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MARIJUANA MOMENT

GOP VIRGINIA GOVERNOR DOESN’T HAVE ‘ANY INTEREST’ IN LEGALIZING MARIJUANA SALES
UNDER NEW DEMOCRAT-LED BILLS


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POLITICS


GOP VIRGINIA GOVERNOR DOESN’T HAVE ‘ANY INTEREST’ IN LEGALIZING MARIJUANA SALES
UNDER NEW DEMOCRAT-LED BILLS

Published

4 hours ago

on

January 11, 2024

By

Kyle Jaeger

As Virginia Democrstic lawmakers renew their push to legalize marijuana sales,
the Republican governor says the issue isn’t something he’s personally
interested in advancing this year.

While advocates are hopeful that commercial legalization could move through both
chambers of the legislature, which are now controlled by Democrats, the remarks
from Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) indicate that the plan might not be enacted into
law even if it is approved by the House of Delegates and Senate.

Following his State of the Commonwealth address on Wednesday, Youngkin was asked
about the prospects of further cannabis reform.

State Governors Urge Biden to Reschedule Marijuana by Year-End for Economic and
Safety Benefits
Governors from six states are urging President Biden to fast-track the
rescheduling of marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III, a move that could
have far-reaching economic and health implications. The governors of Colorado,
Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey, and New York have jointly penned a
letter to President Biden emphasizing economic benefits and aligning federal
policy with public opinion. Veuer’s Maria Mercedes Galuppo has the story.
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“I just don’t have a lot of interest in pressing forward with marijuana
legislation,” he told reporters.

Cannabis is “an area that I really don’t have any interest in,” the governor
said.



The governor is setting a sobering tone for cannabis reform advocates as the
2024 session begins, making the brief comment on the same day that a bill to
legalize cannabis sales was filed in the House. A Senate companion is expected
to be introduced shortly.

Use, possession and limited personal cultivation of cannabis by adults is
already legal in Virginia as the result of a Democrat-led proposal approved by
lawmakers in 2021. But Republicans, after winning control of the state House and
governor’s office in the 2021 elections, later blocked the required reenactment
of a regulatory framework for retail sales. In the interim, the unlicensed
market has expanded.



But Democrats’ victories in the most recent election last November to take
control of both legislative chambers have some cannabis advocates hopeful that
the state could enact cannabis sales provisions this year, though the path
requires building strong consensus in the legislature under the looming threat
of a veto.

Youngkin’s disinterest in marijuana reform isn’t necessarily a surprise.
Advocates were relieved that he committed to simply not attempt to overturn the
noncommercial legalization law enacted by his Democratic predecessor in 2021.

When he was elected, Youngkin said he was “not against” allowing commercial
sales, per se. He said there were certain Democratic “non-starters” such as
provisions setting labor union requirements for marijuana businesses—and he
wanted to address concerns from law enforcement—but he generally indicated that
he did believe there was a bill he could support.



That expectation has been quickly tempered at the beginning of the new year,
though.

Last session, a cannabis sales bill did advance through the
Democratic-controlled Senate, but it stalled out in committee in the House,
which at the time had a GOP majority.

The newly filed commercial legalization bill would reenact the earlier sales
provisions blocked by Republicans while making a number of updates to the
planned regulatory scheme.



Existing medical marijuana businesses in the state would be able to begin
adult-use operations on July 1 of this year, while some other
businesses—including microbusinesses and a small number of hemp companies—could
begin operation on January 1, 2025. Broader issuance of all license types
wouldn’t happen until July 1, 2025.

Among other changes, the legislation would create a new microbusiness licensing
program, which replaces past equity-licensing provisions. The microbusiness
program would offer small business licenses exclusively to eligible individuals,
including veterans or people in the state from areas impacted by marijuana
policing historically, and would provide technical assistance and other benefits
to qualifying applicants.

Sales of adult-use products would be taxed at six percent at the state level,
with local governments permitted to levy an additional tax of up to six percent.
The proposal would also prohibit outdoor cultivation by cannabis businesses,
instead requiring grows to be indoors. Products, meanwhile, would need to be
sold in plain packages, free from commercial branding, trademarks and other
design.



