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20 Nisan 2017 Perşembe

How to stop the construction industry choking our cities

Poor air quality, with diesel the biggest culprit, is now thought to be the cause of 40,000 deaths in the UK each year.


But while cars and lorries have attracted most attention, less reported is the contribution of other polluters to the problem, particularly construction sites.


According to the most detailed air-quality study in the UK, the London Atmospheric Emissions Inventory, construction sites are responsible for approximately 7.5% of damaging nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions, 8% of large particle emissions (PM10) and 14.5% of emissions of the most dangerous fine particles (PM2.5).


While a small amount of this (about 1%) is dust from site activities like demolition, the vast majority comes from the thousands of diesel diggers, generators and other machines operating on sites.



Construction workers


In 2005, more than 230 construction workers a year were reported to have died from cancers caused by exposure to diesel fumes. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA Wire

Yet this machinery is not held to the same emissions standards as on-road vehicles. What’s more, its proportionate impact will only get higher as on-road emissions drop, according to Daniel Marsh, King’s College London academic and project manager for the London Low Emission Construction Partnership.


So what are the chances the industry can improve?


Given the construction industry’s questionable history with asbestos, which wasn’t regulated until 1983 or completely banned until 1999 – almost 40 years after the cancer link was proven – some are sceptical. In 2005, the Health and Safety Executive found (pdf) that each year more than 230 construction workers die from cancers caused by exposure to diesel fumes, a figure it hasn’t since updated, even though more is now known about diesel’s noxious effects.


Marsh is particularly concerned about the impact on those working with the most polluting machines. He says: “Now on a construction site if you find asbestos it’s like a scene from ET, people swoop down in protective suits – it has become a huge priority. What the industry has failed to take on board is that diesel emissions should be considered in the same way.”


Despite this general failure to act, there are innovative firms in the industry trying to help clean up. The Greater London Authority is also attempting to clamp down on the problem. In January, Mayor Sadiq Khan said he intends to bring in a fine like the congestion charge to be paid by firms using polluting machines, beefing up groundbreaking emissions rules on central London building sites introduced under his predecessor Boris Johnson.


Leading the charge are firms like Off Grid Energy, which has developed products that turn traditional diesel generators (responsible for an estimated 25% of site emissions) into hybrid machines, reducing fuel consumption by around 60%.


Founder and CEO Danny Jones says the requirement for occasional very high “peak loads” of energy leads builders to use far bigger generators than necessary, which then remain on all day and night. In contrast, Off Grid’s battery system stores excess power, turns off generators when charged, and allows much smaller generators to be used. Just one proposed motorway works installation, Jones says, will be the equivalent of taking 225 cars off the road.


Another firm tackling the problem is Taylor Construction Plant, which is providing the first UK lighting rigs (mobile units that provide bright lighting, generally for working outside after dark but also for security) to be powered by hydrogen fuel cells. This means zero on-site emissions, at a total cost (including fuel) that product manager Simon Meades says is cheaper than the approximately 20,000 conventional generator-powered lighting rigs operating in the UK. After a slow initial uptake, Meades says demand has grown fivefold in the last year.


Even slower to change have been the fleets of diggers and excavators, which until now have relied on powerful diesel engines, but where hybrid technology is finally emerging. Swedish motoring giant Volvo, through its Volvo Construction Equipment subsidiary, has customers currently trialling a prototype hybrid excavator that generates electric power from the down-swing of its boom arm.



Volvo Construction Equipment’s LX1 hybrid wheel loader prototype


Volvo Construction Equipment’s LX1 hybrid wheel loader prototype. Photograph: Jonas Ljungdahl

Patrick Lundblad, the firm’s senior VP of technology, says these trials have confirmed the vehicle uses around half the fuel of Volvo’s best-performing conventional excavators. Customer demand doesn’t seem to be an issue either.


“Wherever we go our customers want to have a couple of our green machines,” he says. However, producing it is not straightforward; 98% of the vehicle parts are new, and supply chains are immature, meaning the firm doesn’t know when it’ll be ready for sale.


This is not the only problem. Off Grid’s Jones says resistance to its products from the generator hire industry, which also makes money from selling diesel, came close to driving his firm out of business. “We’re a classic disruptive technology, and our challenge is the reluctance of the diesel generator rental industry to engage in a technology that changes what they do now.”


