: “A Little Dab Will Do Ya” for more on BHO.

There is a clear negative effect on teens and youth in states that have legal recreational marijuana, even though it has always been legalized for adults and not teens. SAM reported the average rate of regular teen marijuana use is 30% higher in Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington than the US rate as a whole. Almost one-third of all 18 to 25-year-olds in legalized states said they’ve used marijuana in the past month, up from around one-fifth 10 years ago. See the research of Stacey Gruber detailed in “From the Frying Pan Into the Fire with Recreational Marijuana in PA,” “Double Whammy of Teens Vaping Marijuana,” and “Listening to Marijuana Research” for further concerns with teens using marijuana.

The research into whether or not marijuana is a gateway drug is mixed, but it does seem to have been a “stepping stone” of sorts with individuals who go on to use other drugs. See “Marijuana as a ‘Gateway’ Drug” and “Rebirth of the Gateway Hypothesis,” for more on the gateway hypothesis.

Cannabis may be safer now, but its strength is increasing under legalization. SAM reported the average national THC potency of flower is 11.04%, but in Colorado it is 17.10% and it is 21.24% in Washington State. In the 1960s and 1970s, cannabis contained less than 4% THC. And there is emerging evidence of a strong link between high-potency marijuana and psychosis. “The odds of psychotic disorder among daily cannabis users were 3.2 times higher than for never users, whereas the odds among users of high potency cannabis were 1.6 times higher than for never users.” See “Gambling with Cannabis and Psychosis” and “Cannabis and Psychosis: More Reality Than Satire” and “Psychosis and Adolescent Marijuana Use” for more information on the link between marijuana and psychosis.

One final piece of information came in mid-September of 2020. The Pittsburgh Business Times reported that two of the largest Pittsburgh-area medical marijuana startups, Solevo and PurePenn, have been acquired by a Florida company, Trulieve Cannabis Corp., based in Tallahassee, Florida. Solevo ranks second on the The Pittsburgh Business Times’ list of the region’s largest medical marijuana dispensaries and growers/processors; PurePenn is fourth. In addition to Florida, Trulieve has operations in California, Massachusetts and Connecticut.

Do Pennsylvanians really want to go “full Colorado?”

09/29/20

Should Pennsylvania Go ‘Full Colorado’ with Marijuana? Part 1

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On September 3, 2020, Governor Wolf renewed his call for the legalization of recreational marijuana use for adults in Pennsylvania, which he originally announced his support of in September of 2019. Pointing to a presumed economic windfall such a legislative act would bring to the Commonwealth, he said: “Now more than ever, specially right in the middle of a pandemic, we have a desperate need for the economic boost that the legalization of cannabis could provide.” Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman also highlighted the economic impact to come from legalization. He said he could pitch marijuana legalization as a jobs bill. “Legalizing marijuana would create tens of thousands of jobs that require no subsidy.” This is a complete about-face from Wolf’s position two years ago, when he said, “I don’t think Pennsylvania’s actually ready for recreational marijuana.”

His rejection of legalization from August of 2018 was followed by a statement on Twitter in December of 2018 that signaled an evolving position, where Governor Wolf said more and more states were implementing marijuana legalization and we should keep learning from their efforts. “I think it is time for Pennsylvania to take a serious and honest look at recreational marijuana.” In an article I wrote in January of 2020, “From the Frying Pan Into the Fire with Recreational Marijuana in PA,” I said I hoped PA would learn from the long-term consequences of marijuana legalization in other states. We should not allow the political pressure to legalize marijuana to outpace learning from the consequences to other states and the science from research into marijuana.

Is the pressure to legalize recreational marijuana use in Pennsylvania a consequence of “more and more states successfully implementing marijuana legalization,” as Governor Wolf said in December of 2018? Let’s look at some of the claims that have been made about legalization, especially in Colorado, to see what this supposed successful implementation could mean for Pennsylvania.

