Legal Marijuana’s Social Impact On Colorado

Via ConvergEx’s Nicholas Colas,

Believe it or not, there was no change in the number of marijuana users in Colorado between 2014 and 2015 after legalization of the sale of recreational cannabis went into effect. At least that’s what Colorado’s Retail Marijuana Public Advisory Committee reported in their latest research on the effects of marijuana on public health. They also found that calls to poison centers for exposure to marijuana and emergency room visits continue to fall. The State Department of Public Safety also reported that the number of marijuana arrests nearly halved, down by 46% between 2012 and 2014. Moreover, Colorado has one of the lowest unemployment rates in the country, and the legal marijuana industry has certainly helped by adding 18,000 new full-time jobs in 2015 according to the Marijuana Policy Group. Perhaps the most significant benefit to the state is tax receipts, as Colorado received $198.5 million in tax revenue last year from marijuana sales of $1.3 billion.

Bottom line, retail marijuana legalization has had its fair share of pros and cons in Colorado, but it’s not been nearly as bad as critics had forecast.

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Note from Nick:  Jessica’s note about the legal pot business get a lot of attention and comments from readers and today she looks at the social impact of legalization on the state of Colorado.  With other states – most notably California – voting to legalize marijuana, this will become a national issue in coming years.  Read on for the details.

We’ve written several notes about the success of legal recreational marijuana businesses in Colorado over the past few years, but our most frequently asked question is: what are the social costs? Many people have heartbreaking stories about the effects drugs have had on their loved ones and with one in five Americans now living in a state where retail cannabis is legal, it’s important to understand the social side of the business as well.

Colorado has a few years of useful data to unpeel the layers given that stores have sold retail marijuana there since January 2014. We put together a list of different angles from which to measure some social ramifications and benefits of legalization. Here’s what we found:

Homelessness

Colorado experienced the third largest increase in the total number of homeless people last year (721 people), following California (4,504) and Washington (1,374). It also had an increase of 231 homeless veterans from 2015 to 2016, marking the largest gain of any state. There were only seven other states with a rise in homeless veterans. HUD link: https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/2016-AHAR-Part-1.pdf

So what’s going on there?  The ability for dispensaries to sell recreational marijuana as of January 2014 has certainly entered the debate. A few points:

  • Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper spoke about homelessness and the unintended consequences of legalizing marijuana in his annual State of the State address in January 2017: “There’s no question that marijuana and other drugs–in combination with mental illness or other disabling conditions–are essential contributors to chronic homelessness.” He also said “tax revenue from marijuana sales can and should be used to help those who fall through the cracks including hundreds of homeless vets.”

Speech link: https://www.colorado.gov/governor/news/gov-hickenlooper-delivers-annual-…

  • In a Denver Post article, spokesman Daniel Warvi for the Department of Veterans Affairs said “a perfect storm” of circumstances is pushing many veterans onto the streets. Veterans are coming to Colorado planning to get a job in the burgeoning legal marijuana industry or because Colorado’s job market is booming… But when they arrive in Colorado, the jobs many of them qualify for don’t pay enough to cover rent, and they learn they must be a Colorado resident for a year before getting a cannabis-related job.”

Here’s the full article, which also includes some vet’s experiences: http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/18/colorado-spike-homeless-veterans/

  • Bottom line, many people moved to Colorado after retail marijuana was legalized, and some may have not had the skills to find a job. Granted there are other factors to consider, such as a low unemployment rate and widespread access to health care. The state’s population grew by 101,000 in 2015, marking the first time it crossed the 100,000 threshold since 2001, for example. In another Denver Post article, state demographer Elizabeth Garner said net migration made up about two-thirds of the gain. Link: http://www.denverpost.com/2015/12/22/colorados-population-jumped-by-1010…

Correlation does not equal causation, of course. With that said, contributing factors in the debate have included homeless people moving to Colorado because they can legally buy marijuana or individuals moving to the state with the hopes of getting a marijuana related job and not finding one in time before they become homeless. Source: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/feb/27/marijuana-legal-homeless…