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How to stop the construction industry choking our cities

20 Mart 2017 Pazartesi

The role of industry in childhood cancers | Letters

With childhood cancer being a controlling factor in tackling daily life, and having been forced to defy a very poor prognosis myself, I feel a need to respond to your letter about Brexit’s impact on children with cancer (14 March). Glenis Wilmott MEP states that 1,700 children are diagnosed with cancer, of which over 250 die, annually in the UK, and that their only chance of survival may lie with being on a clinical trial, due to lack of treatments.


Cancer treatment is dreaded by adults, but is much worse for a child, with the consequences of treatment often casting a shadow for the rest of their lives. With a 40% increase in child cancer in less than 20 years, surely we have to refocus and ask politicians at all levels to take responsibility for their decisions in allowing industries which increase risks and known causes of cancer, such as air pollution. The unborn child can be 1,000 times more vulnerable than a grown man to environmental pollutants, and yet recently activists against fracking have been deemed irresponsible.


Sandra Steingraber, a leading biologist and herself a survivor of child cancer, summarises this dichotomy so well in the title of her book Living Downstream. It comes from a fable about a village on a river. Villagers saw more and more people floating past, drowning in the fast flowing river, and put all their efforts into devising ways of rescuing and trying to resuscitate them. They were so preoccupied with this task they did not think to go upstream to see who was throwing people in the river. It should come as no surprise that the New York ban on fracking was achieved by a scientific team led by Sandra Steingraber.


Survival does not just depend on clinical trials, but also on clean air, water and soil. We can have a very full and long life after cancer, but so much more than drugs come into the equation.
Caroline McManus
Edinburgh


Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com


Read more Guardian letters – click here to visit gu.com/letters



The role of industry in childhood cancers | Letters

7 Ekim 2016 Cuma

The Marijuana Industry in Arizona: 5 Need-to-Know Facts

Marijuana is a booming business in Arizona and with more companies popping up every day, the industry continues to grow. In 2014, the Arizona Department of Health Services reported that over 10 tons of marijuana was sold through local dispensaries. That grossed an impressive revenue of approximately $ 110 million dollars!


Today, patients who cultivate their own plants are no longer able to do so within 25 miles of a dispensary. And with over 80 dispensaries in Arizona, the pot business is good! Here are just five need-to-know facts about the changing cannabis industry in Arizona:


5 Need-to-Know Facts About Cannabis in Arizona


  1. We Are Still Fighting for Legalization. Marijuana has been legal for medicinal use since 2011. The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol is now on the November 2016 ballot as Proposition 205. Under the Regulation and Taxation of Marijuana Act, anyone over the age of 21 would be able to possess up to one (1) ounce of marijuana and cultivate six (6) plants of their own in a secure area. This initiative would include a 15% retail tax on marijuana sale by licensed businesses that would be allocated directly to the education system. A much needed aid! A recent survey of 500 Arizona voters revealed that 49% of voters would reject legalization for recreational use, 43% would vote “yes,” and around 8% of voters were undecided according to the Arizona Republic.(1)

  2. Our Growers Are Educated. The Arizona Department of Health Services allows qualifying patients to grow their own medicine. For this reason, many people have acquired a green thumb but that doesn’t mean that the average Arizona resident can maintain 6 healthy cannabis plants. That’s where professionals come in. Colleges across the state including the University of Arizona now offer classes and degree programs to prepare students for the professional and sustainable cultivation of marijuana. The budding industry has help develop thousands of lucrative jobs in research, biology, chemistry, law, horticulture and medical treatment sectors. Now that’s higher education.

  3. There is a Sense of Community. When medical marijuana co-ops first opened in Arizona, everyone had something different to bring to the table. Menus were loaded with distinctive cannabis-infused items to choose from: homemade baklava, cookies, candy… People were making salad dressings, peanut butter – you name it! The same people that were in those collectives are still creating concoctions and sharing them with the rest of us cardholders. Even with dispensaries, the friendship remains and innovators are still happily incorporating cannabis into their healthy lifestyles. And that’s a great thing!

