In 2016, Californians voted to legalize recreational adult-use marijuana. Proponents of Proposition 64, including then-Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, argued that it would generate massive revenue, while decreasing illicit cannabis and drug cartel activity in the state.
Now, nearly six years later, it’s clear that promise has not been kept.
While the state has collected billions in tax revenue from cannabis sales since legalization went into effect in 2018, billions more continue to pour into a thriving illicit market.
A new report from cannabis website Leafly found that more than half of all cannabis sales in the state (55%) are in the illegal market. It means the product being sold hasn’t been subjected to the state’s rigorous testing and tracking regimen, and can contain harmful pesticides or other powerful narcotics.
California recorded more than $5.2 billion in sales in 2021, according to the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration. According to Leafly’s analysis, that means more than $11.5 billion worth of cannabis was actually sold in the state, with the majority of that money going to drug cartels and dealers.
“The purpose was to move cannabis into a regulated market,” said Wesley Hein, director of compliance and government affairs with Mammoth Distribution said of Prop. 64. “And so that’s what people felt like they were voting for.”
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