In his most recent call for legalization, Governor Wolf said the revenue from legalization would benefit restorative justice programs and historically disadvantaged businesses. Another factor in the proposed legislation is reform to the criminal justice system and the uneven enforcement of marijuana laws against Blacks and Latinos. Fetterman said: “If you go over the span of decades we are talking nearly a quarter of a million Pennsylvanians that now have some affiliation with the criminal justice system for nothing more than consuming a plant that’s actually legal in 12 jurisdictions across this country.” State Senator Sharif Street of Philadelphia, one of the co-sponsors of the “Adult-Use Cannabis Act,” added that marijuana would economically benefit farmers, who could rotate it with corn. He added that regulation would also make it more difficult for dealers to sell to minors.

In addition to these claims made during the September 3rd announcement, there were the results from a May 2019 statewide “listening tour” by John Fetterman to hear people’s opinions as to whether or not they were in favor of or opposed to legalizing adult-use recreational marijuana. The most commonly stated reasons cited in support of legalization included in the Listening Tour Report were: a perceived economic benefit with increase funding for education and infrastructure, the expungement of past non-violent cannabis convictions and the belief that cannabis is safer than alcohol and opioids. Common reasons stated by those opposing legalization included concerns marijuana is a gateway drug, increased vehicular accidents and problems measuring a DUI level, and potential negative effects on youth.

The Listening Tour Report also found there was a 65-70% approval of adult-use cannabis legalization. Residents were overwhelming supportive of decriminalization and expungement of non-violent and small cannabis-related offenses. There was near-unanimous support for removing marijuana from its classification as a Schedule 1 drug. Many residents said that if legalized, marijuana should be grown on Pennsylvania farms and should create jobs in Pennsylvania. People were also concerned about an increase of people driving under the influence of marijuana. Most people were opposed to candy-like edibles because of their potential appeal to children.

A Franklin & Marshall College Poll in Mach of 2019 found that 59% of Pennsylvania voters supported legalization, a dramatic change since May of 2006 when only 22% supported legalization. There was a dramatic upshift of approval between 2015 (40%) and 2017 (56%), with Pennsylvania’s approval of medical marijuana occurring in 2016. Many polls reporting on whether or not marijuana should be made legal did as the Franklin & Marshall poll did, by asking an either-or, yes or no question: “do you think the use of marijuana should be made legal, or not?” But when polls distinguished between the recreational use and medical use of marijuana, support, support for legalization dropped. See the following compilation of survey results on PollingReport.com. Look at a 2014 question by the Pew Research Center that begins with: “Which comes closer …”

It seems a legitimate question of the reported percentages of Pennsylvanians supporting adult-use cannabis legalization is to ask to what extent was it influenced by the previous approval of medical marijuana? I previously raised the question of a possible strategy in the long-term goal of gaining national approval for recreational marijuana legalization was to pursue it one state at a time; initially concentrating on the supposed medical benefits from marijuana (See “Marijuana Peek-A-Boo” and “Eating the Elephant of Marijuana Legalization in PA”). These touted medical benefits are difficult to replicate or refute since marijuana is currently a Schedule I drug, which makes reliable research into its effects—good or bad—difficult to do.

Governor Wolf said recently the revenue from legalization would benefit restorative justice programs and historically disadvantaged businesses. However, the original “Adult-Use Cannabis Act” said $9 million would annually be distributed from the fund annually to the Department to carry out its duties, which include grants and loans to “low-income permittees.” These departmental duties include up to $2 million annually “to provide financial assistance to growers, processors, dispensers, and microgrowers who were harmed by effects of cannabis prohibition.” Interest-free loans could be granted to individuals with a prior cannabis-related criminal conviction, whose annual income was below $80,000, and who had successfully completed an educational program and passed an exam; again, up to $2 million annually.

95% of the remaining annual tax income (projected to be $581 million) was supposed to go to school districts. The projected income was calculated from the 17.5% tax rate that would be imposed on cannabis sold by licensed dispensaries. Yes, there would be some benefit to historically disadvantaged businesses and restorative justice programs, but that is out of merely 1.5% of the projected tax income. The governor’s rhetoric seems to be a bone tossed in reaction to the economic crisis of the COVID pandemic and the social justice issues that have been sweeping the country the past several months rather than a serious proposal. That is, if the roughly $539.6 million would really go towards schools. $581 million sounds like a significant figure, but it is actually 0.65% of the total operating budget for Pennsylvania for fiscal year 2020-2021.

