Monday, December 19, 2016

California State Treasurer John Chiang’s Cannabis Banking Working Group starts to address Federal-California “disconnect” on cannabis banking services



California State Treasurer and declared 2018 gubernatorial candidate John Chiang presided today over the first meeting of the Cannabis Banking Working Group (CBWG) he recently called into existence.  The mission of the CBWG is to resolve the “disconnect” between Federal classification of cannabis as a Class 1 (dangerous and useless) controlled substance and California’s treatment of it as a legitimate and legal medical and recreational option.

Medical cannabis was legalized in California in 1996, by a favorable vote of the people on Proposition 215.  Recreational cannabis was legalized in the Golden State in 2016, by the favorable vote of the people on Proposition 64.


Here’s the press release his office issued this afternoon:

 
Cannabis Banking Tales of Risks Take Center Stage
at Capitol Meeting of Industries and Public Agencies
Treasurer Chiang’s Cannabis Banking Working Group hears of real and potential risks to cannabis workers, their families and banks
PR16:61
12/19/16


SACRAMENTO Simple questions about how to maintain bank accounts and make deposits became entangled with prison anxieties and fears of robbery Monday during the first in a series of meetings of the Cannabis Banking Working Group convened by California State Treasurer John Chiang. About 100 people attended the meeting in the State Capitol.

The working group was organized by the Treasurer following voter approval of Proposition 64 last month. The proposition legalizes the recreational use of cannabis but leaves unresolved a conflict with existing federal law. Caught in the middle are California banks and cannabis businesses that are legal under California law.

“As we learned today from listening for more than three hours to experts with California’s public agencies, financial services and cannabis industry there is a dangerous, disruptive disconnect between state law and federal law,” the Treasurer said.

The disconnect not only adversely affects governments seeking to collect taxes, cannabis businesses seeking to use traditional financial services and the banks that might wish to provide those services, panelists said Monday. The disconnect also puts cannabis workers and business owners at risk of being harmed and bankers at risk of going to prison, they told Chiang and members of the working group.

“The cannabis industry is the largest shadow economy in California. Allowing them banking access would facilitate compliance and bring millions of dollars into our economy,” said Fiona Ma, California State Board of Equalization Chairwoman and a member of the Cannabis Banking Working Group.

“We need strong leaders like Treasurer John Chiang to tackle this urgent and complex state and federal conflict.”

In addition to Chiang and Ma, the 16-member working group includes representatives of the California Bankers Association, California Community Banking Network, California and Nevada Credit Union League, the California Employment Development Department, the state Franchise Tax Board, Department of Business Oversight, Bureau of Medical Cannabis Regulation, Business Consumer Services and Housing Agency, Attorney General, California Growers Association, California Cannabis Industry Association, California State Association of Counties, League of California Cities and the law firm of Clark Neubert, which represents the cannabis industry.

The Cannabis Banking Working Group plans to hold at least four more meetings around the state.

“It is clear the machinery of federal government is clunking along behind the trending preferences of the American people,” Chiang said. “The people increasingly proclaim cannabis use acceptable. Yet federal law maintains its use is a crime.

“Defining the problem is our first objective. And we started doing that today. As we continue to hold meetings around the state and compile information, I think we will continue to gain ever more clarity on precisely what should be done and how.”


To watch a video recording of the first meeting of the CBWG, click here.

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