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Vote for Recreational Marijuana Legalization in Arizona

Yes on 205

Proposition 205: Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol in Arizona

The Regulation and Taxation of Marijuana Act initiative has officially made it onto the November 2016 ballot in Arizona as Proposition 205. The initiative, which is spearheaded by The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, launched the “Yes on 205” campaign on August 11, 2016.

Register to vote by Oct 10. Vote by Nov 8. Learn more and vote here:

Below is a guide from the ballot initiative’s website outlining what Prop 205 does and does not entail.

What Prop 205 does:

  • It allows adults 21 years of age and older to possess up to one ounce of marijuana and consume marijuana in private.
  • It allows adults to grow up to six marijuana plants in an enclosed, locked space within their residences and possess the marijuana produced by those plants in the location where it was grown. No more than 12 total marijuana plants can be grown in a single residence. Property owners and landlords will have the right to prohibit marijuana from being grown on their property.
  • It establishes the Department of Marijuana Licenses and Control to oversee a tightly controlled system of licensed marijuana retail stores, licensed cultivation facilities, licensed product manufacturing facilities, and licensed testing facilities. The department will include a law enforcement unit that will be responsible for enforcing regulations, conducting compliance checks, and investigating violations.
  • It allows a limited number of licensed marijuana retail stores to sell marijuana to adults 21 years of age and older. The number of retail stores will be capped at 10 percent of the number of liquor store licenses, which is currently fewer than 180.
  • It allows localities to impose limits on where and when marijuana businesses are allowed to operate.
  • It requires businesses to test marijuana products and adhere to strict packaging and labeling guidelines.
  • It enacts a 15% excise tax on retail marijuana sales, which will be used to fund the implementation and enforcement of regulations. Any additional marijuana tax revenue will be allocated as follows: 40% to the Department of Education for school construction, maintenance, and operating costs; 40% to the Department of Education for full-day kindergarten programs; and 20% to the Department of Health Services for public education regarding the relative harms of alcohol, marijuana, and other substances.

What Prop 205 does not do:

  • It does NOT allow marijuana to be used in public. Public use will remain illegal.
  • It does NOT change existing penalties for possession of more than one ounce of marijuana or cultivation of more than six marijuana plants. It will also remain entirely illegal to sell any amount of marijuana without the proper business license.
  • It does NOT allow unlicensed individuals to produce marijuana extracts using butane or other potentially hazardous products.
  • It does NOT affect employers’ current marijuana policies or their ability to establish workplace restrictions on marijuana consumption by employees.
  • It does NOT change existing laws regarding driving under the influence of marijuana. Driving while impaired by marijuana will remain illegal.
  • It does NOT enact a tax on the sale of medical marijuana or affect the rights of medical marijuana patients that were established by Proposition 203.

VOTE HERE:

Register to vote by Oct 10. Vote by Nov 8. Learn more and vote here:

VOLUNTEER INFO:

Learn about volunteering for the YES on 205 campaign here

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