The same 2019 Franklin & Marshall poll mentioned above also found that legalizing marijuana for recreational use was a top priority for only 5% of Pennsylvanians surveyed, while increasing state funds for public education (23%) and improving the state’s infrastructure (18%) were viewed as more important top priorities. Proposing to spend the anticipated income from legalization on schools sounds like a strategic political move to increase the chances of getting the Adult-Use Cannabis Act through the state legislature.

The same can be said about the inclusion of social justice reform actions in Senate Bill 350. Decriminalization and expungement can be accomplished independent of legislation that legalizes recreational marijuana. While changing the scheduling is popular in PA, there is nothing really that can be done, as that would take federal action. And as long as cannabis is a Schedule I controlled substance, selling, distributing, possessing and/or using marijuana or marijuana-derived products is a federal crime. JDSupra ended their article on the Adult-Use Cannabis Act with a disclaimer that said while federal policy may recommend enforcement discretion, “it is important to understand that compliance with state law does not equal compliance with federal law, and that federal marijuana policy may change at any time.”

A New York Times article in June of 2019, “Reefer Madness or Pot Paradise?” looked at what has happened in Colorado since they became the first-in-the-nation to experiment with legalizing recreational marijuana. Let’s look first at the social justice issue John Fetterman was concerned about. While low-level marijuana charges have fallen dramatically, the racial divide in drug arrests has continued. State data shows that African-Americans in Colorado are still being arrested on marijuana charges at twice the rate of white people. Jonathan Singer, one of two state legislators who endorsed the Colorado ballot measure that legalized their adult use recreational marijuana measure, said: “You don’t see drug-addled people roaming the streets, but we haven’t created a utopia.” Once known for its wide range of outdoor activities, now Colorado is known as the state that has “great weed.”

Colorado’s first-in-the-nation experiment has reshaped health, politics, rural culture and criminal justice in surprising ways that often defy both the worst warnings of critics and blue-sky rhetoric of the marijuana industry, giving a glimpse of what the future may hold as more and more states adopt and debate full legalization.

Law enforcement officials say legalization caused the black-market cultivation of marijuana to expand and made the problem worse. While licensed growers harvest marijuana from fields and greenhouses, police and sheriff’s officers raid houses converted to illegal cultivations they say export marijuana to other states. People cover the windows of grow houses to have the glowing grow lights and rewire the electric and water lines to avoid the meters. In May of 2019 police and federal drug-enforcement agents raided 240 homes around Denver and Northern Colorado that were illegally growing marijuana. The US attorney in Denver said Colorado has become “The epicenter of black-market marijuana in the United States.”

Small rural, towns near Utah, Nebraska or New Mexico are opening marijuana shops and raising concern from officials about out-of-state trafficking. Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM) reported there has been a 50% increase in illegal grow operations across rural areas of the state. “In 2016 alone, Colorado law enforcement confiscated 7,116 pounds of marijuana, carried out 252 felony arrests, and made 346 highway interdictions of marijuana headed to 36 different U.S. states.”

Legalization has made it easier for the black market to thrive in rural areas due to the difficulties involved in distinguishing between legal and criminal marijuana farms. About $6.5 million worth of illegal marijuana was confiscated by federal agencies in the White River National Forest in Aspen, Colorado, and 9,200 illegal marijuana plants were found growing on islands in the middle of the Colorado River (Associated Press, September 29, 2017; Roy, 2017). The ability to hide black market activity in legalized states has encouraged drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) and Mexican cartels to begin growing marijuana illegally within the United States and there is now a strong presence of cartel activity in Alaska (ADPS, 2016).

Since recreational sales began in 2014, more people visited emergency rooms for marijuana-related problems and hospitals report higher rates of mental health cases tied to marijuana. Yet thousands of others make daily stops at dispensaries without any problems. Calls to poison centers rose 210% in Colorado after legalization. The annual rate of marijuana-related ER visits increased 35% between 2011 and 2015.