  4. Cannabis is an OTC Takeover. You may have already heard that marijuana is safer than pharmaceutical drugs. What you may not know is that many OTC (over the counter drugs) contain acetaminophen. The problem with that is that a staggering amount of people accidentally overdose every year. This added up to over 1,500 deaths in the United States – just between 2001 and 2010! Acetaminophen overdose sends close to 80,000 people to emergency rooms every year and is the leading cause of acute liver failure according to the National Institutes for Health. These shocking statistics pave the way for a not-so-hostile marijuana takeover. If Americans replaced just one NSAID (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug) like Tylenol with marijuana, hundreds of lives could be saved.(2-3)

  5. We Aren’t Pot Heads. In Arizona, it’s estimated that between 2013 and 2014 there were approximately 52,374 active cardholders. As a legitimate medical patient, I can tell you that we are NOT just sitting around getting high. Chatting with other patients at clinics, I have become accustom to discussing topics including the laboratory data for CBD (non-psychoactive component) content, THC (psychoactive component) content, flavor profiles and sales! Arizona dispensaries provide high-quality medicine to patients, and as we share in this new experience, collectively we are realizing that marijuana is highly effective for treating many different health problems. There are millions of ways to use marijuana, and many of them don’t include a high at all. Just consider topical products and CBD oil!

What’s Next for Cannabis in Arizona?


As Arizona continues to fight a grassroots battle for legalization, in November 2016 the game may change… in a BIG way. Currently, the average medical marijuana patient in Arizona consumes approximately 166 grams. But cardholders must be approved under these qualifying conditions: cancer, glaucoma, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C, ALS (Lou Gehrig’s), Crohn’s, Alzheimer’s, cachexia or wasting syndrome, severe and chronic pain, severe nausea, seizures (like epilespy), and severe and persistent spasms (like multiple sclerosis).


If Arizona voters vote “Yes” on Prop 205, marijuana use will be open to all citizens over the age of 21. Stay Tuned!!


References:


  1. Wingett Sanchez, Yvonne. Poll: Arizona marijuana-legalization campaign could fail if voted on today? http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/politics/politicalinsider/2016/04/20/poll-marijuana-legalization-campaign/83250834/

  2. Mosbergen, Dominique. Tylenol Overdose Risk Is Staggering; Acetaminophen Safeguards Remain Insufficient: Report. The Huffington Post. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/24/tylenol-overdose_n_3976991.html


The Marijuana Industry in Arizona: 5 Need-to-Know Facts

4 Eylül 2016 Pazar

Fashion industry told to end its quest for ‘unattainable thinness’

The Women’s Equality party is to launch an unprecedented campaign aimed at radically changing the way the fashion industry treats body size and shape.


Coinciding with London fashion week, which will run from 16-20 September, the initiative will call for an end to unrealistically small “sample sizes” – the sizes in which designers show their new creations – and demand a minimum body mass index (BMI) for models.


Sophie Walker, the WEP leader, plans to ask the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to withdraw funding for next year’s fashion week if the campaign’s key demands are not in place by then. She will also ask Maria Miller, chair of the Women and Equalities Commission, to hold a public hearing in which fashion designers will be asked why their clothes are based on “an unattainable level of thinness in women”, which Walker believes is contributing to a crisis in public health with an economic impact of £1.3bn a year.


The campaign calls for models whose BMI is below 18.5 to be seen by a medical professional from an accredited list, who will judge whether they are well enough to be employed by a modelling agency. Similar legislation exists in France, Spain, Italy and Israel. Campaigners are also asking that fashion designers showing at LFW commit to including at least two sample sizes in every range, one of which must be a UK size 12 or above.


Additional proposals include fashion magazines committing to at least one piece in each issue featuring plus-size models. WEP is also demanding that body image awareness become a compulsory part of personal, social and health education, with a focus on media depictions of beauty and extra training for teachers.


Those backing the campaign include Caryn Franklin, the former presenter of The Clothes Show, who is now a professor of diversity in fashion at Kingston University, plus-size model Jada Sezer and model Rosie Nixon, who has spoken out against an industry that asked her to lose an unreasonable and unhealthy amount of weight in order that she get “down to the bone”.


WEP will also launch an interactive social media campaign, #NoSizeFitsAll, based on the statistic that one in five women cut the labels out of their clothes to conceal their size. A photoshoot will feature new designers Isatu Harrison and her line, Izelia, and Katie Pope of Pope London, both of whose work will be modelled by a diverse group of women.


Walker describes the initiative as a chance to “raise awareness of the body image issues experienced by women and girls, and to have a discussion about the significant and far-reaching impact of the fashion industry’s idolisation of a unique and very small size”.



