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Pot group predicts $1B in Nevada tax revenue over 7 years

FILE - In this June 28, 2017, file photo, Alessandro Cesario, the director of cultivation, works with marijuana plants at the Desert Grown Farms cultivation facility in Las Vegas. A marijuana trade group says pot production, processing and sales could be a billion-dollar industry in Nevada by 2024. That's a key finding in an economic analysis released Friday, Oct. 26, 2018, by the Nevada Dispensary Association. It projects that pot-friendly policies in tourist-oriented Las Vegas and Reno could make Nevada one of the nation's largest marijuana marketplaces. State officials have reported almost $530 million in pot sales since July 1, 2017. (AP Photo/John Locher, File)


Las Vegas • The state of Nevada could reap more than $1 billion from marijuana production, processing and robust sales during the first seven years of recreational pot sales, according to an industry group’s economic analysis released Friday.

Pot-friendly policies, strict “seed-to-sale” regulations and the prospect of doing business with some of the 45 million tourists who visit Las Vegas and Reno each year could make Nevada one of the nation’s largest marijuana marketplaces, said Andrew Jolley, president of the Nevada Dispensary Association.

He acknowledged that California, which began recreational pot sales this year, is expected to dominate the industry in size and scale.

“Nevada will be a very important market and should be a leader in regulations,” said John Restrepo, principal analyst at Las Vegas-based RCG Economics, the producer of the analysis that attempted to put dollar signs to smoke rings since legal pot sales started on July 1, 2017.

The 33-page report was made public just weeks after state officials reported first-year taxable pot sales totaled almost $530 million, exceeding expectations by some 40 percent. Nevada received just under $70 million in tax revenues on that figure, including $27.5 million for schools and about $42.5 million for a state “rainy day” contingency fund.

Nevada is among nine states and Washington, D.C., that have legalized recreational marijuana.

Sales got off to a rocky start amid a legal battle over distribution licenses, and tourists still don’t have a place to legally smoke the pot they can buy. Hotels don’t allow smoking in rooms, and laws regulating marijuana lounges have not been approved.

Smoking also isn’t allowed in a Las Vegas museum, named Cannabition, that recently opened to advance Las Vegas toward becoming a marijuana mecca. It features a glass bong taller than a two-story building.

Democratic state Sen. Tick Segerblom, the legislative godfather of Nevada’s marijuana law, said Friday that lawmakers should allow pot-centered venues ranging from spas to yoga studios to concerts and festivals.

“You can’t encourage people to come to Nevada to buy marijuana and then say, ‘Oh by the way, you can’t use it here,’” he told the dispensary association.

The economic report said 64 retail dispensaries are now open statewide, with more than half in Las Vegas. The 40 businesses that participated in a survey for the report employed about 1,300 people. The report projected more than 8,000 jobs in the industry in the next six years.

It did not look at public safety, health, human services, schools or criminal justice costs associated with legalization.

In Washington state, where voters legalized pot in 2012, a 2017 report examined two years of data and found no evidence that recreational sales affected cannabis abuse treatment admissions. It found that adults 21 and older were “significantly” more likely to report heavy cannabis use in parts of the state with high per-capita sales.

In Nevada, the report said marijuana cultivation and production is centered in and around Las Vegas, North Las Vegas and Pahrump. It said 99 of 120 licensed marijuana farms and 69 of 83 processing sites are in Clark and Nye counties.