In Part 2, we will continue with our examination of whether Pennsylvanians can hope to successfully implement recreational marijuana legalization. There is a 2018 report by Colorado, “Impacts of Marijuana Legalization in Colorado” that has some interesting data on seizures of Colorado-sourced marijuana (some Colorado-sourced marijuana was seized in Pennsylvania). Violent crime increased, as did marijuana arrests of young African-American and Hispanic youth. Oh, and Colorado was in the top 20% of states for youth marijuana use.

01/21/20

From the Frying Pan Into the Fire with Recreational Marijuana in PA

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On September 25, 2019, Governor Tom Wolf announced he supports legalizing recreational marijuana. Wolf and Lt Gov. John Fetterman called for three specific actions at their press conference: 1) a bill to decriminalize non-violent and small cannabis-related offenses; 2) developing a way to expunge past convictions for non-violent and small cannabis-related offenses; and 3) consideration by the General Assembly of legalization of adult-use recreational marijuana. He said: “We now know the majority of Pennsylvanians are in favor of legalization, and that includes me.” He added that he looked forward to seeing what could be accomplished, especially the criminal justice reforms.

His endorsement represented an about-face from August of 2018, when he told KDKA Radio Morning News the time was not right to legalize marijuana for recreational use: “I don’t think the citizens of Pennsylvania are ready for it.” He recommended waiting on the longer-term results of legalization in states such as Colorado, Oregon, Washington, where their different approaches could be helpful as PA weighs its own options. Then in December of 2018, Wolf said in a tweet: “More and more states are successfully implementing marijuana legalization, and we need to keep learning from their efforts.” He added any change would require legislation. But he thought it was time for “Pennsylvania to take a serious and honest look at recreational marijuana.”

Wolf’s support for legalization came after the completion of Fetterman’s “Statewide Cannabis Listening Tour” on May 19, 2019. Key takeaways from those who attended the tour included: 65-70% approval for adult-use cannabis legalization; near unanimous support for decriminalization and mass expungement of non-violent and small cannabis-related offenses; if legalized, cannabis should be grown on Pennsylvania farms; the removal of cannabis from its current classification as a Schedule I drug; and a provision allowing for six to eight homegrown cannabis plants for personal use. More than 10,000 individuals attended Listening Tour meetings and the online portal received more then 44,000 comments. The September announcement of support for legalizing recreational marijuana was followed by the introduction of the “Adult-Use Cannabis Act,” Senate Bill 350, by Pennsylvania senators Daylin Leach and Sharif Street.

If passed, the bill would legalize adult-use cannabis for individuals 21 years of age and older, and establish a permitting process for growers, processors, and dispensaries; the current measure would not place a limit on the number of permits that could be issued. The bill would also allow for cannabis delivery, consumption (i.e., “bring your own” or BYO) lounges, and home grow. Under the proposed legislation, the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture would oversee the adult-use program.

Two days after the Adult-Use Cannabis Act was introduced, Governor Wolf met with governors from New York, New Jersey and Connecticut at a “marijuana summit,” where they agreed to a set of core principles for legal cannabis programs they would pursue. This seems to be part of a continuing strategy for legalizing recreational marijuana in Pennsylvania that I said was like eating an elephant one bite at a time (See “Eating the Elephant of Marijuana Legalization in PA”). Let’s see if we can digest some of what we are hearing from the “Statewide Cannabis Listening Tour,” the Adult-Use Cannabis Act, and what we can learn from the states who have gone before PA in legalizing recreational marijuana.

The first key takeaway in the Executive Summary of the Listening Tour was that 65-70% of those who attended tour stops approved of adult-use cannabis legalization. This seems to be the source of Governor Wolf’s statement that “We now know the majority of Pennsylvanians are in favor of legalization.” We know that 65-70% of those who attended tour stops approved of adult-use cannabis legislation, not that 65-70% of Pennsylvanians approve of legalization. The 10,000 or so individuals who went to the Listening Tour stops are not representative of the Commonwealth as a whole, and surveys of them should not haven been presented as “the majority of Pennsylvanians” by the governor. The Executive Summary made the distinction, saying a majority of attendees supported legalization—why didn’t the governor?

