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Marijuana sales in Bayfield?

FLC students present financial impact study on retail sales
Students from a Fort Lewis College class on local economic development have completed a fiscal impact study on retail marijuana sales in Bayfield. The students presented their findings at a meeting Thursday at Bayfield Town Hall.

Sales of retail marijuana in Bayfield could bring in between $100,000 and $200,000 in extra tax revenues, with about $24,000 to $100,000 in increased costs for the town.

Students from Fort Lewis College presented these figures on Thursday night as part of a financial impact study they conducted for the Town of Bayfield.

About 30 people attended the presentation.

"We are in no way recommending anything," said professor Deborah Walker, who advised the students on the project. Rather, the study provides information to the town to make decisions on the issue.

The study defined the market area for retail marijuana sold in Bayfield, estimated the number of potential customers, provided a market analysis, estimated demand and sales, along with taxes and revenues, then also tracked potential costs and the net fiscal impact.

Population demographics

The total population of the potential customer market area in the 81122 and 81137 zip codes is 14,130 residents, with 10,375 of them 21 and older.

Based on research in Colorado that about 16 percent of the state's adults use marijuana, that equates to 792 monthly local customers, with another 175 who drive through on U.S. Highway 160 stopping to purchase the drug.

Of the potential customers, the study factored out residents who commute to Durango or Pagosa because it was assumed they could buy pot in those towns.

Market analysis

The study assumed Bayfield could support one retail store and one cultivation center.

In 2016, Durango's 12 pot shops paid $988,000 in sales tax revenue from marijuana sales and another $51,250 in licensing revenue.

In Cortez, three shops paid $65,125 in sales tax and $7,500 in licensing revenue.

Estimated sales

For retail sales, the students estimated $232,000 in annual sales on the low end, $754,000 in the medium range, and $3.5 million on the high end, a number they said they didn't think was feasible.

In cultivation sales, the low estimate came in at $198,000, medium was $595,000, and the high estimate was $793,000.

Revenue to Town of Bayfield from retail sales

The students presented three possibilities for taxing retail sales: an excise tax, a fee for each transaction, and no extra tax or fee.

With an excise tax, the range of tax revenues was $17,400 on the low end, $57,000 in the medium range, and $261,000 on the high end.

With a transaction fee on each sales, those figures came in at $45,000, $69,000 and $261,000.

With no extra fees, Bayfield could raise $10,000 in town sales tax on the low end, $34,000 in the medium range, and $157,000 on the high end.

Revenue to Town of Bayfield from a cultivation center

These numbers also had three ranges, based on an extra sales tax, a transaction fee, and no special fees.

Estimates ranged from $9,000 to $63,000 in extra revenue for the town. Property taxes could bring in another $2,000 to $4,000, the study estimated.

Annual fees could bring in about $1,105 for a retail store and $1,075 for a cultivation center.

Potential cost effects

Administrative, enforcement and infrastructure cost estimates also were presented on the low and high end.

The low cost estimate was $24,000, with a higher cost estimated was $106,000, if a new deputy was hired for the marshal's office.

Net fiscal impact

If sales were low and enforcement and administrative costs were high, the town actually could lose money on marijuana sales, the study found, estimating a deficit of up to $16,000.

If costs were low and the town charged an excise tax, it could make as much as $162,000 in tax revenues.

With no extra taxes or fees, the town could make $67,000 to $90,000 in sales tax revenues, after accounting for increased administrative and law enforcement expenses.

The students said one of the challenges of such a study is that there is little research into marijuana sales because it has been legal under state law for only four years, and it is still illegal under federal law.

After the end of their presentation, several residents asked questions about the study.

One attendee asked how many employees a retail store would have. The average is 12 per dispensary, the students replied, but they assumed Bayfield's would be on the small side, so eight employees might be a more realistic number.

Most cities in Colorado require buffer zones, banning sales within 500 to 1,000 feet of schools, libraries or parks. A 1,000-foot buffer zone in Bayfield would leave no properties available for retail sales. A 500-foot zone would provide some areas for sales or cultivation.

When asked about law enforcement costs, students said their research found that Mancos hired an extra police officer when it allowed retail sales in town limits. Statewide studies have not found an increase in crime in towns that sell retail marijuana.

There are non-quantifiable costs to retail marijuana, such as public health concerns, increased usage, crime, economic effects, and traffic, according to the study. Economic savings would include a reduction of black-market sales and the funding of the state's grants for building schools, which are funded in part by taxes on marijuana.

A copy of the presentation about the study is available online at www.bayfieldgov.org, then clicking on the hot topics link, then retail marijuana.



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