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Forcing state-licensed cannabis businesses to continue paying punitive taxes on their ordinary business expenses, even should cannabis be federally rescheduled, is now a bicameral effort in the U.S. Congress.

Congressman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, who chairs the House Budget Committee, and six of his fellow representatives in the U.S. House introduced legislation, H.R. 1447, on Feb. 21. The bill aims to amend the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) of 1986 to maintain the prohibition on any deduction or credit associated with a trade or businesses involved in ā€œtraffickingā€ cannabis.

Under Section 280E of the IRC, businesses involved in Schedule I or II drugs under the Controlled Substances Act are unable to deduct their ordinary business expensesā€”such as payroll, rent and utilitiesā€”from their taxable incomes.

The hope for many U.S. cannabis businesses, the largest of which have the burden of paying roughly $100 million a year in taxes to a federal government that doesnā€™t recognize them as legitimate, is that the Department of Justiceā€™s (DOJ) current proposal to reclassify cannabis as a Schedule III substance would provide them with 280E tax relief to operate more sustainably.

However, Arrington and six of his colleagues in the upper chamber are now hoping to prevent that from happening. The legislation is cosponsored by Reps. Chuck Edwards, R-N.C.; Gregory Murphy, R-N.C.; Vern Buchanan, R-Fla.; Blake Moore, R-Utah; Gary Palmer, R-Ala.; and Pete Sessions, R-Texas.

Although the DOJā€™s Schedule III proposal remains sidelined by an interlocutory appeal, these lawmakers are trying to restrict the proposalā€™s impact should an administrative law judge hearing resume with a favorable outcome for cannabis businesses.

Although the text of H.R. 1447 wasnā€™t available as of Feb. 24ā€”and no related bills were listedā€”Republican Sens. James Lankford, R-Okla., and Pete Ricketts, R-Neb., introduced legislation with a nearly identical title earlier this month.

RELATED: 2 US Senators Work With Prohibitionists to Stop 280E Relief Under Cannabis Rescheduling

ā€œMarijuana doesnā€™t make our families stronger, our streets safer, or our workplaces more productive,ā€ Lankford said in a Feb. 7 press release. ā€œBusinesses who sell federally illegal drugsā€”including marijuana businessesā€”shouldnā€™t get federal tax breaks. This bill clarifies federal tax law toĀ make sure a federally illegal product does not have a federally legal tax deduction.ā€

At the time, Kevin Sabet, the CEO and president of the prohibitionist group Smart Approaches for Marijuana (SAM), took credit for the foundation of the legislation, hailing the bill on social media as a mechanism to ensure cannabis businesses continue to pay $2.3 billion annually in taxes that they otherwise wouldnā€™t be obligated to pay under the designation of a traditional American business.

The Senateā€™s version of the bill is titled the ā€œNo Deductions for Marijuana Business Act.ā€

On Feb. 24, SAM drew attention to a Washington Post article, suggesting that Arringtonā€™s bill serves as companion legislation for the Senateā€™s version.

ā€œArrington introduced a bill late last weekā€”when the House wasnā€™t even convenedā€”to prohibit companies involved in the cultivation or sale of marijuana from claiming business-expensing tax deductions,ā€ The Washington Post reported.

Editorā€™s note: Cannabis Business Times reached out to Arringtonā€™s office for comment and a copy of the House version of the bill.

The bicameral effort to make Section 280E a more permanent hindrance to cannabis businesses comes at a time when just 27% of U.S. cannabis businesses are profitable, according to a 2024 Whitney Economics report.

H.R. 1447 was referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

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