The Adult-Use Cannabis Act would issue permits to applicants seeking to legally become a Grower, Homegrower, Microgrower, Processor, open a Dispensary to sell cannabis retail to consumers, become a Deliverer of cannabis from a dispensary to consumers, or operate “use lounges,” where individuals may use cannabis which they have brought to the space. Cannabis use in public, except use in these consumption lounges, would be prohibited. See the “Adult-Use Cannabis Act” link for a further description of these permits. There would be a 17.5 percent tax rate imposed at the point-of-sale on cannabis by dispensaries.

There was “near-unanimous” support for decriminalization and mass expungement of non-violent and small cannabis-related offenses, and for removing cannabis from its current classification as a Schedule I drug. These social justice concerns and the rescheduling of cannabis are laudable and can be legislated independent of legalizing adult-use of recreational marijuana. Were they bundled into the Adult-Use Cannabis Act in order to garner support in the General Assembly for legalizing recreational marijuana?

There was concern expressed for an anticipated increase of people driving under the influence of cannabis, which has in fact happened in other states. The National Institute on Drug Abuse said several meta-analyses found the risk of being involved in a crash increased significantly and in a few cases doubled or more than doubled. “Two large European studies found that drivers with THC in their blood were roughly twice as likely to be culpable for a fatal crash than drivers who had not used drugs or alcohol.”

A 2009 article in The American Journal on Addictions said detrimental effects of cannabis use varied in a dose-related fashion and were more pronounced with highly automatic driving functions than with more complex tasks that required conscious control. Impaired drivers tend to compensate effectively when driving, but combining alcohol and marijuana eliminates the ability to use such strategies “and results in impairment even at doses which would be insignificant were they of either drug alone.”

In Colorado, where recreational marijuana has been legal since 2012, there has been a sharp increase in the number of marijuana-related automobile fatalities each year from 2013 to 2016. There were 77 marijuana-related fatalities in 2016, 51 of those drivers had levels of THC above the threshold for cannabis impairment under Colorado law. According to a survey by the Colorado Department of Transportation, over half of marijuana users said they had got behind the wheel of a vehicle in the last 30 days within two hours of using the drug.

After recreational marijuana was legalized in Washington in 2012, the proportion of marijuana-positive drivers involved in fatal crashes increased from 8 percent to 17 percent in 2014, according to AAA. The majority of drivers who had detectable levels of THC also had alcohol and/or other drugs in their blood at the time of the crash. “Of all THC-positive drivers involved in fatal crashes over the study period, an estimated 34.0% were positive for THC only, 39.0% were positive for both THC and alcohol.” 16.5% were positive for both THC and one more other drug, but not alcohol; and 10.5% were positive for THC, alcohol, and one or more other drugs.

Research from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) and Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI) showed that crashes were up as much as 6 percent in Colorado, Nevada, Oregon and Washington when compared with neighboring states that haven’t legalized marijuana for recreational use: Idaho, Montana, Utah and Wyoming. IIHS-HLDI President David Harkey said legalizing marijuana was having a negative impact on the safety or our roads. “Despite the difficulty of isolating the specific effects of marijuana impairment on crash risk, the evidence is growing that legalizing its use increases crashes.”

The Adult-Use Cannabis Act seeks to take an illegal drug away from the black market and regulate its distribution through legislation and regulation. And hopefully develop a new revenue source for Pennsylvania. PA Auditor General Eugene DePasquale estimated legalizing marijuana would produce approximately $581 million in annual tax revenue. After funding a grant program ($2 million) and an interest-free loan program ($2 million) and $9 million to the Department of Agriculture to oversee the adult-use program, 95% of the remaining revenue would be distributed to school districts. Ironically, one of the top concerns noted in the “Statewide Cannabis Listening Tour” was the potential of negative effects on the development of youth and students.

The New York Times featured an article in April of 2019 on how the illegal marijuana market was booming in California despite legalization. The governor of California redeployed National Guard troops stationed on the border with Mexico to go after illegal cannabis farms in Northern California because the problem was getting worse, not better. In wildland areas, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife more than doubled its seizures of illicit marijuana in 2018, the first year recreational cannabis was legal.

