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US: Marijuana as Budget Saver?

StopTheDrugWar.org

Drug War Chronicle

Monday 01 Sep 2003

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Marijuana as Budget Saver? Study Looks at Implications of Legalization in
Massachusetts
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/302/mironstudy.shtml

Massachusetts has a $3 billion state budget deficit, Gov. Mitt
Romney and the legislature are battling over multi-million cuts in
education funding, and heroin users are dying at a record pace
while tight times shrink the number of treatment beds by half.
The Bay State budget, like those of about 40 other states, has
been hit hard by tough economic times and could use some help.
Boston University economist Dr. Jeffrey Miron has a simple, if
only partial, solution: Legalize marijuana.

In a study commissioned by the Massachusetts-based marijuana
reform advocacy group Change the Climate
(http://www.changetheclimate.org) and released September 5, Miron
reported that legalizing marijuana in Massachusetts would save the
state as much as $138 million per year. That translates to the
salary equivalent of about 2,300 Massachusetts police,
firefighters, or teachers. The report, "The Budgetary
Implications of Marijuana Legalization in Massachusetts,"
estimates that the state could save $120.6 million in criminal
justice costs by regularizing the herb and generate an additional
$16.9 million in tax revenues on the legalized pot commerce.

Miron does not delve into the pros or cons of marijuana
prohibition -- only the budgetary impact. In the study's
executive summary, he writes, "The report is not an overall
evaluation of marijuana prohibition; the magnitude of any
budgetary impacts does not by itself determine the wisdom of
prohibition. But the costs required to enforce prohibition, and
the transfers that occur because income generated in the marijuana
sector is not taxed, are relevant to rational discussion of this
policy."

And Miron parses those costs and transfers carefully, albeit with
a relatively simple and conservative set of assumptions. For
instance, to determine police costs in enforcing marijuana
prohibition, Miron calculated the number of marijuana arrests,
their percentage of all arrests, and the cost per arrest for
police agencies. He discounted two-thirds of all marijuana
arrests as not "stand alone," or being arrests where other
criminal behavior was the cause of arrest. Still, the study found
that Massachusetts law enforcement agencies spend $40.3 million
just to arrest pot smokers and dealers.

"We looked at the reduction in expenditures in criminal justice
activities that would result from legalizing marijuana," Miron
told DRCNet. "We also estimated the tax revenues Massachusetts
would earn if marijuana sales were legalized and taxed, providing
that the federal government would ever allow it. "We could save
about $120 million in criminal justice spending and gain those tax
revenues. That's a lot of money."

The state could also save $13.6 million spent by the Dept. of
Corrections on the 10 people housed in state prison and 575
sentenced to County Corrections on marijuana charges. That money
could go a long way toward restoring $23 million in cuts to
Massachusetts school districts affected by charter school
enrollments. State Sen. David Magnani (D-Framingham), following a
parallel path, has offered a budget amendment that would get that
money back to the school districts by giving judges the ability to
release nonviolent offenders who have served half their sentences.

Or the $68.5 million that the Massachusetts judiciary and
prosecutorial systems spend enforcing marijuana prohibition could
take care of it, and then some. And that, according to Miron, is
only counting felony marijuana convictions, not the misdemeanors
that clog the system.

For all the exciting budgetary implications of his report, Miron
has not gotten much attention so far, nor, he said, were
legislators ready to repeal prohibition. "There is not a lot of
interest yet," he said, "a small story in the Boston Herald and
the local NPR affiliate, WBUR, but it is starting to percolate,"
he said. "As for the legislature, well, there's not a lot of
movement. I've talked to these guys lots of times, and I have the
feeling that they think it would be perfectly okay to legalize it,
but they fear their voters wouldn't go for it."

In recent elections, Massachusetts voters in districts across the
state have endorsed decriminalization or legalization proposals,
but legislators still weren't sure, Miron said. "The ballot
questions were non-binding and it was an off-year election, so it
is hard for them to tell how representative those votes were.
Still, you would think this would be a relatively receptive
state."

Change the Climate, the group which commissioned Miron's study, is
working to make the state even more receptive. The group, which
has done innovative marijuana legalization ad campaigns in Boston
and Washington, DC, is gearing up a new round of ads aimed at Bay
State voters. Unfortunately, the campaign got off to a rocky (if
subsequently well-publicized) start this week when its first
billboard included a photo of a real life Massachusetts State
Trooper. The trooper and his troop objected, and the billboard
company, which inadvertently used the wrong photo, replaced the
ad. But more are coming.

And given Miron's results, could this weekend's pro-pot Freedom
Rally on Boston Commons hear the rallying cry of fiscal
conservatism?

Visit http://www.changetheclimate.org/bu-study/mass_budget.pdf to
read the study in its entirety online, and visit
http://www.changetheclimate.org to view their ads and other
information. Visit http://www.masscann.org for information about
the Freedom Rally.


 

 

 

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