Crime and Enforcement

We zeroed in on the “Mile-High City” of Denver since it’s the national epicenter of legal recreational marijuana.  Denver’s percentage of statewide marijuana sales was 47% in 2014 and 41% in 2015, and there are more than 1,000 marijuana business licenses outstanding. The city also started tracking marijuana-related crimes reported to the Denver Police Department in 2012. Here are some more stats from their 2016 report:

  • The total number of crimes reported to the Denver Police Department that “have a clear connection or relation to marijuana” but don’t “have an incidental relation to marijuana” increased from 256 in 2012 to 270 in 2015 (down from 293 in 2014). Note that it also does not include “violations restricting the possession, sale, and/or cultivation of marijuana.” Marijuana-related crime makes up less than 1% of overall crime in Denver and fell from 0.58% in 2012 to 0.42% in 2015.

  • Most marijuana-related crime is simply people breaking into stores to get the drug. There were 191 industry-related crimes in 2012 (0.43% of total crime in Denver) versus 192 in 2015 (0.42%) compared to 65 non-industry crimes in 2012 (0.15%) and 78 in 2015 (0.12%). In 2015, “burglary or attempted burglary accounted for 64% of Marijuana Industry-Related Crime. Larceny (theft) accounted for another 11% of all Marijuana Industry-Related Crime.”

  • The report notes the rarity of violent crimes – including homicide, rape, robbery, aggravated assault and arson – related to the licensed marijuana industry. In 2015, there were 8, or “one violent crime related to the marijuana industry for every 1,357 violent crimes overall.”

As for arrests, the Denver PD only started collecting the data in 2014. There was an 11% increase to 1,666 marijuana related arrests from 2014 to 2015, including the unlawful distribution/cultivation/possession of marijuana or a marijuana concentrate, public display or consumption of marijuana, and business license violations.

For crime in Colorado as a whole, the State Department of Public Safety put out a 143-page report last year. They found that the number of marijuana arrests dropped by 46% between 2012 and 2014, and that “marijuana possession arrests, which make up the majority of all marijuana arrests, were nearly cut in half (-47%).” Marijuana accounted for 6% of all arrests in 2012 and 3% in 2014.

Report: http://cdpsdocs.state.co.us/ors/docs/reports/2016-SB13-283-Rpt.pdf

  • In terms of driving under the influence of marijuana, DUIDs rose 10% to 73 in Denver during 2015, but “represent a very small portion (2.8%) of overall impaired driving arrests.”

  • One last important point from the report: “the implication of a legal commercial market is not that enforcement needs will necessarily decrease.” In fact, “the opposite is true in the short run” as “the black market will not simply vanish” and “people will continue pushing the boundaries and operating outside of the rules.” Criminals still purchase marijuana in bulk from Colorado and sell it across the U.S., for example. Therefore, the “Denver Police Department Marijuana Team’s work around illegal marijuana has increased significantly over the last couple of years.”

To put this in perspective, the Denver Police Department (DPD) crime lab processed 524 pounds of marijuana in 2013. After retail sales went into effect in January 2014, this figure grew to 9,504 pounds in 2014 and 4,738 pounds in 2015. Those numbers don’t even include the DPD’s involvement in other operations when marijuana was processed by the Drug Enforcement Agency. The DPD actually increased the number of officers working on  the department’s marijuana team to also monitor home grows to ensure people aren’t developing more plants than is lawful.

Link to report:

https://www.denvergov.org/content/dam/denvergov/Portals/782/documents/An…

Link to graphics: https://www.denvergov.org/content/denvergov/en/denver-marijuana-informat…

Unemployment

Colorado is one of five states with the lowest unemployment rates in the country at 3.0% as of December. This represents a fall from 7.9% in 2012 when it ranked 31st. Of course opportunities working for marijuana-related businesses didn’t make up for the whole decline, but it did help. According to the Marijuana Policy Group in a report published last October:

  • The legal marijuana industry in Colorado added over 18,000 new full-time jobs in 2015 and spurred $2.4 billion in economic activity.

  • Since it’s a “highly-localized industry” it “generates more local output and employment per dollar spent than almost any Colorado sector” except for government program spending. For example, “each dollar spent on retail marijuana generates $2.40 in state output” compared to $1.88 per dollar for the general retail trade.

