CA NORMLs analysis of the conflicting provisions in the AUMA

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  1. http://www.canorml.org/news/Cal_NORML_Guide_to_AUM...


    CAL NORML GUIDE TO THE ADULT USE OF MARIJUANA ACT OF 2016 (AUMA)







    Posted December 14th, 2015 by canorml_admin


    \t
    \t \t


    \t
    \t The Adult Use of Marijuana Act is a legalization initiative that
    will be circulated for the November, 2016 California ballot. AUMA is
    sponsored by internet entrepreneur Sean Parker with support from some
    other wealthy benefactors and drug reform advocates.

    AUMA is a lengthy, 62-page initiative which elaborately writes
    hundreds of detailed restrictions and regulations into state law. Its
    basic thrust is to (1) allow adults 21 years and older to possess up to
    one ounce of marijuana and cultivate up to six plants for personal use;
    (2) regulate and tax the production, manufacture, and sale of marijuana
    for adult use; and (3) rewrite criminal penalties so as to reduce the
    most common marijuana felonies to misdemeanors and allow prior offenders
    to petition for reduced charges. AUMA"s regulatory provisions are
    largely patterned on the Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act
    (MMRSA), recently passed by the legislature and effective Jan 1, 2016;
    licenses for medical and adult-use would be distinct.

    *** Given its extraordinary length and complexity, AUMA contains a
    number of legal glitches and inconsistencies that will have to be fixed
    by the courts. It also contains a number of complications and
    restrictions that users accustomed to the looser framework of Prop 215
    may find objectionable. AUMA fails to afford the same degree of
    protection to marijuana consumers as some other initiatives that have
    been filed with the state but are unlikely to qualify for the ballot.
    Cal NORML has not taken a position on AUMA, but is offering this guide
    to help our members and the public better understand its implications.

    See full text of AUMA

    SUMMARY - ADULT USE OF MARIJUANA ACT (as proposed Dec 7, 2015)

    PERSONAL USE

    AUMA would make it lawful under both state and local law for adults
    over 21 to possess, process, transport, obtain, or give away to other
    adults no more than one ounce (28.5 grams) of marijuana (AUMA Sec.
    11362.1).

    *** The initiative sets inconsistent limits for marijuana concentrates,
    allowing possession of up to 8 grams in Sec. 11362.1 (a)2 , but no more
    than 4 grams in Sec. 11357(a), (b) and (c) and 11360.

    *** Other provisions (VC 23222(b) and HSC 11360(b)) inconsistently
    prohibit driving while in possession of marijuana or giving away
    marijuana, in contradiction to 11362.1. These contradictions will
    have to be settled by the courts.

    CULTIVATION: Adults could cultivate up to six plants and possess the
    marijuana from these plants at their residence for personal use (Sec.
    11362.1(3)). No more than six plants per residence. (N.B: this differs
    from the new limit for medical users under MMRSA, which allows 100
    square feet of growing space per patient). All plants and harvested
    marijuana in excess of one ounce must be (1) kept with the person"s
    private residence or on its grounds, (2) in a locked apace, and (3) not
    visible from a public place. (11362.2). Cities and counties may
    regulate and prohibit cultivation outdoors, but cannot completely
    prohibit cultivation inside a private residence or accessory structure
    that is "fully enclosed and secure.” (11362.2(b)).

    PARAPHERNALIA: Marijuana accessories would be legal for adult use and manufacture. 11362.1 (a) 5.

    CONSUMPTION: The initiative makes it lawful to smoke or ingest
    marijuana, but forbids consumption in any "public place” except for
    licensed dispensaries when authorized by local governments. Public
    place” is commonly construed broadly to include any business or property
    that is open to the public. *** This will greatly reduce the
    locations where medical patients can inhale their medicine, as they can
    presently consume legally in streets and public areas where smoking is
    allowed. Also forbidden is consumption within 1,000 feet of a school
    or youth center while children are present, except on residential
    property or on licensed premises and provided the smoking is not
    detectable by the kids. (11362.3(a)3).

    VAPORIZERS RESTRICTED: Use of smokeless electronic cannabis
    vaporizers is prohibited except in tobacco smoking areas. *** This
    restriction ignores compelling evidence that cannabis vaporizers pose no
    public health hazard because they effectively eliminate harmful smoke
    toxins and carcinogens, as demonstrated in scientific studies by CA
    NORML. The initiative goes on to state that this section does not
    override laws regarding medical use, but no such laws currently protect
    patients" right to vaporize or consume in non-smoking areas, so this
    point may be moot (11362.3(c)). The result will be to effectively
    preclude medical vaporization in housing and health facilities catering
    to patients.

