media-report:-nevada-legal-cannabis-sales-keep-dropping;-industry-blames-illicit-market-|-cannabis-law-report-|-where-to-buy-skittles-moonrock-online

Media Report: Nevada legal cannabis sales keep dropping; industry blames illicit market | Cannabis Law Report | Where to buy Skittles Moonrock online

Learn where to order marijuana online. TOP QUALITY GRADE A++

Cannabyss Inc. is the best place online to buy top quality weed, cannabis, vape, marijuana and CBD products. Get your borderless orders delivered at the pickup spot with ease. Top Grade products for client satisfaction.

👉 Click here to Visit our shop! 🛒

Carson Now.Org

By Isabella Aldrete — Nevada’s cannabis industry has begun to shrink after years of growth, continuing to face stiff competition from the illicit market, according to new data released by the Cannabis Compliance Board (CCB), the state industry’s regulating body.

The state’s legal dispensaries logged $829 million in taxable sales in the fiscal year that ended in June, according to statistics released this month. Sales have fallen each year since peaking at just over a billion dollars in the fiscal year that ended in mid-2021.

Meanwhile, the illicit market makes $242 million to $370 million in sales annually (the exact number is difficult to pin down), representing a quarter to a third of of Nevada’s total cannabis sales, according to a state-produced market analysis published in late September, the first report of its kind since the possession of cannabis was legalized at the state level in 2017.

Although medical marijuana has been legal in Nevada since 2000, it wasn’t until 2016 that voters legalized the recreational use of cannabis through a ballot measure. In 2015, the first medical dispensaries began to open up and, in 2021, the Legislature authorized consumption lounges — opening the doors for what regulators contend could be a booming industry that is safer for consumers than buying from illicit sources.

But many on the regulating side of the industry say that lack of enforcement and public awareness campaigns have allowed the illicit market to flourish, taking away potential tax revenue that could go to schools and infrastructure. Legal sales are subject to a 10 percent excise tax in addition to the standard sales tax rate of about 8 percent, on top of a 15 percent wholesale tax paid at the cultivation level.

Although cannabis taxes can serve as a significant source of revenue for the state — $108 million was transferred to the state education fund out of the proceeds from the most recent fiscal year — the CCB report cautions that taxes may encourage some consumers to seek out more affordable illicit products.

“We don’t want to restart the war on drugs, but we do need to make sure that the businesses are following the law,” said Layke Martin, executive director of the Nevada Cannabis Association. “So it really is about using the civil tools that we have to enforce against unlicensed sales.”

The CCB report noted that some consumers distrust the legal market, finding the products less potent and more expensive, and did not connect increased government oversight to increased safety. Martin encouraged the creation of a targeted public awareness campaign that would emphasize the safety of the regulated dispensaries, as well as of the health risks of consuming unregulated cannabis, which can be laced with detergent or other drugs.

Read full report at

0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

New Purchase

Somebody from [variable_2] has just bought [variable_3] [amount] minutes ago.