Link: http://www.mjpolicygroup.com/pubs/MPG%20Impact%20of%20Marijuana%20on%20C…

On the flip side, even though marijuana is legal on a state level, individuals who use can still fail their employers’ drug tests since it’s illegal on a Federal level. Quest Diagnostics released a report in 2014 that showed the “percentage of positive drug tests among American workers has increased for the first time in more than a decade,” mostly due to marijuana and amphetamines. This followed several years of declines. After recreational marijuana was legalized in Colorado and Washington, marijuana positivity rose by double digits in both states during 2013 compared to a 6.2% increase nationally. The study notes that both states also experienced large increases before legalization so the trend was already underway.

Link: http://newsroom.questdiagnostics.com/2014-09-11-Workforce-Drug-Test-Posi…

  • Some employers are removing marijuana from pre-employment drug tests. Sixty-two percent of businesses test for drugs in Colorado compared to 77% in 2014, according to the Mountain States Employers Council. This may be due to the state’s low employment rate rather than friendlier views, however. See here: http://www.denverpost.com/2017/02/03/colorado-business-pot-drug-tests/

Public Health and Marijuana Use

The Retail Marijuana Public Advisory Committee has monitored marijuana and its impact on public health in Colorado over the past few years and just published another expansive report on the topic. Here are some of their key findings:

  • Past-month marijuana users: There was no change in past-month marijuana use between 2014 and 2015. Two different Federal surveys showed 13% and 17% of Colorado adults said they use cannabis compared to the national average of 8%. Marijuana use over the past month was highest for males (17%) and individuals aged 18 to 25 (26%).

  • Daily marijuana use vs tobacco and alcohol: 6% of adults reported using marijuana daily or near-daily compared to daily or near daily alcohol (22%) and tobacco use (16%).

  • Teen use: 21% of Colorado high school students said they had used marijuana in 2015, roughly similar to 20% in 2013 before stores first started selling retail cannabis. It’s also about in line with the national average of about 17% and 22% according to two different surveys.

  • Marijuana in Colorado homes with children: 8% of adults with children aged 1 to 14 had “marijuana or marijuana products in or around the home.” In “82% of these homes, marijuana was stored safely, while in 18% it was potentially stored unsafely.” The report also said “it is estimated that approximately 16,000 homes in Colorado had children 1-14 years old with possible exposure to secondhand marijuana smoke or vapor in the home.”

  • Hospital visits and poison center calls: Calls to poison centers for exposure to marijuana “appear to be decreasing since 2015, including unintentional exposures in children aged 0-8 years.” Moreover, “the overall rate of emergency department visits with marijuana-related billing codes dropped 27 percent from 2014 to 2015 (2016 data is not available yet).” One point of concern is marijuana edibles, however, as they were “involved in about 40% of marijuana exposure calls to the poison center” and twice as common as calls about smokeable marijuana for children aged 0-8.

Link: https://www.colorado.gov/cdphe/marijuana-health-report

Tax Receipts

Tax revenue from marijuana sales is one of the most significant benefits of legalization for Colorado. The state received $198.5 million in tax revenue last year from marijuana sales of $1.3 billion. The first $40 million each year goes to public school construction projects.  The balance includes funding for everything from educational programs about the drug and substance abuse prevention grants to pesticide control and inspection services. This article provides an excellent breakdown for more details: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/289613

 

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25 Comments
James
James
March 14, 2017 7:40 am

legalize all drugs,end the cop/court/drug/gang/prison cartels,along with govt.s that profit for black funds by importing themselves!None of your business what someone else does unless endagering you by say driving while fucked up!Seriously,mind your own business and leave us the fuck alone!

Ricky Collins abused child
Ricky Collins abused child
  James
March 14, 2017 8:52 pm

Righton man! I support your right to cleanse the gene pools in 5 years. Let the doppers shoot up. Its time that druggies were treated the way they deserve to be treated.

Hell give them heroin for free.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
March 14, 2017 10:54 am

SSS has a job there in Colorado at one of the major pot centers . He’s a taste tester…like most taste testers ( and Billy C. ) he doesn’t inhale,therefore making him a reefer virgin .