    USE IN VEHICLES: Consumption or possession of an open container
    of marijuana or marijuana products is prohibited while driving or riding
    as a passenger in a motor vehicle, aircraft, vessel, or other
    transportation vehicle. Exception: passenger consumption may be allowed
    in the case of licensed dealers given a local government permit.
    (11362.3(a)4,7 -8.)

    DRIVING***: Although the initiative states it is lawful for adults
    to transport marijuana (Sec 11362.1), it leaves standing a contrary
    existing law (VC 23222(b)) that makes it illegal to drive in possession
    of marijuana. Thus drivers would still be liable for arrest for
    transporting legally obtained marijuana in their car even if it was in a
    sealed container. A court ruling will be needed to resolve the
    evident conflict.

    SCHOOL GROUNDS: Possession or use on school grounds are banned while children are present. (11362.3a(5)).

    MANUFACTURE WITH VOLATILE SOLVENTS – Unlicensed manufacture of
    concentrates using volatile or poisonous solvents (not including CO2 or
    alcohol) are subject to heavy felony penalties (11362.4(a)6).

    EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS: The initiative does not interfere with the right
    of employers to discriminate against marijuana users, medical or
    otherwise, both on and off the job. ***11362.45(f).

    MEDICAL USE. - SECTION 5.

    The initiative does not alter the protections of the Compassionate Use
    Act of 1996 (11362.45(i)). Physician recommendations must conform to
    minimal standards already established under MMRSA and current medical
    marijuana legislation (11362.712).

    ID CARDS: Qualified patients will need a state ID card if they want
    to be exempted from a 15% retail tax to be imposed on marijuana sales.
    (34011(g)). No card is needed to enjoy other legal protections of Prop.
    215. The cost of the state patient ID card is limited to $100, or $50
    for Medi-Cal patients; free of charge for indigent patients
    (11362.755). Identifying information in the ID card program is made
    subject to the Confidentiality of Medical Information Act (11362.713).

    CPS/CHILD CUSTODY: Qualified patients may not be denied child
    custody rights merely because of their status as medical marijuana
    users. 11362.45(f).

    REGULATION AND SAFETY – SECTION 6

    OVERSIGHT: The Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation in the
    Department of Consumer Affairs is renamed the Bureau of Marijuana
    Control and given chief authority to regulate the industry. The
    Bureau/DCA is charged with licensing transport, distribution and sale;
    the Dept of Food and Agriculture is in charge of licensing cultivation;
    and the Dept of Public Health is in charge of licensing manufacturing
    and testing. (Sec 26010-12).

    The Bureau is to convene an advisory committee of knowledgeable
    stakeholders to help develop regulations and issue reports. (26014)

    The Governor is to appoint an independent, three-member Appeals Board
    to adjudicate appeals subject to standard procedures(26040).

    LICENSE CATEGORIES: The initiative establishes 19 different license
    categories parallel to those in MMRSA, covering cultivation,
    manufacturing, testing, distributing, retailing, and distributing.
    Licenses for adult use facilities are distinct from those for medical
    facilities issued under MMRSA. (26050)

    LARGE CULTIVATORS: A new category of Type 5 "Large” cultivation
    licenses is created for farms over ½ acre indoors or 1 acre outdoors.
    No Type 5 licenses to be issued before Jan 1, 2023. (26061(d)).

    MICROBUSINESSES: A new category of Type 12 microbusiness licenses is
    created for small retailers with farms not exceeding 10,000 sq. ft. (
    26067 (e) 2).

    LICENSE CONDITIONS: Licenses may be denied based on various
    factors, including restraints on competition or monopoly power,
    perpetuation of the illegal market, encouraging abuse or diversion,
    posing a risk of exposure to minors, environmental violations, and
    "excessive concentration” in any city or county.

    *** Excessive concentration is defined excessively broadly to include
    any concentration in a local census track that is higher than elsewhere
    in the county. This effectively includes any new facility in a county
    that doesn"t already have one. An exception is made for denying
    applications that would "unduly limit the development of the legal
    market.” The overall effect is to give regulators a blank check to
    determine for themselves what constitutes excessive concentration. Local
    governments can also impose their own limits on concentration. (26051)

    RESTRAINT OF TRADE: Licensees are barred from price fixing,
    restraint of trade, price discrimination between different locations,
    and selling at less than cost to undercut competitors. (26052)

    NO ALCOHOL OR TOBACCO LICENSES may be held by marijuana licensees (26054(a)).

    SCHOOL BUFFER ZONES: No licensee shall be located with 600 ft. of a
    school or youth center in existence with the license was granted, unless
    a state or local licensing authority allows otherwise. (26054(b)).