Fashion industry told to end its quest for ‘unattainable thinness’

29 Ağustos 2016 Pazartesi

Living wage has positive impact on care industry, research shows

The worst fears about the impact of the national living wage on social care businesses have been confounded by research suggesting it has had a remarkably positive effect on pay rates in the traditionally low-wage sector.


When the statutory minimum of £7.20 an hour for all workers aged 25 or over was announced – an increase of 50p on the previous floor – employers in social care warned that they would struggle to pay it on profit margins that were already low.


Care England, the umbrella body for the bigger companies in the sector, which employs 1.6 million people in England alone, forecast on the eve of the new rate taking effect in April that the added cost would be the “the final straw” for some businesses teetering on the brink of viability.


But a study published on Tuesday by the Resolution Foundation thinktank indicates that the move has had a favourable effect not only on care workers directly benefiting but also – and unexpectedly – on younger workers and on wage rates across the sector. The overall pay bill has risen by more than twice that needed to meet the new minimum alone.


Laura Gardiner, senior research and policy analyst at the foundation, said: “It is great news that the national living wage has had a large, positive impact on low pay in social care, giving hundreds of thousands of frontline care workers a pay rise, with no evidence of hours being cut to foot the bill.”


The study, based on pay data for 80,000 employees of more than 2,000 care providers, suggests that 57% of frontline workers (54% of all) have benefited directly from the £7.20 minimum with an average pay rise of 9.2%. This includes 83% of those aged under 25 who are now receiving £7.20 or more, even though it is not required by law.


Noting that the overall pay bill has risen 6.9%, the study concludes that introduction of the national living wage is “undoubtedly correlated with an immediate and profound increase in pay in the sector”.


The foundation admits that its analysis does not cover any job losses or non-compliance with the new minimum. It also expresses concern at workers’ potential to progress up the pay ladder, pointing out that 32% of the sample studied were now “bunched” at £7.20.


A previous survey of local councils that commission social care found that 82% of them raised fees paid to care providers from April – almost half by more than 3% – after ministers allowed councils to add a 2% social care precept to council tax bills.



Living wage has positive impact on care industry, research shows

25 Temmuz 2014 Cuma

Bull Industry Turns Three: Winners













28 Haziran 2014 Cumartesi

Bitter Pill to Swallow: Can The US Industry Bear The Value Of Sovaldi?

Sovaldi, the new drug to deal with and remedy Hepatitis C has undoubtedly brought on fairly an uproar in the US given that its FDA approval in December of 2013.  At $ one,000 per pill, the manufacturer, Gilead, has lots of men and women and payers to response to in purchase to justify this enormous cost, say sector professionals and watchdogs.


With approximately three million individuals in the US struggling from hepatitis C, the only options in the previous were Interferon and Ribavirin which led to many side effects along with unpredictable responses. Moreover, the alternative of liver transplant and ongoing end of daily life care were previously the only options for this devastating ailment.


“Sovaldi presents a dramatic example of the what-the-US-industry-can-bear pharmaceutical pricing practice,” explains John Thomas, a professor specializing in wellness law in the Quinnipiac University Schools of Law &amp Medication.


images


“It fees its manufacturer, Gilead, about $ 130 to produce every single pill that it then sells to US patients at $ 1,000 every,” Thomas explains. “In other nations like Egypt and India, however, Gilead provides Sovaldi at a 99% low cost off of the US price tag.”


“At the US cost, Gilead will recoup its Sovaldi growth investment of $ eleven billion in a single 12 months and then will stand to make extraordinary earnings off the backs of US consumers, who will subsidize the drug for other patients about the globe.”


According to Thomas, Gilead’s profit margin has tripled in recent instances and its at present running in the first quarter at a 44% revenue margin–which is more than double what a common pharmaceutical can make.”


The greatest illustration of the market place value of Sovaldi is primarily based on what Gilead charges to other industrialized nations—roughly half of what the US is currently being charged.


How does this happen?  According to Thomas, this is a perform of the “fractured payment system” in the US.


Thomas explains that in the United kingdom or in EU, in which they pay out half of what the US pays, there is not a lot leverage in that industry “because the single payer government technique and the payer speaks for everybody and they can negotiate half cost.”


