Advocates in favor of legalizing marijuana are looking to score another victory this year in an unlikely state.
The Alaska Campaign to Regulate Marijuana submitted around 46,000 signatures to state election officials on Wednesday in favor of legalizing recreational marijuana use. The signatures, if verified, top the 30,000 needed to put an initiative on the state’s August ballot.
“It’s not that the initiative would bring marijuana to Alaska,” Bill Parker, one of the initiative’s sponsors, told the Anchorage Daily News. “Marijuana is already in Alaska. It would legalize, regulate and tax it. It would treat it like alcohol.”
The proposed initiative is modeled after the the most recently successful one in Colorado to legalize recreational marijuana. Colorado voters approved a ballot measure to tax recreational marijuana last November with 65% of the vote. The new law, that went into effect at the start of the year, imposes a 15% excise tax on marijuana wholesales, and a 10% sales tax on retail purchases. The state estimated on Wednesday it’s brought in more than $5 million in sales, including $1 million on Jan. 1.