    RESIDENCY: All licensees must be continuous California residents as of Jan 1, 2015. This restriction sunsets on Dec 31, 2019.

    PRIORITY TO EXISTING OPERATORS: Licensing priority shall be given
    to applicants who can demonstrate they have acted in compliance with the
    Compassionate Use Act since Sept 1, 2016.

    APPLICANTS WITH PRIOR CONVICTIONS: Licenses may be denied for
    convictions of offenses "substantially related” to the business,
    including serious and violent felonies, felonies involving fraud or
    deceit, felonies for employment of a minor in controlled substance
    offenses. A prior conviction for a controlled substance offense may not
    in itself be the sole grounds for rejecting a license. (26057). CS
    offenses subsequent to licensing are grounds for revocation.

    \tCULTIVATION regulations are similar to those established under MMRSA:

    • Cultivators must comply with conditions set by Dept. of Fish and
    Wildlife and State Water Resources Control Board, plus all other state
    and local environmental laws. 26060, 26066.

    • The Dept. of Pesticide Regulation is to issue standards for use of pesticides.

    • The state shall establish an organic certification program and
    standards for recognizing regional appellations of origin. 26062-3.

    • Marijuana to be regulated as an agricultural product by the Dept of Food and Agriculture (26067).

    • The Dept. shall establish an identification program with unique identifiers for every marijuana plant.

    TRANSPORT and DELIVERY: The Bureau shall establish standards for
    types of vehicles and qualifications for drivers eligible to transport
    commercial marijuana (26070(b)). Local government may not prevent
    delivery of marijuana on public roads by licensees in compliance with
    the initiative and local law (27080(b)). NOTE***: this implies that
    local governments still retain the right to bar deliveries to medical
    marijuana patients under MMRSA!

    NON_PROFITS: The Bureau is to investigate the feasibility of
    creating nonprofit license categories with reduced fees or taxes by Jan
    1, 2018 (Sec.27070.5). In the meantime, local jurisdictions may issue
    temporary local licenses to nonprofits primarily providing marijuana to
    low income persons, provided they are registered with the California
    AG"s Registry of Charitable Trusts. *** This section is of no effect
    because marijuana non-profits are not allowed on the registry due to
    federal law. Nonetheless, there is nothing to prevent non-profits from
    registering as commercial entities under the act.

    MANUFACTURING and TESTING LABS are regulated by the Dept. of Public HEalth along similar lines as MMRSA. (26100)

    LABELS: The act prescribes specific label warnings on every package
    of marijuana and marijuana products (26120): "GOVERNMENT WARNING: THIS
    PACKAGE CONTAINS MARIJUANA, A SCHEDULE I CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE. KEEP OUT
    OF REACH OF CHILDREN AND ANIMALS. MARIJUANA MAY ONLY BE POSSESSED OR
    CONSUMED BY PERSONS 21 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER UNLESS THE PERSON IS A
    QUALIFIED PATIENT. MARIJUANA USE WHILE PREGNANT OR BREASTFEEDING MAY BE
    HARMFUL. CONSUMPTION OF MARIJUANA IMPAIRS YOUR ABILITY TO DRIVE AND
    OPERATE MACHINERY. PLEASE USE EXTREME CAUTION.” (The Schedule I
    warning is to be deleted if the federal government reschedules).

    MINORS MAY BE SNITCHES: As in the alcohol industry, minors may be
    employed as peace officers to try to entrap marijuana dealers into
    illegal sales. (26140)

    ADVERTISING: misleading claims and marketing to minors are banned.
    No billboards along interstate highways, and no use of cartoon
    characters, language, or music known to appeal to kids. (26150-5).

    LOCAL CONTROL: Local governments may completely prohibit any type of
    business licensed under the act. The same is true of medical marijuana
    facilities under MMRSA. *** There is nothing to prevent local
    governments from banning both dispensaries and deliveries to qualified
    patients. (26200)

    ON-SITE CONSUMPTION: Local governments may permit on-site consumption
    at licensed retailers and microbusinesses provided: access is
    prohibited to persons under 21, consumption is not visible from any
    "public place” or non-age-restricted area, and sale or consumption of
    alcohol or tobacco aren"t allowed. *** This effectively ends the
    current practice of allowing beer and wine at popular cannabis events
    (26200(d)).

    LABOR LAWS IN EFFECT: The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement
    and Occupational Safety and Health shall apply the same labor standards
    as apply to medical producers under MMRSA, including the requirement
    that all businesses with 20 or more employees have a labor peace
    agreement (34019(a)7).

