Articles Tagged with California marijuana laws

Several marijuana-related bills were signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom recently. Among them:

  • A measure to allow legal marijuana businesses to take advantage of more tax deductions – in a departure from IRS policy.
  • A measure to provide free medical marijuana to low-income patients – and exempting those products from state-level taxes.
  • A measure directing California regulators to provide the U.S. Department of Agriculture with a program plan for industrial hemp in accordance with the 2018 Farm Bill, which legalized the non-THC crop and its derivatives (which include CBD).California cannabis laws

In addition to passing these laws, the governor vetoed a bill that would have allowed medical marijuana to be used in hospitals and other health care facilities.

Our Los Angeles marijuana lawyers are committed to helping our clients navigate the ever-changing legal landscape of California cannabis law and regulation. With so much at stake, marijuana businesses cannot afford to ignore these changes.

Tax Law Changes

Federal tax law – specifically section 280E – prohibits those who grow, process and sell marijuana from being allowed to deduct taxes, due to the fact that the business profits from marijuana, which is illegal under federal law. Up until this point, California tax law closely matched U.S. tax law.

Now, AB 37 changes that, departing from Internal Revenue Service Policy under 280E. The measure will allow cannabis companies to take state-level deductions just like any other business – from Jan. 1, 2020 to Jan. 1, 2025. The bill takes effect immediately as a tax levy.

Greater Access for Low-Income Residents

Another measure gives greater access to medical marijuana for low-income patients. SB 34 changes the law with regard to “cannabis donations.” Existing administrative law bars licensed cannabis retailers from providing free cannabis to anyone at a licensed premises. There is a narrow exception for licensed medical marijuana retailers and those with micro-business licensees that are providing medical marijuana to patients who struggle to afford it.

SB 34 authorizes all licensed cannabis shops to offer free or reduced-cost marijuana or related products to medical marijuana patients who meet certain medical and income requirements. The bill further exempts marijuana businesses from being taxed on these “donations.”

No Cannabis in Hospitals

One measure that failed was SB 305, which would have required some health care facilities to allow medical marijuana access to terminally ill patients on site. In a veto message, the governor said he “begrudgingly” declined to make the measure law – for fear it would have jeopardized Medicaid and Medicare funding for those facilities. Those programs are subsidized by federal tax dollars, and using that money for an outlawed Schedule I narcotic could have cost the healthcare industry dearly.

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Let’s talk pot shop. As long-time L.A. marijuana lawyers, we’ve seen the industry in California morph from its early days as the first state in the U.S. to legalize medical marijuana in the 1990s to joining a growing number of cannabis companies celebrating legal recreational use of the drug, officially allowable after Jan. 1, 2018. However, the passage of this measure did not open the market floodgates. In fact, certain rules are fairly strict and you must be mindful of them when in public, engaging in business with marijuana companies and especially if starting one yourself. L.A. marijuana lawyers

For those who may be new to California, just landed a job here, have an upcoming visit or perhaps are just now interested in testing the THC waters, here are the main things you need to know.  Continue reading

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