Perhaps only in California could a group of
marijuana smokers call themselves
fiscal realists. And yet, faced with a $20 billion deficit, strained state services and regular legislative paralysis, voters in California are now set to consider a single-word solution to help ease some of the state’s money troubles: legalize. On Wednesday, the California secretary of state certified a November vote on a ballot measure that would legalize, tax and regulate marijuana, a plan that advocates say could raise
$1.4 billion and save precious law enforcement and prison resources. Read the complete article in the NYTimes
here.