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
March 14, 2017 11:19 am

The fact that’s it’s still illegal at the federal level creates all sorts of hilarious complications – especially the inability of sellers to deposit money in federally- chartered banks. Not sure about state-chartered banks. In California, counties and municipalities can still restrict its cultivation and sale (and they do). I know of someone who bought land on which to grow pot, only to find out that it’s not legal in that county. Lol.
He’s growing it anyway. Then there’s the problem of thieves.

If people want pot to be legal, they need the federal law changed. It’s funny to me that there’s been no groundswell to do that. Where are the liberal and libertarian congress people and why haven’t they championed the cause?

James
James
  Iska Waran
March 14, 2017 11:59 am

Iska,perhaps just get rid of the fed instead,solve a plethora of issues.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Iska Waran
March 14, 2017 12:10 pm

Iska wrote–
“Where are the liberal and libertarian congress people and why haven’t they championed the cause?”

several reasons–they would be pilloried by their next opponent.also,there are large amounts of $ involved–

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  TampaRed
March 14, 2017 2:54 pm

Why would they be pilloried by the next opponent if legalizing pot is so popular that it’s sweeping the nation? BTW, I think the federal prohibition contravenes the 10th amendment and Gonzales v Raich was wrongly decided (Clarence Thomas was right – as usual – that it’s an abuse of the Commerce Clause).

Jason Calley
Jason Calley
  Iska Waran
March 14, 2017 3:16 pm

“If people want pot to be legal, they need the federal law changed.”

Of course, theoretically (assuming that we still lived under the rule of the Constitution (which we don’t)) all those Federal laws were never legal in the first place. The Constitution does not give the feds authority to legislate about marijuana. Back when alcohol was outlawed there were still enough people around who understood the Constitution that the politicians knew they had to pass an amendment before they could write laws forbidding alcohol. Ah, the old days! These days they just write whatever they want, and unless you have more army tanks than they do, you BETTER obey. Which is just another way of saying that pragmatically, yes, you are correct, if people want pot to be legal, they need the federal law changed.

I wish it were no so, but it is…

Suzanna
Suzanna
March 14, 2017 1:21 pm

Hemp is a fabulous weed plant (grows like a weed)…
remember Henry Ford made a car out of hemp.
Hemp oil supposedly has healing properties…
many many uses. Smoking it? Well to each their own.
Gov. is the paramount and major drug dealer over all.

http://www.collective-evolution.com/2013/02/25/henry-ford-hemp-plastic-car-stronger/

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Suzanna
March 14, 2017 1:57 pm

As usual Suzanna you make good comments.
I read an article years ago that stated hemp could replace most of the slash pine forests in the south.
The advantages are multi crops per year with less pesticide use.
The disadvantages?

Kelly the Deplorable
Kelly the Deplorable
  TampaRed
March 14, 2017 2:33 pm

Absolutely. The drug part of the plant aside, the industrial uses of hemp are numerous and widespread. I came across a construction materials company several years back that was making pre-fab trusses & joists out of pressed hemp. It came out with a look and feel similar to plastic, as mentioned about Henry Ford’s car.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Kelly the Deplorable
March 14, 2017 2:53 pm

Actually, industrial hemp is worthless as a drug.

It can be used to make everything from gasoline and diesel fuel to construction products to ultra tough natural fiber textiles.

It grows on land otherwise considered poor for agricultural use.

I’ve advocated developing industrial hem production for over 30 years, but few listen.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Kelly the Deplorable
March 14, 2017 2:56 pm

A car made out of hemp? That’s ’70’s technology:
[imgcomment image[/img]

MJC
MJC
March 14, 2017 1:57 pm

More lives are ruined being arrested for drugs than doing drugs

Anonymous
Anonymous
  MJC
March 14, 2017 2:56 pm

Depends on the drug.

Some have very predictable negative outcomes, including death which we see rapidly increasing with opioid overdoses.

