Author Archives: ZitaBazley

Pot industry’s homegrown credit union squares off against the fed

Pot industry’s homegrown credit union squares off against the fed

By on 5 Feb 2015commentsShare

Marijuana has been legal in Colorado for medicinal purposes since 2009, and for recreational uses since last year. Many satisfied voters celebrate on the daily by toking up with a little less bud-induced paranoia. But the state’s pot businesses are feeling a new paranoia: namely, that financial institutions won’t do business with them.

As a result, most weed shops in Colorado conduct business entirely in cash. Which is why, the New York Times reported, a group of entrepreneurs is hoping to open Colorado’s first credit union specifically created to serve pot-selling businesses. But hold your applause, ladies and gents: Their efforts are being strangled by, shall we say, federal green tape. Here’s the Times:

[Mark] Mason, 54, … and a group of other entrepreneurs in Colorado want to start the first-ever financial institution established specifically to serve the pot industry. To do that, they need to make deposits in a Federal Reserve account, and the agency hasn’t let them. Such humdrum administrative decisions are made all the time by federal banking officials, but this one raises big political and legal issues between the federal government and the state of Colorado over the legalization of marijuana.

Before we get blunt about the details, we’d like to issue a brief PSA (Pot Sustainability Announcement): Weed growing, illegal or otherwise, can have a serious impact on the environment from blazing energy costs to harshing the local landscape.

Because legal marijuana, with robust environmental regulations, can be easier on the Earth, I kinda like the idea (Not to be confused with my own personal beliefs about marijuana-usage, grandma!). Making financial institutions available to small business owners is a step towards a greener planet (in, uh, a couple of ways).

Back to the green-cash-money problem: Because weed isn’t nationally legalized, banks put themselves at risk of prosecution for money laundering. They also have a harder time getting insured by larger financial institutions.

And so, Colorado’s weed shop owners are feeling the consequences of a bank-challenged industry: Some have had their bank accounts repeatedly cancelled, others keep cash bolted tight in safes on the shop floor, and all pay high federal tax rates.

Colorado is not likely to strike out the law now, even with neighboring governments suing the state for Colorado-grown pot entering their borders. And since only 5 percent of Colorado’s weed sellers use financial institutions, the state’s economy is craving pot-friendly credit unions.

If Mason is able to limbo under the existing banking regulations and open the doors to the first financial pot joint, it could mean another step toward a cleaner weed industry. And that’s something we’d be stoked about.

Source:
The First Bank of Bud: Marijuana Industry in Colorado, Eager for Its Own Bank, Waits on the Fed

, The New York Times.

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Pot industry’s homegrown credit union squares off against the fed

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Mitt Romney Has a Koch Problem

Mother Jones

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This weekend, a select group of Republican presidential hopefuls will arrive in southern California to attend one of Charles and David Koch’s biannual donor retreats, a coveted invite for GOP politicians seeking the backing of the billionaire brothers and their elite club of conservative and libertarian mega-donors. Featured guests at the conclave will include Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Rand Paul (R-Ky.), and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush was also invited to the confab but is unlikely to attend.

Notably absent from the guest list for the Koch winter seminar: Mitt Romney.

Romney recently barged his way back into the political fray, suggesting he might launch a third presidential bid. He told a group of donors earlier this month, “Everybody in here can go tell your friends that I’m considering a run.” In a presentation over the weekend at a resort near Palm Springs, California—as it happens, the same venue that has played host to previous Koch seminars—Romney delivered what sounded an awful lot like a presidential stump speech, talking about poverty (“I believe that the principles of conservatism are the best to help people get out of poverty”), education (“We have great teachers. I’d pay them more”), and even climate change.

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Mitt Romney Has a Koch Problem

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