Gilead is presently charging the US and other industrialized nations roughly twice what other countries are currently being charged.  A single explanation they can do this in accordance to Thomas is “because they can”, a perform connected to the nature of our fractured payment method. A 2nd essential reason is also since he believes Gilead is anxious about an additional drug in the pipeline 1-three many years out, and they want to make as significantly cash as they can ahead of there is another entity ready to sell a competing drug.


While Congress in theory could regulate the pricing of pharmaceuticals, there is presently no federal  legislative physique that has authority to oversee honest practices in setting pricing of pharmaceuticals–other than [e.g the FTC] addressing misrepresentations in public statements or in promoting, Thomas Explains.


One resolution, in accordance to Thomas, may possibly include creation of a single payer method, “so that we would be on par or even in a greater negotiating place than these other industrialized nations.”


Even so, Thomas believes that a far more realistic approach might involve a concerted campaign to spread the theme, “shame in the industry area, ” that might continue to spot external strain on Gilead to modify the pricing of their items.


“By publishing information, and presenting to numerous constituencies in the American wellness care technique, it may possibly be achievable to shame Gilead into retracting to some extent only what is palatable in this marketplace, ” adds Thomas.


The argument by Gilead–that the greater value of the drug will essentially eliminate prospective downstream costs related with hepatitis C- specially liver transplants and ongoing and finish of existence care- is in the end flawed in many respects.



Bitter Pill to Swallow: Can The US Industry Bear The Value Of Sovaldi?

6 Haziran 2014 Cuma

Labor rejects tobacco industry claim of plain packaging policy failure

Labor has rejected tobacco sector figures that display more cigarettes are becoming sold considering that the introduction of plain packaging.


The tobacco business British American Tobacco Australia has jumped on the figures as proof the plain packaging policy has failed but they are contradicted by Australian Bureau of Statistics information as effectively as by preliminary research into the affect of plain packaging on smoking routines. Labor launched necessary plain packaging in 2012 to significantly protest from tobacco companies.


Figures from InfoView, which are backed by the cigarette businesses Philip Morris and BATA, ran on the front webpage of the Australian on Friday, displaying an improve of .3% in the volume of cigarettes getting offered, but have not been adjusted to account for population development. The study also showed the yearly decline in the amount of men and women smoking more than halved.


When Guardian Australia contacted InfoView for the information it was directed to BATA, who sent a press release quoting the figures and slamming plain packaging.


“With development in sector volumes, fewer individuals quitting and a leap in the amount of cheap illegal cigarettes on the streets, you could draw the conclusion that folks are really smoking far more now than prior to plain packaging came into effect,” a spokesman, Scott McIntyre, stated.


When asked to present the raw information of the analysis, McIntyre replied it was “commercially sensitive”.


“It’s not BATA study,” he stated. “It’s purchased from third-celebration suppliers Roy Morgan and InfoView. We acquire data about our products, just like any other company that sells quick-moving consumer goods.”


Australian Bureau of Statistics figures demonstrate a decline in smokers in Australia since 2001, a trend that continued in 2011-twelve, when the percentage of female smokers dropped to 16.three% and male smokers decreased to twenty.four%.


ABS figures also record a decline in the total home expenditure on tobacco and cigarettes.


South Australia has recorded an improve in the smoking fee in the past 12 months, with 19.4% of the population smoking, up from 16.seven%, in accordance to government figures. The state is in the approach of banning smoking in alfresco places which the government is hoping will help reduced the rate.


The opposition wellness minister, Catherine King, referenced the ABS figures when commenting on the sector figures.


“Only the tobacco market thinks plain packaging is a poor factor – that is because they know they will be selling fewer cigarettes to fewer people,” she mentioned. “It is incumbent on the government to express its unqualified assistance for plain packaging.”


In BATA’s release it explained it was “very clear all information available” in excess of the past 12 months showed the plain packaging policy was a failure.


Most researchers agree it is as well early to correctly measure the impacts of the policy but preliminary investigation has shown men and women have been turned off by the plain packaging, which demonstrates graphic photos of effects of smoking, this kind of as rotting teeth.


Analysis into the influence of the initial 3 months of the policy, published in the British Medical Journal and funded by Cancer Council Victoria, identified 30.6% of smokers utilizing plain packaging perceived their cigarettes to be of decrease top quality than a yr earlier, in contrast with 18.1% of smokers using branded cigarettes.


