Albuquerque Journal

House, Senate poised to vote on cannabis measures

Lawmakers work quickly as legalizati­on proposals considered

- BY DAN BOYD AND DAN MCKAY JOURNAL CAPITOL BUREAU

SANTA FE — A special session that could end with New Mexico joining a wave of other states in taxing and regulating cannabis got off to a brisk start Tuesday at the Roundhouse, with lawmakers advancing freshly drafted bills to legalize marijuana for adult users and wipe certain potrelated conviction­s off offenders’ records.

The unusual special session — called by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham just 10 days after lawmakers wrapped up a 60-day legislativ­e session — will continue Wednesday with both the House and Senate poised to vote on the cannabis-related measures.

The Democratic governor called the special session in an attempt to get a marijuana legalizati­on bill across the finish line after a previous bill stalled on the Senate floor in the final hours of the recently completed

session.

But the “cannabis redo” also represents a political risk of sorts, because the cost of recent special sessions has averaged about $50,000 a day.

Given that backdrop, four Democratic lawmakers unveiled a revised cannabis legalizati­on bill Tuesday that is similar to the legislatio­n that previously fell short but with one big difference — the removal of expungemen­t provisions that had triggered opposition, especially among Republican lawmakers. The expungemen­t section was instead placed in a separate bill.

Meanwhile, the new cannabis proposal, House Bill 2, cleared the first of its two assigned committees Tuesday.

It would allow New Mexicans ages 21 and older to buy and possess outside the home up to 2 ounces of cannabis or 800 milligrams of edible cannabis, starting no later than April 2022.

Rep. Javier Martínez, an Albuquerqu­e Democrat and cosponsor, said the proposal would create a tightly regulated cannabis industry in New Mexico.

“No legislatio­n of this magnitude will ever be perfect,” he said, “but it’s pretty darn close to it.”

The legislatio­n passed the House Taxation and Revenue Committee 8-4 on Tuesday afternoon, a few hours after it was introduced in the House.

It was under debate before the House Judiciary Committee late Tuesday and, if passed there, would head to the full chamber for considerat­ion.

House Speaker Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, said he expected final House action on the proposal Wednesday morning, with passage sending it to the Senate.

Cannabis legalizati­on proposals have passed the full House at least twice since 2019, only to die in the Senate, including earlier this month.

Expungemen­t

While the retooled cannabis legalizati­on proposal advanced in the House, the stand-alone expungemen­t bill to wipe certain cannabis-related conviction­s off New Mexicans’ criminal records drew scrutiny in the Senate.

The Senate Judiciary Committee spent several hours Tuesday debating the legislatio­n, Senate Bill 2, which would order the expungemen­t of criminal records for marijuana-related offenses that would fall under the proposed cannabis legalizati­on law.

“These are offenses that would no longer be crimes,” Sen. Katy Duhigg, D-Albuquerqu­e, said during Tuesday’s hearing.

She and other bill supporters also said drug-related conviction­s currently hamper many New Mexicans from landing jobs and paying their bills.

However, the bill would also authorize the release of New Mexicans jailed for cannabisre­lated offenses, and several senators expressed concern about the logistics of reviewing thousands of court files to determine eligibilit­y.

In addition, Attorney General Hector Balderas, whose office would be in charge of reviewing criminal records under the expungemen­t proposal, suggested lawmakers should appropriat­e money to pay for such an effort.

“Our office strongly supports criminal justice reform that corrects the inequities of excessive incarcerat­ion, but I am highly concerned that the Legislatur­e provide the necessary funding for staffing and oversight, and that an unfunded mandate will harm deserving New Mexicans,” Balderas said in a statement.

At least some references to the AG’s Office were removed from the bill by the Senate committee late Tuesday, before it was approved and sent to the Senate floor.

Criticism

The special session has faced political crosswinds, even before getting underway.

Some GOP legislativ­e leaders have criticized the governor for holding the special session during the week leading up to Easter and not publicly disclosing the contents of the revised bill before the session began.

In addition, Sen. Jacob Candelaria, D-Albuquerqu­e, tweeted this week that he would oppose the cannabis legalizati­on bill because it would set up a “protection­ist marketplac­e” by imposing plant count limits.

He also expressed concern the social justice provisions were no longer included in the measure.

In response, a Lujan Grisham spokeswoma­n said Tuesday that Candelaria was entitled to his own vote, but “not his own facts” about the legislatio­n and raised the question of a conflict of interest.

“It’s hard sometimes to tell where the senator ends and the attorney for the state’s largest medical cannabis company begins,” Lujan Grisham spokeswoma­n Nora Meyers Sackett said, referring to Candelaria’s past legal work representi­ng Ultra Health LLC.

While New Mexico lawmakers debate the issue, other states are moving ahead with legalizati­on measures. New York and Virginia are on the verge of becoming the 16th and 17th states to legalize recreation­al marijuana, respective­ly.

New Mexico already has a medical cannabis program with more than 100,000 enrolled members. And Lujan Grisham signed into law a 2019 decriminal­ization bill that made possession of up to a half-ounce of marijuana a civil offense punishable by a $50 fine.

Public support

Recent polls have shown broad public support across all regions of New Mexico for legalizing recreation­al cannabis, with backers saying such a law would generate revenue for the state, create jobs and free up law enforcemen­t to focus on other issues.

But the legalizati­on push has also drawn opposition, and representa­tives of Catholic bishops and health organizati­ons testified Tuesday against the revised legalizati­on bill.

Linda Siegle, a lobbyist for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, questioned the wisdom of allowing on-site consumptio­n, a move she said would weaken hard-fought air quality protection­s for workers and consumers.

“Secondhand smoke of any type is dangerous,” she said.

Opponents also said the legalizati­on proposal would worsen New Mexico’s struggle with driving under the influence and conflict with federal law.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe, left, talks with Sen. Cliff Pirtle, R-Roswell, on the Senate floor shortly after a special legislativ­e session started Tuesday. Just as he did during this year’s 60-day regular session, Pirtle has filed a competing cannabis legalizati­on proposal.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe, left, talks with Sen. Cliff Pirtle, R-Roswell, on the Senate floor shortly after a special legislativ­e session started Tuesday. Just as he did during this year’s 60-day regular session, Pirtle has filed a competing cannabis legalizati­on proposal.
 ??  ?? A small group of protesters, including J.D. Vasquez of Santa Fe and Bill Ruhl of Albuquerqu­e, pray outside the Roundhouse before the start of a special session Tuesday. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham called the special session in an attempt to win passage of a bill legalizing recreation­al cannabis for adult users, which the group of protesters opposes.
A small group of protesters, including J.D. Vasquez of Santa Fe and Bill Ruhl of Albuquerqu­e, pray outside the Roundhouse before the start of a special session Tuesday. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham called the special session in an attempt to win passage of a bill legalizing recreation­al cannabis for adult users, which the group of protesters opposes.
 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Osnaldo Perez, a contractor with American Fence, removed a portion of a security fence from around the Roundhouse before the start of a special session Tuesday. The temporary fencing was erected in January in response to threats of violent protests at state capitols nationwide.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Osnaldo Perez, a contractor with American Fence, removed a portion of a security fence from around the Roundhouse before the start of a special session Tuesday. The temporary fencing was erected in January in response to threats of violent protests at state capitols nationwide.

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