Ricky Collins abused child
Ricky Collins abused child
  MJC
March 14, 2017 8:55 pm

I’m sure you’re right. How can you be arrested if you don’t do drugs. If you do use drugs you’ve all ready decided where you want to be. That’s why we have boweries in every city.

xrugger
xrugger
March 14, 2017 2:00 pm

Hey man…when did pot become legal in Colorado man!! California too?? Wow man, that’s trippy!! I’ve been stoned for the last 5…?…12…??…23…?…several years. Been living with a female panther in a cave up on the Musselshell..she never did get used to me! Dude!! When did all this happen??
(hat tip to Del Cue and J. Johnson)

CCRider
CCRider
March 14, 2017 2:28 pm

I have friends in Denver who say the biggest change they’ve seen since it became legal was at Bronco football pregame tail gating behavior. It use to be a drunken brawl. Now it’s much more pleasant and the food has improved measurably. Sounds right to me.

Ricky Collins abused child
Ricky Collins abused child
  CCRider
March 14, 2017 8:57 pm

When you get the munchies doesn’t matter what you chow down on. Which is why druggies are often seen staggering along and munbling to themselves. Hell everyone had a doper roomate in college, today they flip burgers or drive cabs or teach English lit.

Michele L Dinsmore
Michele L Dinsmore
March 14, 2017 4:19 pm

how to win ANY ‘conflict’ without dropping a single bomb or waste a single bullet? Air drop tons of pot brownies and hippy music! DATS HOW! seriously though, this weed plant is far more profitable to the PTB as a schedule 1 class NARCOTIC. They get seizures and forfeitures and aquadrupling of prison inmates [job security for many companies] cops and DAs make their careers off it, as do the dirty judges, and of course theres BIG PHARMA who continues to ignore the medicinal bennies and instead market the shit out of repackaged by products they cant find any ‘use’ for besides calling it the latest in drug research! Toke lightly and carry a big hit! SMH

Rocky Racoon
Rocky Racoon
  Michele L Dinsmore
March 14, 2017 8:59 pm

Let’s try that at Berkley and see how it works out. Oh yeah, all those guys are coke heads soooooo…….

Hagar
Hagar
March 14, 2017 6:22 pm

While I am not and have never been a user of drugs… aspirin, caffeine, tobacco, and alcohol excepted… I have long accepted the idea that the war on drugs of all kinds is a foolish way to fund black ops. I know not of all the ramifications of legalizing the ‘hard drugs’, but I am aware of the destruction of lives and communities by the illegal drug activities of drug pushers, cartels, 3 letter agencies, script doctors, gangs, and of course the users.

The Taliban had all but shut down poppy production in Afghanistan until Shrub invaded. Now our brave, duped, soldiers guard the poppy fields so that the CIA can reap the spoils of war. Iran-Contra was fueled by Colombian cocaine. Not sure what Fast and Furious was to achieve. Air America funneled tons of Golden Triangle product to the West funding God knows what.

So I am for doing away with the arcane drug laws and let people do what they will. Most of us, not all, utilize our drug of choice responsibly. Not sure how to determine impairment for automobile use or workplace activities, but someone can. I am not so much libertarian as I just want the corruption of the drug wars to stop. I know, pipe dream.

Rocky Racoon
Rocky Racoon
  Hagar
March 14, 2017 9:02 pm

Yeah what that dude says is all true. The Taliban shut down drugs. That’s why they have bank accounts in Tehran and traffic to Lebannon. Bummer man, I used to trek to Afghanistan to get the real stuff back in the 70s.

You still get hash abywhere in the Middle East but keep it a secret, Schrub tried to stop it, that evil Hitlerite.

rhs jr
rhs jr
March 14, 2017 10:01 pm

Fake Journalist can’t see chemtrails and that dope makes people dopey (esp in the long run). Sober is cheaper and better. Hey, if dope is good for you then you really ought to try some hash.

