Answering 10 common California marijuana questions in the legal weed era

Answering 10 common California marijuana questions in the legal weed era

Its been almost a week since Californians voted to legalize recreational marijuana, and weve received a steady flow of questions from readers asking everything from how Prop. 64 impacts medical marijuana rights to what will happen to prices when its legal to purchase.

Here are answers to some of your most common California marijuana questions.

Q: Can we buy pot from a delivery service now?

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For now, only if you have a medical marijuana card. No recreational pot sales at a shop or by delivery are allowed until the state licensing program kicks in sometime before or on Jan. 1, 2018.

Q: I am currently a medical cannabis user. I do not smoke recreationally and have no plan to. My largest concern is the cost of medicine. Now that the sale of marijuana will be taxed, will medication be taxed as well? Will the price of meds go up?


Medical marijuana will soon be taxed, though at a lower rate than recreational marijuana.

In about a year, when new state licenses are rolled out and recreational shops can open, all cannabis sales will be taxed at 15 percent. If medical marijuana patients have a government-issued ID card, they can skip paying state sales tax, which averages around 8 percent. But theyd still pay the 15 percent special tax, for an overall increase of about 7 percent.

All consumers may face additional local taxes that might be approved by voters in cities and counties.

Still, after initial price bumps that tend to kick in briefly as stores get into compliance, every state that has legalized marijuana has seen prices go down substantially over time thanks to increased competition. So medical and recreational users can expect to pay less, eventually, even after new taxes factored in.

Q: If Im a medical marijuana patient, does Prop. 64 affect what I am able to carry and grow?

Medical rights remain intact. So people who have doctors recommendations for marijuana are still permitted to smoke the drug in most places tobacco where smoking is allowed. And, while recreational consumers are limited to growing six plants at a time, medical marijuana patients continue to be allowed to cultivate up to 100 square feet of pot plants.

Q: Will there even be a reason to keep your medical marijuana card now that weed is finally legalized?

Californians who dont have major medical problems no longer have to spend time and money getting a doctors recommendation to use marijuana. However, medical patients do hang onto some additional rights that recreational users dont have:

Patients who pay for a state-issued ID card will be exempt from state sales tax (see above).
Medical marijuana patients can grow more marijuana at home and use it in more places than recreational consumers (see above).

You only need to be 18 to get a medical marijuana card, where you need to be 21 to use recreationally.

Theres a good chance that a number of cities may only allow medical shops and not recreational, so you might have more access as a patient. Also, recreational pot shops wont open for a year, while medical shops can continue to operate.

Q: How can we repeal this initiative?

Ballot measures can be repealed by qualifying your own measure for a future ballot that undoes this one. Information on how to go about that is here.

Q: What about possession on a federal highway, even in a closed container or in trunk?

As long as that highway is in California and the container is sealed and locked away, it shouldnt be a problem. Federal authorities have been letting legal marijuana states essentially carry out their own programs, with some limits. For example, dont cross state lines and dont go into a federal park.

Q: Since marijuana has become recreational and medical is allowed in a few more states, what about carrying a closed container of marijuana on a plane from a legal state to another legal state? Is this still illegal?

That is still illegal. Marijuana remains illegal federally. And even legal states including California ...

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