Of the roughly 14 million pounds of marijuana grown in California annually, only a fraction — less than 20 percent according to state estimates and a private research firm — is consumed in California. The rest seeps out across the country illicitly, through the mail, express delivery services, private vehicles and small aircraft that ply trafficking routes that have existed for decades.This illicit trade has been strengthened by the increasing popularity of vaping, cannabis-infused candies, tinctures and other derivative products. Vape cartridges are much easier to carry and conceal than bags of raw cannabis. And the monetary incentives of trafficking also remain powerful: The price of cannabis products in places like Illinois, New York or Connecticut are typically many times higher than in California.

Politico also wrote about “How Legal Marijuana Is Helping the Black Market.” It said when Oregon legalized marijuana in 2014, the state tried to stifle its black market by making the path into the legal market was as easy as possible. “It did not limit licenses and it simplified regulations, creating a program with one of the lowest barriers to entry in the United States.” The strategy worked. An Oregon State Police Sergeant estimated there are more illicit marijuana growing in Southern Oregon than before legalization, with most of it going out of state. He said law enforcement is just inundated with illegal marijuana and exportation.

Now, Oregon is an easy place to find high-quality, cheap, legal marijuana. There are more than 650 licensed marijuana dispensaries in the state, or three times the number of McDonald’s restaurants (205). If you’re an Oregonian living in a town or county with legal pot and you want to buy marijuana, there is no reason to shop illegally.

Even The Motley Fool weighed in with “5 Reasons the Marijuana Black Market Won’t Go.” They noted how the legalization of recreational marijuana in Canada and U.S. states has not stopped black market cannabis, as initially expected. “In California, the largest legal weed market in the world by annual sales, illicit marijuana sales are projected to outpace legal pot sales in 2019 by a significant margin: $8.7 billion to $3.1 billion.” Estimates by Scotiabank are that the black market would be responsible for 71% of total cannabis sales in Canada in 2019. The problem noted by the Motley Fool included supply issues in Canada, tax issues in select US states, a slow dispensary approval process, jurisdiction issues, and spotty regulatory enforcement.

Staci Gruber, who is the director of the MIND (Marijuana Investigations for Neuroscientific Discovery) project, has published a series of studies that confirmed the heavy use of marijuana lowers the level of white matter in the corpus callosum region of the brain; and the earlier the age of marijuana use was associated with lower levels of white matter. White matter affects learning and brain functions, modulating the distribution of action potentials and acts as a relay and coordinates communication between different brain regions. Not surprisingly, marijuana smokers were also found to have higher levels of impulsivity. Adolescent marijuana users are also vulnerable to reduction in grey matter, which is responsible for information processing and decision making. See “Listening to Marijuana Research,” “Marijuana Policy Has Run Ahead of Science” and “Double Whammy of Teens Vaping Marijuana” for more on these concerns.

The Motley Fool noted where cannabis had been one of the fastest-growing industries on the planet. After sales more than tripled worldwide between 2014 and 2018, Wall Street forecasted a 5-fold to 18-fold increase in global annual revenue by 2030. But since May of 2019, many marijuana stocks have seen their share price cut in half or worse. Our neighbor to the north, Canada, hasn’t stomped out the black market as expected and supply shortages have been a persistent problem. And the regulatory enforcement designed to drive the black market out of business hasn’t been working. “Based on data from the United Cannabis Business Association, via an audit that was recently turned into California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-Calif.), 2,835 of the 3,757 listings of marijuana sellers in California on website WeedMaps were unlicensed.”

Hopefully the core principles for legal cannabis programs the governors of Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania agreed they would pursue at the so-called “marijuana summit” included a continued “wait and see” option. Legalizing recreational marijuana does not seem to have solved problems it was predicted to solve and seems to have generated new ones that weren’t anticipated or predicted. Let’s follow Governor Wolf’s older advice about waiting to see the longer-term consequences of marijuana legalization in Washington, Oregon, Colorado and California. If we acted on his endorsement in favor of legalization now, wouldn’t we be jumping from the frying pan into the fire?