Mmj Patients Hail Landmark Victory With Unprecedented Vote In Congress

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by Old School Smoker, Jul 22, 2014.

  1. Washington, D.C.–(ENEWSPF)– Medical marijuana patients hailed another landmark victory today when Congress voted 231-192 to restrict Department of Treasury funds from "being used to prohibit or penalize a financial institution from providing services to a marijuana-related business that engages in activities permissible under state or local laws." The amendment to the financial services budget bill was introduced by Representatives Denny Heck (D-WA), Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), Ed Perlmutter (D-CO), and Barbara Lee (D-CA), and won an unprecedented number of votes for a medical marijuana issue.

    The burgeoning medical marijuana industry has endured years of resistance from the banking and financial services industry mainly due to the threat of federal interference. Most of the major banks, including Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Citigroup, have refused to work with medical marijuana businesses despite a memo issued by Treasury earlier this year. This refusal has forced thousands of medical marijuana producers, manufacturers, and distributors to resort to cash-only businesses, putting them and the patients that use their services at greater risk of harm.
    The Internal Revenue Service (IRS), a Treasury agency, has for years selectively audited dozens, and possibly hundreds, of medical marijuana businesses, under a little-known provision of the tax code that forces criminal enterprises to pay taxes on their gross revenue. Despite following all local and state laws, dispensaries in California and Colorado are still being audited under Tax Code Section 280e, meant for cartels and large criminal enterprises. The Heck-Rohrabacher-Perlmutter-Lee amendment would arguably curb these audits and give the banking industry the go-ahead to service medical marijuana businesses.
    "An overwhelming number of House members are telling the Obama Administration to stop meddling in state and local medical marijuana laws," said Mike Liszewski, Government Affairs Director with Americans for Safe Access, which has been lobbying Congress on these measures. "Today's vote should also be a clear signal to the U.S. Senate that they, too, should respect medical marijuana laws across the country."
    Congress also made an historic 186-236 vote to reject an amendment introduced by Representatives John Fleming (R-LA) and Andy Harris (R-MD) to the same budget bill, which would have prohibited Treasury from implementing the guidance issued earlier this year that allows banks to service medical marijuana businesses, in opposition to the Heck-Rohrabacher-Perlmutter-Lee amendment.
    Today's vote comes just two months after the House voted to restrict Department of Justice (DOJ) enforcement in medical marijuana states as an amendment to the Commerce, Science & Justice (CJS) budget bill. The then-unprecedented 219-189 vote signaled a sea change in Congress, according to advocates, and today's vote has surpassed the level of support seen in May. A similar CJS amendment has been filed by U.S. Senators Rand Paul (R-KY) and Cory Booker (D-NJ), but has not yet come up for a vote. A vote on a CJS amendment in the Senate is expected later this summer.
    With over 50,000 active members in all 50 states, Americans for Safe Access (ASA) is the largest national member-based organization of patients, medical professionals, scientists and concerned citizens promoting safe and legal access to cannabis for therapeutic use and research. ASA works to overcome political and legal barriers by creating policies that improve access to medical cannabis for patients and researchers through legislation, education, litigation, grassroots actions, advocacy and services for patients and the caregivers
     
  2. This is a "Heck" of a thing....lol see what I did there... No seriously this is good 
     
    Giving financial institutions they ability to do business with MMJ businesses is a huge deal.  I'm reading an article right now on how CO. and Wash. are doing an all cash deals with there growers, processors, and employees and how much danger it's putting them in. There is a whole industry on intelligence/counterintelligence and security for the MJ industry...Guys carrying AR-15's and 30 round clips trying to protect their money. They're hiring old "Blackwater" guys to do the security for something that should be so simple. If they could deal with the banks like everyone does that would solve a ton of problems.    
     
  3. Being from Colorado this is a very exciting thing to hear! It's awesome to see that people are really coming around to the idea that marijuana is not a bad substance, and if done properly, it really does work economically.
     
    I also like how Colorado's law states that the first $40 million of tax revenue from marijuana sales goes towards helping schools and various things around the state.
     
  4. This was expected. The pharmaceuticals, hospitals and banking interests cannot maximally profit (or at all) without opening up the market past a cash only business.

    This is marginally good for patients and citizens, almost irrelevant. But exceptionally good for the interests who've been jockeying over who's getting how much control over the legal markets.

    But i do agree as far as dispensary owners go, and regarding the safety of their staff, this is good for them.
     

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