News

Denver Marijuana Tax Revenue Exceeds Half a Billion Dollars

DENVER — According to news reports, data released this week by the city of Denver shows tax revenue from legal marijuana sales has generated more than half a billion dollars for the city since 2010. The news comes less than a couple weeks after the Colorado Department of Revenue announced state marijuana tax revenue has exceeded $2.5 billion.

From 2010 to August 2023, regulated cannabis businesses conducted about $5.7 billion in legal sales of adult-use and medical marijuana, producing $501,538,144 in local tax revenue. The revenue has been used to support affordable housing ($61.7 million), homelessness services ($30 million), education ($27 million), small business investment ($10 million), and opioid intervention ($4 million).

“Colorado’s cannabis industry has fulfilled legalization’s promise of substantial tax revenue for our state and local communities,” said Chuck Smith, president of the board of directors at Colorado Leads. “These businesses are not only generating revenue, but also creating jobs, utilizing the products and services of other local businesses, and making charitable contributions to a wide range of local causes.”

Earlier this month, Colorado Leads hosted a golf tournament that raised thousands of dollars for the Denver Assessment, Intake, and Diversion (AID) Center, a crucial connection point to comprehensive community and systems-based services for justice-involved individuals and others.

“While our economic impacts tend to grab the headlines, we are most proud of our industry’s commitment to regulatory compliance and enhancing public safety,” Smith said. “Regulated marijuana businesses ensure adults who choose to consume cannabis can purchase it safely and legally. They also take great care to prevent cannabis from being sold to minors.”

Late last week, the Colorado Department of Revenue’s Marijuana Enforcement Division announced the compliance rate for underage sales checks reached a record high 99% in 2022.

How to make change

Colorado Leads member LivWell Enlightened Health found that just a few cents goes a long way to making change. In August, LivWell asked its customers to “round up” their purchase to the nearest dollar with the difference going to the Colorado COVID Relief Fund. The company has already raised more than $30,000 through nearly 69,000 transactions/donations.

The relief fund supports Colorado communities and organizations affected by the recent outbreak of COVID-19.

Colorado cannabis: All grown up

Colorado State University is launching a cannabinoid research center with a $1.5 million gift from an alumna who is the head of a CBD company.

The money will fund research, cover operating expenses and purchase equipment, and students and faculty will study the formulation of cannabinoids, separation efficiencies, and efficacy testing, among other things.

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You want to go where everybody knows your name

Bloomberg looks at the Colorado’s new law permitting cannabis lounges, how local governments may regulate them and how entrepreneurs grapple with making them profitable.

“This takes it out of back alleys and parks,” said state Rep. Jonathan Singer, chief sponsor of a law (H.B. 1230) that took effect Jan. 1. “Whether you are a novice, a tourist, or an established resident, you should have a public place where it’s safe to consume.”

 

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Related: Silverthorne opts out of cannabis hospitality and delivery.

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Sales record shattered

Marijuana dispensaries racked up over $114 million in sales in March alone as the cannabis industry continues to break sales records.

Full Story »

Sales may have received a boost from the so-called Bomb Cyclone. 

Read More – Marijuana Business Daily Chart of the Week »

In the News

Take it to the bank

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Manuchin told a federal lawmakers that there is no regulatory solution to existing banking access issues for the marijuana industry, and he encouraged Congress to resolve the problem with legislation “on a bipartisan basis.”

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Cannabis helping kids stand up to bullies 

Parkview Elementary School in Lamar uses more than $100,000 a year it receives from the state’s cannabis taxes for its anti-bullying program. The program has made a big difference in the lives of elementary school kids.

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No legal immigrants need apply?

Denver Mayor Michael Hancock and City Attorney Kristin Bronson are pressing the Trump administration to rethink its citizenship policies after legal immigrants in Denver have been denied the opportunity to become naturalized citizens because they work in the marijuana industry.

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Headlines

Vetoed Autism Bill Returns 

A bill – similar to the one vetoed last year by then-Gov. John Hickenlooper – that would allow Coloradans with autism to use medical marijuana cleared its first legislative hurdle last week.

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A Cannabis Oasis

The only two adult-use cannabis shops in El Paso County are a financial boon to Manitou Springs. Mayor Ken Jaray said a recent project to bury cable lines previously suspended on telephone poles would not have been possible without the taxes the city brings in from the two shops. The fund the city uses for these types of projects, its Urban Renewal Authority, climbed from an average of $34,000 a year before recreational marijuana, to $1.2 million in 2016.

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