It was also reported that 26.2% of plain-package smokers were much less satisfied by their cigarettes than they have been a year earlier, in contrast with 14.9% of branded-packet smokers.



Labor rejects tobacco industry claim of plain packaging policy failure

9 Nisan 2014 Çarşamba

Meat Industry Gets Court To Vacate Selection In Favor of Great Regulation

by Prolonged Island Attorney Paul A. Lauto, Esq.


The American Meat Business (AMI) has succeeded in delivering nevertheless yet another blow to consumers, by obtaining the U.S. Court of Appeals to vacate a recent choice in favor of the USDA’s Amazing (Nation of Origin Labeling) regulation.  The end result will be the re-hearing of the case in Might, by all eleven judges in the circuit.


The USDA took a stand for shoppers by implementing Awesome, which requires  labeling of specific meats to disclose the nations the place cattle was born, raised and slaughtered.  One of the premises behind the regulation is that considering that cattle may possibly be born, raised and slaughtered in three different nations, buyers have the appropriate to know the place their meats are coming from.  The AMI submits that Amazing violates the 1st amendment by compelling speech that is factual in nature and of no well being benefit to consumers.


The final result of this case is appropriate to all buyer label movements, as it centers on the consumer’s correct to know what is in the food we consume.  In the U.S., several hazardous food components are hidden from shoppers under the toxic veil of a meals label.  The USDA, which is far from excellent, implements a regulation that actually favors customers, only to be brought down by the AMI.  Perhaps the adage, “No great deed goes unpunished” is real right after all.


Long Island Attorney
Paul A. Lauto, Esq.
www.liattorney.com 



Meat Industry Gets Court To Vacate Selection In Favor of Great Regulation

20 Şubat 2014 Perşembe

How Tax Could Blunt The Growth Of The Legal Marijuana Industry

The economics of the legal pot industry seem to be simple. Make it legal, tax it and let provide-and-demand take in excess of. Soon enough, unlawful drug trade need to dwindle and state tax coffers should be filled.


In the genuine planet, it’s not that simple. In Colorado, for illustration, where the commercial manufacturing and sale of recreational marijuana is now legal, the price per ounce of higher grade pot from a retail outlet is now much more than double what it expenses from an unlawful drug dealer. Why? You guessed it. Tax.


At present, pot sold legally in Colorado is topic to the state’s 2.9% revenue tax, an extra ten% state tax on retail marijuana income and a 15% excise tax on average marketplace price of wholesale marijuana. According to the Colorado Division of Revenue’s Division of Taxation, this final piece is calculated by multiplying the amount of retail marijuana merchandise by the typical market place charge at the time, then multiplying by the 15% (excise tax charge). The state even supplies the following sample calculation on their site:


ABC cultivator transfers 3 lbs of flower, 5 lbs of trim and 8 plants to ABC store. At the time of transfer the regular industry charges are:


$ one,876 for Flower
$ 296 for Trim
$ 9 per Immature plant


three lbs. of flower  x $ one,876  = $ five,628
five lbs. of trim      x $ 296   = $ one,480
eight plants             x $ 9      = $ 72____
$ seven,180 x .015 = $ 1,077 in retail marijuana excise tax due


When you get previous the preliminary shock of reading a word issue about marijuana growers on a government tax web site, the up coming reaction is how complex this company is! After you do the math, this tax equation indicates that a $ 30 eighth ounce of marijuana will have about $ 8.59 in taxes appended to it. In other phrases, a 29% tax price.


Colorado tasks about $ 67 million a 12 months in new revenue from these taxes.


Will they reach that goal? With just over a month of regulated marijuana income underneath their belts, the government officials responsible for the program say they are happy with the early benefits, but have yet to report specifics. The AP reviews:


“Colorado’s leading marijuana regulator, Department of Income head Barbara Brohl, mentioned it is too quickly to know how a lot tax revenue legal weed is going to produce, but that Colorado appears to have avoided main public security troubles, at least in the 6 weeks considering that marijuana sales began.”


There are some really true obstacles standing amongst Colorado and their revenue objective.  In accordance to NBC Information, retailers in Colorado have been selling leading-shelf marijuana at shut to $ 400 an ounce. For some standpoint, that’s about twice the price tag of healthcare marijuana. On the black market, an ounce of higher-grade marijuana sells for about $ 237 in Colorado, in accordance to priceofweed.com, a internet site that payments itself as the “global price index for marijuana.”


