California's Cannabis-Growing Nuns Pray For Profits
Merced
County sits in the middle of California's Central Valley.
For as far
as the eye can see, there are identical rows of crops, with the occasional
farmhouse or family home.
One of these
homes looks unassuming from the outside.
There's
nothing unusual about the building or the land around it, except that there's a
small group of women, wearing pristine white habits, burning incense, and
singing hymns as they walk in step blessing their cannabis plants.
These women
are the "Sisters of the Valley," better known as the Weed Nuns.
Lead by
Sister Kate, the women are members of a self-proclaimed enclave of nuns who
identify as healers and feminists, but more importantly, business people. They
do not represent an official religion.
"I
chose an industry that is messed up," Sister Kate says. "It's going
to probably be messed up and I'm probably going to have to do a lot of dancing
and sidestepping."
She's
referring to all the confusing technicalities in the laws surrounding
California's cannabis industry.
California
is home to the so-called "green rush" of cannabis production. It was
the first state to legalise medical marijuana in 1996, and recreational use has
been legal since 2016.
The state's
law, however, is full of regulatory loopholes, which means the legality of
marijuana cultivation varies from county to county and city to city.
So while
it's legal to use cannabis in the state, nearly two-thirds of California cities
have banned marijuana businesses, with others making it extremely difficult to
obtain permits.
This means
that for the Sisters of the Valley, growing their 60 plants outside, here in
Merced County, does not fall within the law.
"The
sheriffs know that, they just let me do this," admits Sister Kate.
"But there's really no reason for them to let me.
"They
could have shut me down by now just because it's illegal to grow hemp
[cannabis] in this county.
"But I
think that they know we will just challenge the law and get it changed then in
the county… And I think they know it would be a fight they don't want to
undertake."
There's a
second home on the property which the sisters call "the abbey"- it's
where all the medicine-making takes place.
Sister
Camilla carefully pours super-strength CBD oil into tincture bottles.
They produce
and sell all their own hemp-based medicines and salves, a business that before
the pandemic was grossing $1.2m a year (£1m).
Despite
praying for, and blessing every batch, they're now making half that.
Selling
through dispensaries might help them rebuild, but that would mean even more
regulations, and higher taxes.
Twenty miles
down the road, in downtown Merced, Joel Rodriguez, who runs the local cannabis
shop, is operating legally.
However,
California has put so many taxes in place on the cannabis supply chain, Mr
Rodrigez says it is putting people out of business, or pushing people to
operate outside the legal regulations.
He is one of
many cannabis businesses in California that complain of stifling taxes and high
operating costs.
"Dealing
with the tax rates as well as having the overheads that black-market dealers
don't have to deal with - rent insurance payroll, just basic stuff like
internet - those kinds of things we have to deal with everyday, we can't write
that off, and that all goes into the end cost for the customer."
The initial
application fee for a retail license in California is $1,000.
After that
there are annual state administrative and regulatory fees that can add up to
tens of thousands of dollars a year for small businesses, and close to $100,000
for larger operations.
Operating
legally is much more expensive than operating illegally, acting as an incentive
to dealers.
The illegal
trade in marijuana is estimated to be worth around $8bn, roughly twice as big
as the legal trade in California in 2021.
One
underground dealer, who did not want to be identified by name, says he can
offer a better product and make more profit by working outside legal
parameters.
"Just
trying to get that license is going to cost you about a million dollars,"
he says. "And in the industry that we're in, you can accumulate a million
dollars just off of doing what you're doing by making it available to everyone
who doesn't have a card or doesn't have a car to get to a club."
Throughout
California, those who once arrested people for cannabis offences now embrace
legal businesses.
"We
need to make it a little bit easier for those folks that are doing it
lawfully," says Chief Ruben Chavez of the Gustine Police Department in the
Central Valley. "Make it easier for them to be able to produce the product
and not have to go through so many hoops."
So far this
year, California has received nearly $580m dollars in tax revenue and Chief
Ruben believes easing regulations would lead to more revenue for his city and
help his department's efforts to eradicate the illegal trade.
"Our
resources are dwindling," he says. "But if we can get some revenue,
some assistance, not only from the state, maybe from the Feds to go after those
folks that are doing it illegally… If you stop the illegal growers, the illegal
operations a little more, I think the lawful, business community will pick up
more [revenue]."
That
approach would benefit growers like the Weed Nuns, Sister Kate says.
"The
truth is, I'd love for them to permit us, because that would be a win. And
because we believe in paying taxes."
Story From
BBC
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