勛圖腦瞳扦 alum advocates for cannabis companies
Kaufman sees future for cannabis industry

With more than three decades practicing corporate and securities law, Neil Kaufman 81 found a niche representing cannabis companies. Why cannabis? Cue up the punch line of the old joke about robbing banks; its where the money is. The industry is smoking hot. Pun intended.
The state-legal cannabis industry has grown to over $6 billion. It has potential to grow to $50 billion within the next 10 years. This is the biggest growth industry since the 1990s tech boom, says Kaufman, managing member of Kaufman & Associates LLC.
Kaufman helps cannabis companies navigate minefields unique to their industry. Want to open a bank account or get financing? Start by trying wellness instead of marijuana in your companys name. Want to take credit card payments? Cash is king, or tolerate higher-cost foreign processors, as U.S. credit card companies dont want a piece of this pie.
Federal illegality, he says, imposes high hurdles. Ordinary business expenses are considered nondeductible costs of drug trafficking, so cannabis companies must pay income tax on their full revenues. Clearly, Uncle Sam isnt thinking wellness.
Existing drug-approval policies dont fit because cannabis has more than 400 chemicals, and no single formulation could be put through a normal approval process. Instead, cannabis needs special treatment.
I hope and believe that Congress will enact a statute specifically designed for cannabis as it did for dietary supplements and tobacco enabling the industry to generate enormous tax revenue, he says.
Medicinal and adult-use cannabis have many benefits, Kaufman says, such as alleviating seizures, glaucoma, digestive problems, anxiety disorders and even chronic pain. Instead of misplaced concern about marijuana being a gateway drug, researchers are finding that cannabis helps opioid addicts.
If you get injured, you get a prescription for opioids. When it runs out, and you cant get another, so many Americans hit the black market, leading to abuse and overdose. If, instead, you can get relief from medical cannabis, the addiction can be avoided. Or if you get addicted, medical cannabis seems to help avoid relapses. Weve seen a 25 percent reduction in opioid overdose deaths where cannabis is legally available. Thats huge for a country going through an opioid crisis. How can any rational person ignore that?