Once the novelty of retail pot wears off, will customers carry on to pay out far more than double the price in order to get some thing legally? Or, will the back-alley drug dealer come to be noticed by buyers as a “tax free zone”? Further social and economic considerations will perform into the equation as properly, such as the implications of turning out to be a spot for drug tourism and expense of enforcement.


Other states are betting that the Colorado experiment will spend off. Washington State, for example is placing plans in movement to legalize pot with a 25% excise tax on all phases of manufacturing in addition to an 8.75% sales tax, which analysts anticipate will add 37% to the retail value of marijuana. Alaska, Arizona, D.C. and Oregon are explained to be mulling loosened marijuana laws as properly.


As more states entertain new marijuana legislation, the economic impacts will be a fascinating situation examine in the influence of taxes on buyer conduct.



How Tax Could Blunt The Growth Of The Legal Marijuana Industry

7 Ocak 2014 Salı

Government "dancing to the tune of drinks industry", say senior physicians

Alcohol lines the shelves of an off-licence

David Cameron backed plans to impose a minimal value per unit of alcohol, and then dropped the policy in July final year above a lack of ‘concrete evidence’ it would lessen harmful consuming. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images




Senior medical professionals have accused the government of “dancing to the tune of the drinks sector” soon after it emerged that wellness officials and ministers had 130 meetings with alcohol and supermarket lobbyists even though they have been considering new price tag controls.


An investigation by the British Health-related Journal was undertaken soon after David Cameron backed plans to impose a minimum price tag per unit of alcohol, and then dropped the policy in July final yr above a lack of “concrete evidence” it would minimize damaging drinking.


The policy had been opposed by many senior ministers over fears it would raise the price of beer, wine and spirits for buyers. Nonetheless, other individuals, which includes Dr Sarah Wollaston, the Tory MP for Totnes, and Labour, raised issues about the affect of lobbying by the drinks market.


In its new report, the BMJ found only quite couple of of the 130 meetings between the Division of Overall health and the business considering that 2010 have been publicly documented simply because they were mostly with officials, rather than at ministerial degree.


It also identified one with Jeremy Hunt, the wellness secretary, and another, with the then public heath minister, Anna Soubry, took area following the finish of an official consultation into the policy final 12 months.


The government mentioned the meetings were entirely proper and there were a comparable variety with wellness campaigners, but on Tuesday night, Labour and health-related experts condemned the access offered to lobbyists on such a significant public overall health situation.


In an open letter, 21 senior physicians and campaigners, including Prof Sir Ian Gilmore, particular adviser on alcohol for the Royal University of Doctors, raised fears that “huge business is trumping public wellness concerns in Westminster”.


“The drinks sector continues to have high-level accessibility to government ministers and officials even though no forum at the moment exists for the public well being local community to put forward its situation in an surroundings free from vested interests,” Gilmore mentioned.


“With deaths from liver disease swiftly increasing and teenagers now presenting with sophisticated liver failure, the government has a duty to realise its commitment to introduce minimal pricing.”


Andy Burnham, the shadow overall health secretary, stated it showed the government had been “located out cosying up to vested interests and standing up for the incorrect individuals”.


“It has become a hallmark of his government,” he explained. “Public wellness policy is in utter disarray. Soon after the tobacco business final 12 months, these revelations raise but a lot more considerations about the influence of big organization on this government’s policies.”


A spokesman for the Department of Wellness stated it was fully unfounded to “insinuate regimen meetings amongst departmental officials and industry representatives amounted to an improper connection with the drinks market.


“Employing the very same methodology of counting every single meeting in between every single official and a stakeholder representative in excess of the last 3 many years, the division has had a similar amount or much more meetings with wellness charities, overall health campaigners or the food market,” the spokesman mentioned.


“As you would count on from a government department in search of to effect public overall health change by way of a voluntary deal with market, a broad group of officials have numerous distinct meetings with a huge assortment of stakeholders, and we utterly reject the allegation of something untoward in the little proportion of these that took place with the alcohol sector.”


She additional that the government was still considering minimum unit pricing as a portion of its strategies to tackle alcohol abuse.




Government "dancing to the tune of drinks industry", say senior physicians