—
Marijuana Moment is tracking more than 900 cannabis, psychedelics and drug
policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters
pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and
hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.

Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to
get access.
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A separate bill filed Wednesday by Del. Charniele Herring (D), meanwhile, would
make a number of changes to criminal penalties around marijuana, establishing
some new crimes while easing others. HB 773 would also create a petition process
to allow people convicted of marijuana offenses to seek resentencing hearings.
Those provisions, if passed, would take effect July 1, 2025. The state’s
existing cannabis possession law included a separate expungements process.



Days after the GOP-controlled House rejected the prior cannabis sales proposal,
it also killed a bill that would have let medical cannabis businesses made
certain state-level tax deductions. Republicans also scuttled separate
legislation to create a psilocybin advisory board and reschedule the
psychedelic.

Meanwhile in the state, several hemp businesses were recently hit with
five-figure fines as part of an effort to crack down on hemp cannabinoid
products.

Two companies and a private citizen have also sued over the newly tightened
rules for hemp products, which set the maximum amount of THC in hemp products at
0.3 percent concentration and 2 milligrams per package. The threshold made
illegal hundreds of products already on store shelves. But in October, a judge
denied their claim.



Senate President Pro Tempore Louis Lucas (D), for her part, quipped last month
that her support for a plan to bring two professional sports teams to
Alexandria might be contingent on getting a marijuana sales bill enacted into
law.

Last year, Lucas was flagged in a media investigation around CBD products, as
the co-owner of a cannabis shop in Portsmouth. Lab testing revealed the
shop stocked mislabeled products, some of which contained illegal levels of THC.
The problem is common among hemp-derived CBD products, which in most states
remain unregulated.

Here are changes that would be made in Virginia under the new legal sales
legislation:


 * Existing medical marijuana businesses could begin adult-use operations on
   July 1, 2024, while some other businesses—including microbusinesses and a
   small number of hemp companies—could apply to begin operation as of January
   1, 2025. Broader licensing wouldn’t happen until July 1, 2025.
 * Sales of adult-use marijuana products would be taxed at 6 percent at the
   state level, with local governments able to impose another 6 percent tax. If
   a town imposes a tax, that would supersede any tax imposed by the surrounding
   county. Medical marijuana, meanwhile, would be taxed through a separate
   12-percent state excise tax.
 * The Virginia Cannabis Control Authority’s board of directors would create
   regulations and control the possession, sale, transportation and delivery of
   marijuana products. The board would also be in charge of licensing, packaging
   and labeling, lab testing, security requirements and sanitary standards, as
   well as some educational efforts around preventing marijuana-related harms.
 * The board could set a maximum THC level on marijuana and cannabis products,
   though edibles couldn’t exceed 10 milligrams per serving or 100 mg per
   package.
 * Licensees could be granted or have an interest in multiple license types,
   including cultivation, manufacturing, wholesale and retail, but regulations
   “shall be drawn narrowly to limit vertical integration to small businesses
   and ensure that all licensees have an equal and meaningful opportunity to
   participate in the market,” the bill says. No member of the board could have
   a financial interest in any licensee or applicant.
 * Local governments could opt out of allowing all marijuana establishments, but
   only with the approval of local voters. Towns within a county could allow the
   businesses even if the county it’s in prohibits them.
 * As for medical marijuana, the board would be required to align existing
   regulations with any new requirements that “establish health, safety, and
   security requirements for pharmaceutical processors and cannabis dispensing
   facilities.”
 * The board would also create Cannabis Micro Business Liaison, who would lead a
   microbusiness support team designed to assist eligible microbusiness
   applicants through business accelerator plans, conduct an analysis of
   potential barriers to entry to the legal market, spread awareness of business
   opportunities in historically economically disadvantaged communities, provide
   technical assistance and conduct outreach.
 * Microbusinesses would be created as a license category reflecting some social
   equity considerations, with eligibility open to businesses owned at least
   two-thirds by qualifying individuals. Those include military veterans, people
   who resided for at least three of the past five years in historically
   economically disadvantaged communities, people who attended at least five
   years of public elementary or secondary school in such areas or people who
   received federal Pell grants or attended a school where at least 30 percent
   of students are eligible for Pell grants.
 * “Historically economically disadvantaged communities” would be defined as
   either as jurisdictions in which “offenses for marijuana possession were
   committed at a rate in excess of 150 percent of the statewide average for
   marijuana possession offenses during the previous 10 years” or federally
   defined historically underutilized business zones (HUBZones).
 * Microbusinesses could enter into cooperative agreements with other
   microbusinesses as well as lease space and equipment “and cultivate,
   manufacture, and sell” cannabis products on the premises of another licensee.
 * Microbusinesses could not manufacture more than 1,000 pounds of marijuana
   products per year or sell at wholesale more than $500,000 products annually.
   They would also be limited to no more than 10,000 square feet of canopy
   space.
 * Retailers would need to be no more than 1,500 feet in area, though medical
   processors or facilities would be grandfathered in so long as they were
   permitted prior to July 1, 2024 and the retail portion of their facilities
   don’t expand after that date.
 * Cultivation facilities would be limited to 150,000 square feet of canopy,
   with similar grandfathered-in exemptions for existing medical facilities,
   which are limited to 200,000 square feet.
 * Maximum purchase limits, in terms of purchasable amounts over a given period
   of time, would be set by regulators, and the bill would require creation of
   “a retail sales monitoring program to ensure compliance” regarding sales to a
   single purchaser.
 * No cannabis retailer would be allowed to be located within a quarter mile of
   another marijuana store. Regulators would also be required to ensure that
   licensees are in compliance with other applicable zoning and land use
   restrictions.
 * Labels on cannabis products would need to be “complete, accurate, easily
   discernable [sic], and uniform among different products and brands,” and
   would also need to be accessible through licensees’ websites. Among other
   details, labels would also need to include all active and inactive
   ingredients, the total percentage and milligrams of THC and CBD, serving
   size, usage instructions as well as child and safety warnings “in a
   conspicuous font.”
 * Laboratory testing would need to analyze a sample from each batch of
   cannabis, with thresholds for failure set in accordance with other states’
   standards. Processed products would need to be tested after manufacture of
   the product is complete. “In the case of retail marijuana,” the bill says,
   regulators could limit testing to CBD, THC, terpenes, pesticide residue,
   heavy metals, mycotoxins, moisture and microbial contaminants.
 * Regulators would create rules around routine inspections of all cannabis
   establishments, which under the bill would need to occur at least annually.
   Rules would also need to be made around minimum equipment and resource
   requirements, safe and secure dispensing, wholesale distribution and transfer
   to retail establishments and sale of devices, among other details.
 * Rules on the number of licenses any person could be granted would need to
   both “ensure that all licensees have an equal and meaningful opportunity to
   participate in the market” and forbid people who hold multiple categories of
   business licenses from transferring a license to any other person who owns
   more than one license type.
 * Regulators would need to craft a process allowing “certain licensees” to
   acquire hemp extracts “grown and processed in the Commonwealth in compliance
   with state and federal law” as well as a process allowing cannabis licensees
   “to formulate such extracts into retail marijuana products.”
 * Providing marijuana or marijuana paraphernalia to individuals who are under
   21 would be a Class 1 misdemeanor, which carries penalties of up to a year in
   jail and a $2,500 fine. Advertising marijuana to minors in any type of
   publication would also be a Class 1 misdemeanor. Failing to check ID prior to
   selling cannabis to a minor, meanwhile, would be a Class 3 misdemeanor,
   carrying up to a $500 fine.
 * Minors who attempt to use false documentation to buy marijuana would also be
   subject to a Class 1 misdemeanor.
 * Providing marijuana to an intoxicated person would also be a Class 1
   misdemeanor, as would buying marijuana on behalf of an intoxicated person.
 * Regulations would need to be “commercially reasonable” and consistent with
   “standards in states with regulated cannabis markets.”
 * Banks and credit unions that work with cannabis businesses would not be held
   liable under state law for working with the legal industry, though nothing
   would require financial institutions to work with marijuana clients.



> Fifth Michigan City Approves Local Psychedelics Decriminalization Resolution



Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan.

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