2015: $740.74 for each pot plant uprooted in New Hampshire

emptyheadThe DEA spent $73,000 to eradicate marijuana plants in Utah. It didn’t find any.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/10/07/the-dea-spent-73000-to-eradicate-marijuana-plants-in-utah-it-didnt-find-any/

In 2015, the Drug Enforcement Administration gave $20,000 to the state of New Hampshire to eradicate marijuana plants, according to federal documents. But the Granite State’s law enforcement agencies didn’t have much luck finding any weed to pull that year — their efforts uncovered a single outdoor grow site with a grand total of 27 plants.

Do the math, and U.S. taxpayers paid $740.74 for each pot plant uprooted in New Hampshire that year.

That’s an expensive weeding operation, but it could be worse. Utah received $73,000 in marijuana eradication funds, according to the federal documents obtained and published by journalist Drew Atkins. But agents failed to find a single pot plant to eradicate.

The DEA’s $14 million marijuana eradication program has been the subject of a fair amount of criticism in recent years. Twelve members of Congress have pushed to eliminate the program and use the money instead to fund domestic-violence prevention and deficit-reduction programs.

Its purpose is to “halt the spread of cannabis cultivation in the United States,” a mission that has become complicated as more states have legalized medical or recreational marijuana programs. Several more states have similar measures on the ballot this year.

DEA records show the program has been effective in some states, most notably California. Agents pulled 2.6 million marijuana plants in 2015, seizing more than 1,600 weapons in the process. Nearly $5.4 million was funneled into that state’s program.

Kentucky’s $1.9-million program had the next largest number of eradicated plants, more than 570,000.

Nationwide, the DEA documents show that spending on the program has shrunk from about $18 million in 2014 to $14 million in the current fiscal year. Some states — including Alaska, Colorado and Vermont — stopped receiving eradication funds completely.

Here’s where that money’s going on a state-by-state basis.

California, where medical marijuana is legal, receives the lion’s share of marijuana eradication funds, in part because the “Emerald Triangle” region of Northern California. The area has long been home to many of the state’s legal and quasi-legal marijuana production operations, but law enforcement authorities have maintained that it also has been a haven for the grow operations of Mexican drug cartels.

Kentucky also receives a large amount of money to eradicate marijuana. The state has a surprisingly rich culture of marijuana cultivation.

Rounding out the top 5 marijuana eradication states are Tennessee, Georgia and, perhaps unexpectedly, Washington. The aptly nicknamed Evergreen State legalized the recreational use of marijuana in 2012, and pot shops opened for business in 2014. So it may seem odd that the DEA is spending $760,000 this year to eradicate pot plants in the state.

But Washington is the only recreational marijuana state that doesn’t allow people to grow their own plants for recreational use. (In D.C., incidentally, the situation is reversed: Homegrows are okay, but you can’t buy weed at the store.)

Washington also receives more marijuana eradication money than any other state with a recreational pot regime in place. Oregon received $200,000 this year, while Colorado and Alaska didn’t take any federal money for marijuana eradication.

You can also look at the 2015 marijuana eradication totals to compare the states based on how much they’re spending per plant. Here’s what that map looks like.

New Hampshire, Louisiana, Delaware, Utah and New Jersey all spent well over $100 for every marijuana plant eradicated. Eleven states spent at least $50 per plant, while nearly half of the states — 23 of them — spent at least $25 in federal money for each marijuana plant they eliminated.

At the other end of the spectrum, states with big investments in marijuana eradication — like California and Kentucky — also had the most successful efforts to pull up large numbers of pot plants. So their per-plant costs are much lower.

To be perfectly clear, even in a fully legal, highly regulated market like Colorado’s there will be a need to enforce prohibitions on large-scale, unlicensed marijuana grows — similar to the way the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms busts illegal home alcohol distilleries. Beyond that, authorities often make a number of arrests at cultivation sites, or seize weapons and other property from people suspected of involvement with marijuana grow operations.

Still, some lawmakers are starting to question the need dedicated this level or resources to eliminating pot plants when so many states are relaxing their own restrictions.

 

3 Responses

  1. I would love to know how much Arkansas spends on this. They’re constantly flying helicopters around our rural areas searching for plants. Years ago when my in-laws lived out of city limits in a very rural area, a helicopter that was flying around, searching for the plants, come down extremely close to look at their small garden. Their okra plants (which look much like marijuana plants) had caught the helicopter pilot’s attention. I can’t even imagine the waste of $$ just in gas my state wastes on this crap (and we STILL have a huge meth problem – go figure).

  2. Heres a thought,take every ounce of monies given to dea,,retirement,etc and defund it,,Then give all that money to Universal Healthcare,,I can dream can’t I,,,mary

  3. U know,,thee older I get,,the more I research,the more I see just how freaken corrupted our government has become,,,it truly sickens me to see everyones HARD EARN MONEY spent via our government to destroy people lives,,in the name of lieful propaganda,,,The dollar amount quoted above,,does not include,,media campiegns,,from all alphabet soap agency at 1 million a minute,,does not include a lot of thing besides what is quota above,,,The dea needs to be defunded yesterday,,thee aoumt of tax payer monies spent of jails,on media etc is no where worth destroying non violent innocent 83 year olds,,or any one,,I believe every single natural plant be it marijuana,poppy,coca,kratom,,,should be legal,,maybe a restriction to person use,,but thats it..Mother Nature knew long ago the need for these medicinal plant,,and knew thee exact amount of medicines to put in each to help humanbeings,,Restricting or regulating nature was never intended to be done by man,,no mankind has the rite to control nature,,look at thee mess we’ve made of it,,All natural medicine plants should be legal,,its not the government place to control nature..if we could grow our own medicine,,think how much money we would save!!!!!!!mary

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