Wild Bob
Wild Bob
March 14, 2017 11:53 pm

I just moved out of Colorado. Dope ruined it for me. Here’s the story:
My wife and I purchased 8 acres in Kiowa, south and about 30 miles east of Denver, in 2005. Our dream home, retired, ready to die there.
Then, along comes medical dope. The people behind me, on 40 acres, sold out (very quickly and unexpectedly) and the place was bought by none other than Gary Turner (this is all research I did on my own so I might have incorrect info), of the Ted Turner clan. Turner has a small mansion on the outskirts of Parker, Colo., as well as considerable properties in the Roxbourough Park area.
Well, the place was rented out. First man/gal couple moved in, right away I could tell something was up (they were growing).
They were secretive, and kinda strange. Problem was, the driveway to their house bordered my property and came within 100′ of my back door, so I got to see everything, and I mean EVERYTHING, that went on over there. After a few years, I was pretty much able to tell what they were having for lunch.
Anyway, here comes the traffic. Pickups, small cars, Mercedes, out-of-state license plates, it was like I-5 in Los Angeles. All day, ever day, in, out, in, out…..ruining my peaceful buddhist existence. These dudes were selling to out-of-staters, on a very regular basis. I got involved with local 5-oh, but it seems my tips never seemed to lead to any arrests (that I knew of, anyway).
After he left (couldn’t pay the rent, dunno why) in moved the mexicans. And quite the crew they had….one big burly long greasy-haired beaner; some dude with a blue mohawk, who enjoyed watching me from 2 acres away as I soaked in my outdoor hillbilly hottub. There was constant riff-raff types in there. That all got shut down when the main beaner-dude beat his girlfriend, gave her a black eye, out come the cops, out go the mexicans.
Next, in comes the drug-dealing negro from Nebraska. He had the odd habit of liking to ‘jog’ along the dirt road in front of my house and others in the subdivision. Man did I ever feel uncomfortable with his reconnoitering my property. This dude was sketchy, wore one of those prison-type black nylon do-rags, was always close to my house and property line ‘pulling weeds’, etc. I don’t know if you’re aware of the statistics re: black drug dealers, but let’s just say they’re not exactly the salt of the earth. He was as out-of-place in that neighborhood as a Preacher in a whorehouse on a Friday night.
I became quite paranoid, worried about a home invasion, robbery, whatevahs, so I ended up sleeping with a Mossberg 500 under my pillow (and still do, to this day, so if you’re ever visiting you might wanna give a shout out before attempting to rouse me from my slumber!). One thing’s for certain when you live out in the country, you’re your own 1-man army. It’s up to you to defend yourself, there ain’t no-one gonna be a-comin’ to your rescue when shit goes pear-shaped. Being a former Marine ( I had even earned the nickname ‘RamBob’ at one point), I had several ‘defensive’ positions set up on the property, including a tree-stand for surveillance and a sand-bag filled ‘storage shed’ close to the property line. I also installed video cameras, and regularly patrolled my property in the wee hours. I had at least 3 interesting experiences during those patrols, but that’s a story for another time.
I decided I either sell my house and move away and keep from going insane, or kill someone and go to prison. We sold our home January 2015, and rented a home for the last 2 years at great expense. We just recently moved into a modest home in a different, more reasonably priced state.
Yeah, it’s all good, dope dope dope, leave us alone. Let me tell you: it’s all good as long as it’s ‘somewhere else’ but you sure as HELL don’t want it in your OWN back yard!
And man!! Everywhere you go, dopers are driving around doing 10-15 mph under the speed limit. ‘Failure to make headway’ is the term, I believe, for the traffic infraction. They’ve driven up rental prices to the stratosphere, as I understand some 10,000 people per month are moving there. I-25 from Cheyenne to Trinidad is bumper to bumper traffic, 24-7-365.
Colorado is a shit hole. I got ran out, sorry, I’m not a doper.
I believe in meditation and I rarely even use Motrin. Drugs have side effects. I give cannabis credit: Its DNA has evolved to make large hairless cow-eating monkeys with fangs tend to it’s every need. It has turned them into zombies. Literally, zombies.
PostScript: After a bad haircut a few months back, I earned the new nickname ‘BobJovi’. Oh, and in 2012 I voted for Romney, and no dope, and I got dope, and chOadBama. I accepted my loss gracefully, and I sure as fuck wasn’t out rioting in the streets. I also voted for Trump, as did many of my friends. Colorado has been taken over by mexicans, and that’s who voted blue. Again, a story for another time.