    MARIJUANA TAXES - SECTION 7

    All retail sales are subject to a 15% excise tax in addition to the
    regular state sales tax, effective Jan 1, 2018. Patients with state ID
    cards are exempt. (34011)

    All marijuana is subject to a cultivation tax of $9.25/ounce dry-weight
    for flowers or $2.75 for leaves, effective Jan 1, 2018. Other
    categories of harvested product are to be taxed at a similar rate based
    on their relative price to flowers. (34012)

    Cities and counties may impose any taxes they please on facilities
    cultivating, manufacturing, processing, selling, distributing,
    providing, storing (!), or donating (!!) marijuana. *** (34021)

    INSPECTIONS – The board and other law enforcement officers may
    inspect any place where marijuana is sold, cultivated, stored to assure
    taxes are collected. (34016).

    TAX REVENUES are allocated to a new California Marijuana Tax Fund. (34018)

    Proceeds go to:

    • Reasonable enforcement costs of the Bureau and other regulatory agencies not compensated by other fees (34019)

    • $10 million per year from 2018 thru 2028 for California public
    universities to study and evaluate the implementation of the act

    • $3 million per year from 2018 thru 2022 to the California Highway
    Patrol to establish protocols to determine whether drivers are impaired.

    • $10 million per year beginning in 2018, increasing by $10 million per
    year to $50 million in 2022-23 to the Governor"s Office of Business and
    Economic Development for a community reinvestment program, at least 50%
    of which in grants to community nonprofits, for job placement, mental
    health and substance abuse treatment, legal and other services to
    communities disproportionately affected by the war on drugs.

    • $2 million per year to the California Center for Medicinal Cannabis
    Research for research on efficacy and safety of medical marijuana.

    Of the remaining revenues,

    • 60% are allocated to a Youth Education, Prevention, Early Intervention
    and Treatment Account for youth programs to prevent drug abuse.

    • 20% to an Environmental Restoration and Protection Account for environmental cleanup and restoration.

    • 20% to a State and Local Government Law Enforcement Account for CHP
    DUI programs and grants to local governments relating to enforcement of
    the Act.

    CRIMINAL OFFENSES – SECTION 8

    Current marijuana laws (Health and Safety Code
    11357-111360) are rewritten with a new penalty structure. In all
    cases, offenders under 18 are not liable to criminal punishment, but to
    drug education and community service.

    POSSESSION (HSC 11357): Illegal possession of an ounce by persons
    18- 21 continues to be a $100 infraction. Illegal possession of more
    than an ounce by adults continues to be a misdemeanor, punishable by
    $500 and/or six months in jail. Possession of less than an ounce upon a
    school ground during school hours by a person over 18 is a misdemeanor
    punishable by a fine of $250, or $500 plus 10 days in jail for repeat
    offenses.

    CULTIVATION (HSC 11358): Illegal cultivation of six plants or less
    by minors 18-21 is a $100 infraction. Illegal cultivation of more than
    six plants is a misdemeanor punishable by $500 and/or 6 months. The
    current mandatory felony penalty for cultivation is eliminated, but
    felonies may be charged in the case of repeat offenders, persons with
    violent or serious priors, and various environmental offenses.

    POSSESSION FOR SALE (HSC 11359): Penalties are dropped from current
    mandatory felony to misdemeanor ($500 and/or 6 months). Felony
    enhancements allowed for repeat offenders, serious or violent priors,
    and sale to minors under 18.

    TRANSPORTATION, IMPORTATION, SALE OR GIFT (11360): Penalties are
    dropped from current mandatory felony to misdemeanors ($500 and/or 6
    months). *** Felony enhancements allowed for importing, exporting, or
    transporting for sale more than 1 ounce of marijuana or 4 grams of
    concentrate.

    GIVING AWAY***: Section 11360(b) retains the current $100 infraction
    for giving away up to one ounce of marijuana. This conflicts with
    Section 11362.1, which makes it legal for adults over 21 to give away an
    ounce to other adults. This contradiction will have to be cleared up
    by the courts.

    PRIOR OFFENSES: Persons previously convicted of offenses that would
    not be a crime or would be a lesser offense under AUMA may apply to the
    court for a recall or dismissal of their sentence. (11361.8)

    INDUSTRIAL HEMP: SECTION 9

    \tThe initiative enables legal production of industrial hemp under
    California"s existing hemp law, which has been in suspense pending
    approval by the state Attorney General.

    AMENDMENT: SECTION 10

    The legislature may by a 50% majority vote (1) reduce any
    penalties in the act, (2) add protections for employees of licensees,
    or (3) amend Section 5 (Medical Use) or Section 6 (Regulation and
    Safety) consistent with the purposes of the act. A 2/3 vote is
    required for other amendments.
     

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