A California legislator announced a bill on March 24 to give the legal cannabis industry a tax break from the state’s high taxes as retailers struggle to survive a growing threat from the black market.
“If we continue to pile on more taxes and fees onto our struggling small cannabis businesses, California’s cannabis culture is under serious threat of extinction,” Haney said in a statement. “Instead, we should be looking at how we can support this industry which has barely been given a chance to survive after legalization.”
The bill is expected to be heard in the Assembly Revenue and Taxation and Business and Professions committees in April.
The California Cannabis Industry Association said on Monday that the industry was already struggling under the crushing weight of a 15 percent excise tax and the illegal cannabis market.
The legislation also called for the state’s Department of Tax and Fee Administration to adjust the tax every two years, starting this year, to a rate that will generate the amount of revenue that would have been raised by the canceled cultivation tax, but not to exceed 19 percent.

Newsom’s office declined to comment on the proposed legislation Wednesday. A spokesperson told The Epoch Times in an email that the office doesn’t typically comment on pending legislation.
On Monday, the director of the California Department of Cannabis Control, Nicole Elliott, defended Newsom from allegations that he was responsible for the cannabis tax hike.
Several industry groups also publicly objected to the 2022 tax increase bill, including the United Cannabis Business Association, the California Cannabis Manufacturers Association, the Cannabis Distribution Association, and the California Cannabis Industry Association.